i think that was my favorite. behind the jokes, that one, there s a lot of truth behind what he was saying. as always, the punch line carries the message. let me finish tonight with the hawks. two-step dance to sell american wars we shouldn t get into. they re familiar. and this is hardball. the place for politics. i describe myself as a mother, a writer and a performer. i m also a survivor of ovarian and uterine cancers. i even wrote a play about that. my symptoms were a pain in my abdomen
greg: wouldn t let me do my line. greg: mine is subtle. dana: wrote the punch line. greg: climbed my way up the monologue there i have it standing there by the way, the guy still has 68,000 followers on his other twitter account which he has left open while starting a new one. dana: probably sat there and hoped that maybe, you know. maybe he follows them back. dick dick let s not take this too lightly. the polls show this guy is running tightly. i know. democratic primary in new york there is no runoffs. you can win you may say that but i have seen worse happen. i had a guy who was a candidate never should have won. only way i could use is if i was with a life or dead woman and he was with both and he still got the nomination. i m agreeing. i think he will win i m wake, i think he could win and i think there are worse choices than him. real live. dana: yes, dime i admire his ability to keep his
with that line and then did you. well, that s why i wrote the monologue. greg: wouldn t let me do my line. greg: mine is subtle. dana: wrote the punch line. greg: climbed my way up the monologue there i have it standing there by the way, the guy still has 68,000 followers on his other twitter account which he has left open while starting a new one. dana: probably sat there and hoped that maybe, you know. maybe he follows them back. dick dick let s not take this too lightly. the polls show this guy is running tightly. i know. democratic primary in new york there is no runoffs. you can win you may say that but i have seen worse happen. i had a guy who was a candidate never should have won. only way i could use is if i was with a life or dead woman and he was with both and he still got the nomination. i m agreeing. i think he will win i m wake, i think he could win and i think there are worse choices than him. real live.
talk about politics and strange bedfellows. when he was the governor, mark sanford disappeared from the state, was really in argentina to visit his mistress. he and his wife went through a bitter divorce and he s now engaged to that one-time mistre mistress. now he s running for congress and it s reported he asked his ex-wife jenny sanford to run his campaign. let s bring back our chief political analyst gloria borger who is looking into this story. originally reported in new york magazine with the punch line that said sanford said to his ex-wife, i m quoting, i could pay you this time. what s going on here? i think he gives new meaning to the notion of being self-involved. don t you, wolf? from my reporting today, it s very clear to me jenny sanford was pretty taken aback by this request, but when you look at it
american motors. as the president of the company, he decided to close the factory in michigan and move all the production to wisconsin. remember, this is what he is volunteering as a humorous story about his dad closing down a factory in michigan. they had a high school band that was leading each of the candidates, and his band did not know how to play the michigan fight song. it only knew how to play the wisconsin fight song. so every time they would start playing on wisconsin, on wisconsin, my dad s political people would jump up and down and try to get them to stop, because they didn t want people in michigan to be reminded that my dad mad moved production to wisconsin. which is hilarious. see, the punch line is about shutting down the factory and putting all those people out of work in michigan and people being angry about it. see, it s hilarious. my dad had moved production to wisconsin. again, if there s anything i