Too right about that. I was glad that I was able to catch it on tv. Got a little heated in there when they brought up the nanny...hopefully she looks like Mrs Witherspoon and not Ms Jolie...seems like there is more splanin' to do with that one
he was clearly trying to get to her to influence her answer much the same way hes tried with congressmen. this nanny gate is becoming more important than it should. they have plenty to nail him with already.
consider me a game changer. unlike in national treasure, i am in favor of changing the status quo. edit: didnt realize the cheaters side of the numbers.
Two great moments from Rep. Lynn Westmoreland's time in the spotlight: 1. Westmoreland questioned what the heck everybody was doing there in the first place, saying it wasn't Congress' role to investigate individual players and that "if we called everyone who was accused of using steroids before this committee, we'd have to shut this place down." Amen to that. 2. But since he was there, sitting in front of a microphone, Westmoreland then turned his guns on McNamee to ask why he never told Clemens during that recorded phone call that he was telling the truth. McNamee repeated his earlier alibi that when he said, "It is what it is," that was his way of saying he had said he'd told the truth. McNamee then said, "If I'd know he was going to air [the tape] on national TV, I would have said, 'I did tell the truth.' " Westmoreland seemed clearly bemused by that rationale, then got off the congressional quip of the day: "It depends on 'is-what-it-is' means, I guess."