&
Advertise Here with Today.com
 

Sep 25 2008

McCain burns Letterman

Published by Regina Avalos at 12:19 pm under politics, television Edit This

20080401mccainletterman533.jpg

A case where politics meets the entertainment world. Senator John McCain announced on Wednesday that he was suspending his presidential campaign to focus on the financial crisis facing the country at the moment. This has raised some eyebrows, and Obama has had his own thoughts on this stepping back by the Republican candidate.

With McCain suspending his campaign, the senator has canceled some of his appearances. One of them being an appearance that was set to take place last night on David Letterman. This caused Letterman to make a few cracks at the senator for not appearing as scheduled.

Thursday morning on the Today Show, one of McCain’s staff spoke out about the cancellation. He said right now McCain’s focus is on the crisis. Letterman said Sarah Palin should take over campaigning for the time being while McCain helps deal with the issues facing our country. Would Letterman have welcomed an appearance last night by Sarah Palin instead? Certainly sounds like it!

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google
Possibly-related Articles:                                        (auto-generated)
Advertise Here with Today.com

One Response to “McCain burns Letterman”

  1. threedegreeson 25 Sep 2008 at 2:40 pm edit this

    What McCain’s surrogate failed to mention, is that G.I. John was right down the street in another CBS studio taping a spot with Katie Couric, and had no plans to return to Washington until this afternoon. For more on this, and to see highlights from the show last night, come visit www.therelevantrhino.today.com

    Cheers

Trackback URI | Comments RSS

Leave a Reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.
Not A Member? Register for Free!

Advertise Here
Some Today.com contributors may have received a fee or a promotional product or service from a manufacturer for promotional consideration, while others receive no consideration at all. Each contributor is responsible for disclosing any such promotional consideration.