ENER Sen John Kennedy critiqes Biden on his latest American "Energy Suicide" Policy . You can't fix Stupid!

Millwright

Knuckle Dragger
_______________
Run time and synopsis or it's outta here.

Maybe you too.

You know the rules and flagrantly defy them.
 

night driver

ESFP adrift in INTJ sea
On a similar note, the RFK JR Super Bowl ad was AWESOM. Looked like a actual reedit of an actual late 1960 ad for JFK, with RFK Jr picka weidte in.

JUST AWESOME!!!

Rebecca Davis O’Brien
By Rebecca Davis O’Brien
  • Feb. 11, 2024, 10:25 p.m. ET

Yes, that catchy jingle you heard from your television just before halftime at the Super Bowl was an ad supporting a Kennedy running for president, and it looked and sounded almost exactly the way it did in 1960.
A super PAC supporting Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s presidential bid ran the ad, which was essentially a reboot of an ad supporting Mr. Kennedy’s uncle John F. Kennedy in his 1960 presidential campaign. It features the same jingle, the same cheerful cartoons interspersed with candid photographs of the candidate, into which the younger Mr. Kennedy’s face has been superimposed.
The PAC, American Values 2024, paid $7 million for the spot, the PAC’s co-founder, Tony Lyons, said. It took about 36 hours to produce, he said.
Mr. Kennedy is running for president as an independent, having left the Democratic Party in October, arguing that the Democratic primary system was rigged against him. His candidacy has concerned many Democrats who fear that Mr. Kennedy — an environmental lawyer who has become a prominent purveyor of conspiracy theories — could siphon votes away from President Biden.

The super PAC has heightened suspicions about Mr. Kennedy’s base of support. A substantial portion of the PAC’s funding, about $15 million, came from Timothy Mellon, a Republican who has also given $10 million to a super PAC backing former President Donald J. Trump.

Super Bowl ads are often heavy on nostalgia — commercials on Sunday night featured vintage Volkswagen footage, a “Scrubs” reunion, and Ben Affleck and Matt Damon in Boston.
But the Kennedy ad hit a different note. While John F. Kennedy was running in 1960 as a 43-year-old Democrat, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is 70 years old and running as an independent — a self-described spoiler. (Despite Mr. Kennedy’s age, the ad still portrays him as youthful and athletic, including a shot of him on skis.)
Mr. Kennedy has invoked his storied political family and its legacy throughout his candidacy. But many of his relatives have denounced him.
In July, the former president’s grandson, Jack Schlossberg, posted a video calling his uncle’s campaign “an embarrassment,” saying the younger Mr. Kennedy is “trading in on Camelot, celebrity conspiracy theories and conflict for personal gain and fame.”

The Super Bowl ad received a mixed reception on the social media platform X. Ben Shapiro, a right-wing writer, called it “shockingly politically astute.”
Robert Shrum, a longtime Democratic political consultant who worked with former Senator Edward M. Kennedy, wrote: “This RFK Jr. Super Bowl ad is a straight out plagiarism of JFK ad from 1960. What a fraud — and to quote Lloyd Bentsen with a slight amendment: ‘Bobby, you’re no John Kennedy.’ Instead you are a Trump ally.”




OR
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvXJJRjGVT4
 

zeker

Has No Life - Lives on TB
On a similar note, the RFK JR Super Bowl ad was AWESOM. Looked like a actual reedit of an actual late 1960 ad for JFK, with RFK Jr picka weidte in.

JUST AWESOME!!!

Rebecca Davis O’Brien
By Rebecca Davis O’Brien
  • Feb. 11, 2024, 10:25 p.m. ET

Yes, that catchy jingle you heard from your television just before halftime at the Super Bowl was an ad supporting a Kennedy running for president, and it looked and sounded almost exactly the way it did in 1960.
A super PAC supporting Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s presidential bid ran the ad, which was essentially a reboot of an ad supporting Mr. Kennedy’s uncle John F. Kennedy in his 1960 presidential campaign. It features the same jingle, the same cheerful cartoons interspersed with candid photographs of the candidate, into which the younger Mr. Kennedy’s face has been superimposed.
The PAC, American Values 2024, paid $7 million for the spot, the PAC’s co-founder, Tony Lyons, said. It took about 36 hours to produce, he said.
Mr. Kennedy is running for president as an independent, having left the Democratic Party in October, arguing that the Democratic primary system was rigged against him. His candidacy has concerned many Democrats who fear that Mr. Kennedy — an environmental lawyer who has become a prominent purveyor of conspiracy theories — could siphon votes away from President Biden.

The super PAC has heightened suspicions about Mr. Kennedy’s base of support. A substantial portion of the PAC’s funding, about $15 million, came from Timothy Mellon, a Republican who has also given $10 million to a super PAC backing former President Donald J. Trump.

Super Bowl ads are often heavy on nostalgia — commercials on Sunday night featured vintage Volkswagen footage, a “Scrubs” reunion, and Ben Affleck and Matt Damon in Boston.
But the Kennedy ad hit a different note. While John F. Kennedy was running in 1960 as a 43-year-old Democrat, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is 70 years old and running as an independent — a self-described spoiler. (Despite Mr. Kennedy’s age, the ad still portrays him as youthful and athletic, including a shot of him on skis.)
Mr. Kennedy has invoked his storied political family and its legacy throughout his candidacy. But many of his relatives have denounced him.
In July, the former president’s grandson, Jack Schlossberg, posted a video calling his uncle’s campaign “an embarrassment,” saying the younger Mr. Kennedy is “trading in on Camelot, celebrity conspiracy theories and conflict for personal gain and fame.”

