In the past six months I actually did start watching "Celebrity Apprentice," and its drawing power for me was the same as watching "live" events like the Academy Awards and interviews: The illusion that there were peeks at the real people under the manufactured images. I was never impressed with TRUMP, always thought that he was buoyed by the superficial bubble of yes-men around him, people who could be manipulated by their being impressed by big money/"power". But in those months I *did* think the dude had a certain amount of sense.
After he did his birther thing, and how he claimed it wasn't him making it an issue, that he actually had a lot of issues like China and Libya that he wanted to talk about but the media just asked him about birtherism, and the mounting other absurdities, he was not to be taken seriously. But then, after the Correspondents Dinner followed by the BIN LADEN event, he became a compleat clown figure of the pathetic sort. When I saw Apprentice after that, the show had become a total froth of absurdity, with his "decisions" being totally laughable.
His "decisions" were always silly, especially ARBITRARY, and puffed up by yes-men.
Now. Look at this face:
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http://gawker.com/5800906/americas-top-racist-has-dandruffAmerica’s Top Racist Has Dandruff
John Cook—Donald Trump let Rolling Stone in on his hair routine: "OK, what I do is, wash it with Head and Shoulders. I don't dry it, though. I let it dry by itself. It takes about an hour."
For one full hour every morning, Donald Trump waits patiently for his hair to air dry before carrying on with his busy day. One hour. Every day.
He went on to deny that his air-dried coiffe is an elaborately engineered and cantilevered latticework designed to give the false impression that he is not bald: "I then comb my hair. Yes, I do use a comb.... Do I comb it forward? No, I don't comb it forward." Yes he does.
(Image via Getty)
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