S.E. CUPP: Anna Faris, Chris Pratt and cynical assumptions
Perhaps because we saw ourselves in Chris and Anna, the speculation about what went wrong will carry on and venture into silly places.
S.E. is a nationally syndicated columnist, author and commentator. She is author of the book “Losing Our Religion: The Liberal media’s Attack on Christianity” and co-author of the book “Why You’re Wrong About the Right.” She is a CNN contributor.
Perhaps because we saw ourselves in Chris and Anna, the speculation about what went wrong will carry on and venture into silly places.
Forcing your underlings to fight among one another might indeed weed out the disloyal and the lethargic, but it also wastes a lot of time.
Planned Parenthood is certain I’m going to address this issue — with my own child — insufficiently and in fact incorrectly.
S.E. CUPP: It goes without saying that Trump’s “do as I say, not as I do” prescription for the American economy is the definition of hypocrisy.
All over the airwaves and on the internet, you could find scores of overshooters rushing to broaden the already substantial story’s implications.
Colleges have forgotten that their job is to prepare students for the real world, which is rife with insensitivity and offensive opinions.
S.E. Cupp: If you believe sunlight is the best disinfectant, people with dangerous ideas and growing followings shouldn’t be suppressed and ignored.
Trump has tricked us all into believing is that one kind of empathy must come at the expense of another.
He warned the scriptwriters not to base plot lines on Trump’s White House, because no one would believe them.
And then we wonder why middle America feels like the media is out of touch.