prinCZess
Warrior, Writer, Performer, Perv
To all those with Instagram accounts: For the low, low price of endorsing Michael Bloomberg for President, you too can win yourself a new car a tropical vacation 150 dollars!
Sadly, nudity has been barred from potential hiring. So, alas, no 'Bloomberg 2020' cheesecake/beefcake shots...Which, honestly, would have been about the greatest thing to come out of a US presidential election since ol' John Adams and T-boy ya' boy Jefferson were accusing each other of excessive French-ness and hermaphroditism, respectively.
Slightly more seriously...Bloomberg and Steyer seem, between them, intent on demonstrating once and for all whether American elections can withstand millionaires with personal money-dropping willingness. In the case of Steyer, the answer seems to be 'yes', because nobody seems to like him. In Bloomberg's case...Well, much as he seems to get universal mockery, recent national polling has him tied with Warren in third, DNC rule-changes mean he might be at a debate in February, and polling/prediction outfits are tossing him into the mix as a legit possibility to earn delegates at the least.
And if that becomes the case, the likely result is looking to be 'Contested Convention HO!' Because this season's writers of 'America' apparently decided to turn the drama up to 11.
The Bloomberg campaign is using the social marketing agency Tribe to recruit influencers. A post on Tribe’s platform – which matches influencers with paid opportunities – asks influencers to apply for the gig by explaining “why Mike Bloomberg is the electable candidate who can rise above the fray, work across the aisle so ALL Americans feel heard & respected”. The advert specifies influencers should “be honest, passionate and be yourself!”
Sadly, nudity has been barred from potential hiring. So, alas, no 'Bloomberg 2020' cheesecake/beefcake shots...Which, honestly, would have been about the greatest thing to come out of a US presidential election since ol' John Adams and T-boy ya' boy Jefferson were accusing each other of excessive French-ness and hermaphroditism, respectively.
Slightly more seriously...Bloomberg and Steyer seem, between them, intent on demonstrating once and for all whether American elections can withstand millionaires with personal money-dropping willingness. In the case of Steyer, the answer seems to be 'yes', because nobody seems to like him. In Bloomberg's case...Well, much as he seems to get universal mockery, recent national polling has him tied with Warren in third, DNC rule-changes mean he might be at a debate in February, and polling/prediction outfits are tossing him into the mix as a legit possibility to earn delegates at the least.
And if that becomes the case, the likely result is looking to be 'Contested Convention HO!' Because this season's writers of 'America' apparently decided to turn the drama up to 11.