The creative forces behind 'The Simpsons' made their feelings on their own President Trump prediction clear with a message on Bart's blackboard in the intro.
Like almost everyone I've been following this election cycle now for the past year-and-a-half with all of its twists and turns along the way. I've also read with curiosity the leaked emails from the Clinton Camp.
In an election-cycle that seems to be going on forever comes this: Bernie Sanders will be returning to Duluth on Tuesday, October 4 to stump for his one-time rival Hillary Clinton. The rally will happen on the campus of UMD in the Kirby Ballroom.
The first presidential debate will be held tonight between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, with over 100 million people expected to turn in to watch. With so many questions coming into the event, there is bound to be some crazy prop bets surfacing.
Those keeping track can now officially add Queen to the list of acts who don't wish to have their music associated with Donald Trump's presidential campaign.
As the looming political race only darkens, it’s nice to know Donald Trump doesn’t leave everything he touches a pile of ash. So benefits Arnold Schwarzenegger in the first poster for the action hero’s takeover of NBC’s Celebrity Apprentice, looking as magnificent as ever.
Remember the little clubs we would have in grammer school? The one kid that was louder and didn't use a large vocabulary? Well, according to a recent poll bythe Boston Globe Donald Trumps speeches are at a low level of intelligence. Now before you get angry at me for saying that and send me email, we hear and understand him better because of that.
The Simpsons obliquely anticipating future events has become a common phenomenon, though never quite so regrettably as a 2000 episode that referenced “President Trump” in our future. Now, writer Dan Greaney looks back on the unfortunate premonition, noting the line was intended to envision an America that “went as bad as it possibly could.”