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First lady Jill Biden’s former press secretary blasted the White House


"There are two different versions of reality in my party right now," Michael LaRosa, who served as first lady Jill Biden's press secretary, wrote on X on Thursday night in response to a post from Republican communicator Sarah Matthews criticizing the White House's senior deputy press secretary, Andrew Bates.
"The below is an alternate universe that MOST of us Dems are NOT actually living in. Being coherent in his FIRST ‘big boy press conference’ of 2024 is not exactly the bar most of us are looking for.... but clearly it's the bar for Biden set by his own staff ... and that is pretty ‘f---ing’ terrifying."

She went off. There is more in the link as well.


I read the first quote and thought of a couple of posters here.
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KSU out tampering for a QB

according to Jay Norvell. Offered the Colorado State qb $600,000 to enter the portal. KSU has some big donors, so not sure which one this was. Not that is matters. That's a lot of cash from a school like ksu.

CSU’s Norvell: QB shared K-State’s transfer offer
Colorado State head coach Jay Norvell moved on from Colorado rival Deion Sanders, he claims, but the Rams’ coach spilled the tea on a new hot-button issue around his program: tampering with quarterback Brayden Fowler-Nicolosi and wide receiver Tory Horton.
Norvell said Thursday in Las Vegas during Mountain West Conference media day he has no thoughts about Sanders, the subject of a feud before they played last season.
But he did have thoughts on teams wielding massive Name, Image and Likeness offers to CSU’s standouts. That included Norvell saying Fowler-Nicolosi informed Colorado State that someone connected to Kansas State called with an offer of $600,000 if he would transfer to Manhattan, Kansas.
“If you have enough evidence you can prove it. But you know, smoking gun is a smoking gun,” Norvell said of his conversation with Fowler-Nicolosi. “He said a guy from Kansas State called and offered him $600,000 because they lost their quarterback, offered him $600,000 if he entered the portal. I’m not accusing Kansas State of anything, I’m just telling you what the kid told me.
“If they don’t want their name thrown in it, they should probably get a handle on their people.”
Fowler-Nicolosi threw for 3,460 yards with 22 touchdowns in 2023 as a redshirt sophomore.

“We believe he’s got all of the qualities to be special in this league. He threw for 3,400 yards. I don’t think people really understand what that means,” Norvell said.
Horton is well-established as special and Norvell wasn’t surprised to hear the level of suitors that came calling in the offseason, mentioning Texas A& M and Ole Miss as two programs who made contact.
Horton had 96 receptions for 1,136 yards and eight touchdowns for CSU last season. He began his college career at Nevada – Norvell was an assistant coach for the Wolfpack – and has already graduated, which could’ve made another move easier. But Horton said he had no plans to go anywhere.

“There was no point in me transferring … I’m happy where I’m at,” he said. “The knowledge that I get from the coaches at Colorado State is what I need to prepare myself for the next level.”

Norvell didn’t want to go back down the road of discussing Sanders, whom he called out last season. Before the “Rocky Mountain Shootout” game between rivals, Norvell said “When I talk to adults, I take my hat and sunglasses off. That’s what my mother taught me,” which was a reference to Sanders holding press conferences in shades and various hats.

“I don’t have any feelings for Deion Sanders, I really don’t,” Norvell said.

USMNT: Berhalter fired?! Who will replace him?

He needed to go a long time ago!

The USSF absolutely has to CRUSH this hire if they want to represent well as a host nation in 2026...

MSNBC getting Sandeman-Rittenhoused

Couldn't be happening to a more deserving cluster of narcassistic psychopaths.

Why Kenyatta Wright is an ideal fit as financial director for Oklahoma State football

@KW7, good luck in new role. Go Pokes!​

Why Kenyatta Wright is an ideal fit as financial director for Oklahoma State football​

Scott Wright
The Oklahoman

LAS VEGAS — Mike Gundy isn’t always happy to adapt to the ever-changing landscape of college football, but the Oklahoma State coach understands the importance of it.

His latest move, however, seemed to come more naturally, considering Gundy’s opinion of where college football is currently headed.

Gundy sees players becoming treated as employees rather than student-athletes as the door opens wider and wider on what is allowed in terms of paying players.

Gundy recently hired former Cowboy linebacker Kenyatta Wright as OSU’s director of business and finance, and with the wide range of experience Wright has had in various avenues of football, the move looks like a perfect fit.