The Super Bowl ad received a mixed reception on the social media platform X. Ben Shapiro, a right-wing writer, called it “shockingly politically astute.”
Robert Shrum, a longtime Democratic political consultant who worked with former Senator Edward M. Kennedy, wrote: “This RFK Jr. Super Bowl ad is a straight out plagiarism of JFK ad from 1960. What a fraud — and to quote Lloyd Bentsen with a slight amendment: ‘Bobby, you’re no John Kennedy.’ Instead you are a Trump ally.”




OR
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvXJJRjGVT4
not 1 of them ads do anything for me.

NONE are memorable
 

ainitfunny

Saved, to glorify God.
Did nobody watch the video?
Nobody commented on it.
Your loss.
It has nothing to do with RFK or the Superbowl or
Superbowl ads, or RFK running for the Presidency.
 

CaryC

Has No Life - Lives on TB
On a similar note, the RFK JR Super Bowl ad was AWESOM. Looked like a actual reedit of an actual late 1960 ad for JFK, with RFK Jr picka weidte in.

JUST AWESOME!!!

Rebecca Davis O’Brien
By Rebecca Davis O’Brien
  • Feb. 11, 2024, 10:25 p.m. ET

Yes, that catchy jingle you heard from your television just before halftime at the Super Bowl was an ad supporting a Kennedy running for president, and it looked and sounded almost exactly the way it did in 1960.
A super PAC supporting Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s presidential bid ran the ad, which was essentially a reboot of an ad supporting Mr. Kennedy’s uncle John F. Kennedy in his 1960 presidential campaign. It features the same jingle, the same cheerful cartoons interspersed with candid photographs of the candidate, into which the younger Mr. Kennedy’s face has been superimposed.
The PAC, American Values 2024, paid $7 million for the spot, the PAC’s co-founder, Tony Lyons, said. It took about 36 hours to produce, he said.
Mr. Kennedy is running for president as an independent, having left the Democratic Party in October, arguing that the Democratic primary system was rigged against him. His candidacy has concerned many Democrats who fear that Mr. Kennedy — an environmental lawyer who has become a prominent purveyor of conspiracy theories — could siphon votes away from President Biden.

The super PAC has heightened suspicions about Mr. Kennedy’s base of support. A substantial portion of the PAC’s funding, about $15 million, came from Timothy Mellon, a Republican who has also given $10 million to a super PAC backing former President Donald J. Trump.

Super Bowl ads are often heavy on nostalgia — commercials on Sunday night featured vintage Volkswagen footage, a “Scrubs” reunion, and Ben Affleck and Matt Damon in Boston.
But the Kennedy ad hit a different note. While John F. Kennedy was running in 1960 as a 43-year-old Democrat, Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is 70 years old and running as an independent — a self-described spoiler. (Despite Mr. Kennedy’s age, the ad still portrays him as youthful and athletic, including a shot of him on skis.)
Mr. Kennedy has invoked his storied political family and its legacy throughout his candidacy. But many of his relatives have denounced him.
In July, the former president’s grandson, Jack Schlossberg, posted a video calling his uncle’s campaign “an embarrassment,” saying the younger Mr. Kennedy is “trading in on Camelot, celebrity conspiracy theories and conflict for personal gain and fame.”

The Super Bowl ad received a mixed reception on the social media platform X. Ben Shapiro, a right-wing writer, called it “shockingly politically astute.”
Robert Shrum, a longtime Democratic political consultant who worked with former Senator Edward M. Kennedy, wrote: “This RFK Jr. Super Bowl ad is a straight out plagiarism of JFK ad from 1960. What a fraud — and to quote Lloyd Bentsen with a slight amendment: ‘Bobby, you’re no John Kennedy.’ Instead you are a Trump ally.”




OR
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nvXJJRjGVT4

Different Kennedy.

The one in the original OP is about SENATOR Kennedy from Louisiana, and is an absolute hoot. Wish he was my Senator, instead of the scum bag we got. A conservative. And Republican.

The one you are talking about RFK Jr. the Environmental Lawyer and son of RFK Sr. from Mass. who also ran for President in the '60. An old fashioned Liberal. And ex-Demoncrat, running as an Independent. But still with Liberal Demoncrat mind set.
 

BUBBAHOTEPT

Veteran Member
Robert Shrum, a longtime Democratic political consultant who worked with former Senator Edward M. Kennedy, wrote: “This RFK Jr. Super Bowl ad is a straight out plagiarism of JFK ad from 1960. What a fraud — and to quote Lloyd Bentsen with a slight amendment: ‘Bobby, you’re no John Kennedy.’ Instead you are a Trump ally.”
Well, he certainly is pissing off all the right people... :kaid:
I find great enjoyment in that fact…
 

Murt

Veteran Member
The criminals in DC are very scared. They know there is no turning back from which they have come. Both Trump and Kennedy will go to war against our elites and shadow government run by people who will do anything to stay in power.
and that makes them even more dangerous
they are to the point that they have nothing to lose --they are all in and scorched earth if they lose
 
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