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Meghan McCain: Politicians Doing Cocaine, Having Orgies Unfit for Office

McCain commented on the remarks made by Rep. Madison Cawthorn, stating he was invited to an “orgy” in Washington and has witnessed leaders do cocaine.

Eduardo Razo

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Rep. Madison Cawthorn stated on a podcast last week that he was invited to an “orgy” in Washington and has witnessed leaders do cocaine. These remarks by the North Carolina representative continue to echo inside the Beltway and have extended the fury of his fellow Republicans.

Daily Mail columnist and former “The View” co-host Meghan McCain weighed in on the issue regarding the party that her father was in and stated that Cawthorn must name these leaders publicly. 

“So, Madison Cawthorne only hangs out with hardcore MAGA people in DC,” McCain tweeted

“The American public deserves to know which members of congress are doing cocaine and having orgies because they are unfit for office.

Should we all just start guessing the people he’s talking about?”

Cawthorn generated this latest controversy by saying to the “Warrior Poet Society podcast last week his experience in Washington reflects that of Netflix’s “House of Cards.” 

“The sexual perversion that goes on in Washington, I mean, being kind of a young guy in Washington, the average age is probably 60 or 70,” Cawthorn said. 

“I look at a lot of these people, a lot of them that I’ve looked up to through my life—I’ve always paid attention to politics—then all of a sudden you get invited to, ‘Oh hey, we’re going to have a sexual get together at one of our homes, you should come.’”

House GOP leader Kevin McCarthy (R-CA) “plans to talk” with Cawthorn regarding the remarks, as many House GOP members expressed their frustration. 

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1 Comment

1 Comment

  1. Dale Moog

    March 31, 2022 at 10:17 am

    I want to know who the members are the are upset. They must be the ones guilty of this and do not want to be caught. McCarthy should have ignored these members and said I am not cleaning up your mess. If you did not want this out there you should not be doing blow at an orgy.

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Media Business

CBS News Adds New Roles, Duties for Editorial Leaders

CBS News president Ingrid Ciprian-Matthews announced on Thursday the various changes.

Eduardo Razo

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A photo of the CBS News logo

On Thursday, Ingrid Ciprian-Matthews, the recently appointed president of CBS News, revealed several changes to the editorial leadership.

Terri Stewart is now the senior vice president of domestic newsgathering at CBS News. Furthermore, Stewart will oversee the domestic bureaus and manage bookings. Kaci Sokoloff will support her in this role.

Shuffling doesn’t stop there. London bureau chief Andrew Roy now oversees all CBS News international bureaus. Jose Diaz, who leads the network’s foreign desk, will now report to Roy.

David Reiter’s team at CBS News will extend their role to cover significant reporting beats beyond Washington, D.C. They will work with CBS Stations and the Innovation Lab to find prospects for joint national and local news coverage and continue producing special events programming.

Additionally, Kate Zuckerman was promoted to VP of affiliate relations and special events planning. Beth Boyle was elevated to national and planning editor, overseeing editorial content and managing desk operations.

CBS is adding two political investigative producers, led by Matt Mosk, to its growing investigative team. The group will now be incorporated into the Washington D.C. Bureau and report straight to bureau chief Mark Lima.

Finally, Ciprian-Matthews notified staff that the network is hiring an Executive Producer of Daily News.

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Media Business

Experts ‘Don’t See a Buyer’ for ABC

Sources close to the situation say Nexstar isn’t in a good place to pay what Disney would probably demand for ABC.

Eduardo Razo

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A photo of the ABC logo.

Last week, The Walt Disney Company found themselves in the news after a report surfaced noting that they could be looking to offload ABC. Bloomberg revealed that Nexstar Media Group had initial talks with Disney to acquire the television station.

Furthermore, media mogul Byron Allen has offered $10 billion to buy ABC. Still, despite the rumors of a possible sale, various insiders tell The New York Post that they don’t believe Disney will be offloading ABC.

Sources close to the situation told the Post that Nexstar isn’t in a good place to pay what Disney would probably demand for ABC.

“Everyone is way ahead of their skis on this story,” a banker told the Post. “They don’t know what is happening here. Disney taking a meeting doesn’t mean you’re ready to sell, it means you’re getting offers. This is something evolving over many weeks.”

Disney CEO Bob Iger announced in June that legacy television assets, such as ABC, may not be deemed core assets for the company going forward. Nevertheless, some cynics noticed it as Iger inviting a deep-pocketed bidder to come forward. Thus far, none have emerged.

“He told the world if someone wants to put a really big number on these assets he will sell,” a second banker told the Post. “I just don’t see a buyer.”

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SiriusXM CEO: New Streaming App to ‘Enhance’ Subscription Value

Witz shared the company’s planned launch of a next-generation streaming app later this year to draw younger, more diverse audiences and deliver improved search suggestions and other elements.

Eduardo Razo

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SiriusXM aims to increase listenership beyond cars and enhance channel personalization and mobility.

Last month, it was revealed that Suzi Watford was tasked with constructing what she anointed the “next-gen SiriusXM” for its 34 million paying subscribers, helping it reach listeners outside the car.

Recently, CEO Jennifer Witz shared an update on how the process is going for SiriusXM in their efforts to reach listeners on different platforms during a webcast session at the recent Bank of America Securities Media, Communications, and Entertainment Conference.

“It’s really about how do we continue to enhance the value of our subscriptions and [showcase] this tremendously valuable set of content that really speaks to every audio genre,” Witz said. 

Witz shared the company’s planned launch of a next-generation streaming app later this year to draw younger, more diverse audiences and deliver improved search suggestions and other elements.

“The biggest gap we found is being able to get consumers into the content they love,” Witz added. “In the car, it’s been very much about turning the dial or hearing the on-air promotion, or get the email and then go find the content.

“We’re going to be able to make it much easier for our in-car subscribers to carry their listening forward into streaming devices, and vice versa, in a very seamless way. So ultimately, I think it’s not going to be about streaming subscribers or in-car subscribers, but really just about subscribers, because we’re pretty indifferent as to how they listen or where they listen.”

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