While the title might sound more like a pure number-cruncher, Wright's position will serve as a bridge between the program and the players, or their representatives, when working through financial details at the point when universities are allowed to directly pay players — which isn't far away.

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“There’s so much in college football now that’s going into a different world,” Gundy said this week at Big 12 Media Days at Allegiant Stadium. “I have a pretty good feel for the part of college football that I’ve done for 35 years, 20 as a head coach. I’m comfortable with the way we operate.

“We’ve been lucky that we were able to hire Kenyatta and make him the director of business and finance, which is essentially a front office for an NFL (franchise).”

It’s the type of position that didn’t exist in college football three years ago, but is becoming widely common now. Yet there’s no defined method for the role or the person who fits it.

Wright’s experience level seems ideal.

Wright, who played for the Jets and Bills after his college career, was involved with the NFL Players Association during his playing days and beyond. He has been a coach at the high school level.

And most recently, Wright has had various levels of involvement with Pokes with a Purpose, the OSU collective that was developed when name, image and likeness guidelines were established a couple years ago.

“He’ll develop a staff and they’ll handle all the financial side of this with the players, communication with agents, runners, representatives, PR people,” Gundy said. “Salaries, brand, name, image, likeness.

“We’re going to have to have a business side of Oklahoma State football that will handle and work daily to put ourselves in a position to move forward, because if we sit back and watch, we’re gonna get run over.”

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A lawsuit settled by the power conferences and the NCAA will allow universities to pay out more than $20 million per year to their athletes, though the settlement has not yet been finalized by the court system.

Still, coaches and athletic directors are bracing for the moment it goes through.

“The business side of it is new to me,” Gundy said. “So I’ve spent the last five, six months in more business and numbers meetings, and meetings that don’t make any sense to me than I have in my career as a head coach. But I have to do that based on, the times are changing.

“Kenyatta’s got great experience with this. He was very involved and highly respected in the NFL’s Players Association. And essentially what we’re going now is what they’re doing. So it’s important that we have him, and he works directly with me every day, and he can take all that off my plate.”

From the players’ perspective, Wright is a familiar face, because he has been around the program, as has his son, Elijah, who spent the previous two years as a walk-on linebacker with the Cowboys.

“That’s my guy. He’s like a big mentor to us,” linebacker Nick Martin said. “He puts us in a position to succeed. He gets us connected with the right guys, making sure we’re not being taken advantage of.

“He makes sure we are taken care of and we operate as a business as individuals, because that’s what we are. He genuinely cares about us like his kids. He’s a great, genuine guy.”

Historic Wrestling Comparison - Cowboys, Hawks, Lions

I was thinking about a challenge for the next decade or so for the three dominant wrestling programs...

40 before 30 or 20

This translates to: can we get to 40 Championships before Iowa gets to 30 or Penn State gets to 20?

I started this comparison (linked below) between Oklahoma State and Iowa in 2006 and forgot about it. With the new challenge of 40 before 30 or 20, I decided to update it.

It's hard to find some information such as: how many individual All-Americans make up total All-Americans. OSU has it spelled out clearly, but I didn't find it easily with the other two.

Please let me know of any errors you find that need correcting.

So much of our championship history is before freshmen were eligible.....just think of our numbers had they been!

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Poke Defense: Realistic Improvement You Expect…

What say you relative to needed defensive improvement…. It is the elephant in the room if the Pokes will contend for the title!

How much of our issues are talent related?
How much is the play caller?
Where have we upgraded?
What area concerns you the most?
What area do you believe will be our strength?

We have to be much better each game consistently and limit big plays and busts to challenge for Arlington imo. Just thought we could discuss the likelihood that will happen in the Corral’s opinions.

Redditors Fear Citizenship Denial After “Accidentally” Registering To Vote


Hmmm, I thought we were told non citizens didn't vote in elections. I guess that's another Democrat labeled conspiracy theory that turns out to be true.

George Clooney calls for Biden to step aside

“I love Joe Biden but we need a need a new nominee.”

That’s a bombshell that Democrats have to take seriously.

“It’s devastating to say it, but the Joe Biden I was with three weeks ago at a fund-raiser was not the Joe Biden of 2010. He wasn’t even the Joe Biden of 2020. He was the same Biden we all witnessed at the debate.”

Clooney is a big Biden supporter and donor.
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