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"lampooned" Antonyms

305 Sentences With "lampooned"

How to use lampooned in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "lampooned" and check conjugation/comparative form for "lampooned". Mastering all the usages of "lampooned" from sentence examples published by news publications.

She also lampooned the Democratic ticket -- including Virginia Sen.
Whatever the intention, the invention was lampooned savagely in the press.
He lampooned rappers with half-ass rhymes on some space shit.
Jimmy Jacobs lampooned the Bruiser Brody gimmick in his early career.
Maduro is often lampooned for exaggerating the threats against his government.
The strategic wisdom of those moves is lampooned by moderate Republicans.
All forms of expertise have been denigrated and lampooned of late.
The performance lampooned German politicians and criticized the country's treatment of refugees.
The "Ghostbusters" star lampooned Spicer during an unannounced appearance on the Feb.
Trump and McConnell have lampooned the idea of a Green New Deal.
He was lampooned in Saturday Night Live sketches as a nerdy wimp.
Nationally-syndicated newspaper comic Doonesbury lampooned the raid for targeting the infirm.
Russia has aggressively denied any involvement and has lampooned the British investigation.
He lampooned Trump's assertions that seasonal cold weather disproved climate-change science.
It's difficult to think of a modern celebrity South Park hasn't lampooned.
Thanks to his colorful persona, Fieri is often lampooned in film and television.
Ms. Bretécher embodied many of her characters' traits, and she readily lampooned them.
The Islamist-leaning democratic model he once touted increasingly resembles the authoritarianism he lampooned.
Powell also lampooned Trump's proposal that he could win over the African-American population.
He lampooned the Obama/Clinton decision to bomb Libya and send it into chaos.
He frequently lampooned Rubio's penchant for sweating under the lights of the debate stage.
He lampooned House Intelligence Committee Chairman Adam SchiffAdam Bennett SchiffAre Democrats turning Trump-like?
Yet, each time Trump said so, some of us in the media lampooned him.
Their claims have largely hinged on (lampooned) accusations of government overreach and communist indoctrination.
The film was lampooned by critics who thought it was gory and poorly plotted.
" In 1950, he wrote the widely lampooned "Across the River and Into the Trees.
For more than 30 years, Gerard Alessandrini has lampooned Broadway, with love and savagery.
Critics have lampooned CCP&aposs delays in delivering a usable crew vehicle on-schedule.
Baker lampooned Apple for its arguments that privacy concerns trump the needs of investigators.
We lampooned their mobilization of what we saw as a hopeless, hate-filled movement.
Many social media users lampooned the new look, calling it reminiscent of a cheese grater.
Five years ago, Mr Soderbergh's "Side Effects" lampooned the pharmaceutical industry's exploitation of mental illness.
He lampooned Morsi's attempts at speaking English and the bending of the rule of law.
Over the years, the group has adroitly lampooned its reputation as a collection of sad sacks.
Biden was lampooned by Saturday Night Live and by his potential 2020 adversary, President Donald Trump.
At a rally the other day in Mississippi, the president lampooned Dr. Blasey to big cheers.
The next to get lampooned was Pete Buttigieg, the openly gay mayor of South Bend, Ind.
Last year, Mr. Erdogan unsuccessfully sought the prosecution of a German comedian who had lampooned him.
No one could have lampooned America and its pro-American culture better than an American expatriate.
His pop culture bona fides were burnished when he was lampooned in Garry Trudeau's "Doonesbury" comic strip.
Allred was even lampooned on The Simpsons as being overly litigious, screaming "that's assault!" at minor interactions.
" Branstad lampooned the tactic as "unethical and unfair," and warned that he thinks there will be "repercussions.
In another Shakespearean reference, Ms.Vine has been lampooned on social media as a pushy, plotting Lady Macbeth.
Comedian Jimmy Fallon lampooned Kushner on "SNL" last week as a powerful but meek and voiceless aide.
Hudson Yards even shouldered pointed criticism from disability activists, who lampooned it for inaccessibility and various ADA violations.
In 2011, Mr. Benioff was kicked out of a big Oracle conference after he lampooned Oracle's cloud efforts.
Even Samsung, which lampooned Apple for the decision, seems to be tinkering with the idea of dropping it.
"A Case of Exploding Mangoes" (2008), shortlisted for the Man Booker Prize, lampooned the former Pakistani president Gen.
The show lampooned Trump on last night's show, drawing a quick response from him on his favorite medium, Twitter.
Twenty-five years after American Psycho lampooned Collins, we are living in a post-white man's world of pop.
Plenty of people lampooned Kellyanne Conway for invoking the extremely fake "Bowling Green massacre" to justify Trump's immigration ban.
On Thursday, Tim Hortons responded to the video which has been seen and lampooned widely in Canada and beyond.
Earlier this month he was lampooned for pleading ignorance about the myriad scandals surrounding Scott Pruitt, the EPA's administrator.
In January 2015, 12 people died an assault on the French satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo, which had lampooned Islam.
" The downside to tiny-house living is, of course, the cramped quarters, as lampooned on the television show "Portlandia.
Trump wasn't the only political figure to be lampooned ... there were also impostors of Melania Trump and Queen Elizabeth.
And this has already been lampooned and mocked for years, because others have tried to do the same thing.
But she was lampooned back home for being pictured holding Trump's hand in the Rose Garden of the White House.
Other claims in the book include that Camilla had newspaper and magazine cartoons that lampooned Diana in her downstairs bathroom.
His work, though lampooned, has received high marks from certain esteemed music journalists across the globe, as well as myself.
He could be cussed by housewives over breakfast, and lampooned by office clerks at lunch, and deal with all that.
The Hill: Cable networks went wall-to-wall with O'Rourke coverage while Trump lampooned the former congressman's expressive hand movements.
Paul Samuelson, one of the discipline's great figures, once lampooned stockmarkets for predicting nine out of the last five recessions.
Calling himself "a proud alum of Trump U.," Mr. Franken lampooned the Trump educational program, its offerings and its fees.
There were literary readings almost every night, and subversive theater that lampooned the system, using metaphors from baseball to Moliere.
"Deadpool" and "Green Lantern" are satirized, while "Batman" and fellow franchises are lampooned for their catchphrases, special effects and sequels.
Evangelicals have long complained that they are lampooned based on caricatures of their faith, resulting in little or no outrage.
In the minstrel show, blacks — and free blacks in particular — were objects of ridicule, lampooned for seeking equality and respectability.
They made shadow puppets that lampooned political leaders, and enacted savage, sometimes obscene satires of the events of the day.
A storm of Tweets lampooned him as well, with hash tags like #YoCai (I Fell) and #CaerEnLaPublica (Fall Into Public Schools).
Slogans that were lampooned then—Medicare for all, a $15 nationwide minimum wage, free tuition at public colleges—are now mainstream.
Metal is, however, alternately lauded and lampooned for its illegible logo examples, taking typography itself to the furthest brink of relevance.
Singer gets that his app won't cure cancer or "make the world a better place" as HBO's Silicon Valley has lampooned.
If there is a meaningful difference between today's whippersnappers and graybeards, it's how they've responded to being lampooned by the other.
George Will, the conscience of modern conservatism, recently lampooned Vice President Mike Pence for groveling before the extreme excesses of Trump.
A generation lampooned for living with its parents was settling into grandpa's garage apartment, and none of us considered it noteworthy.
While such affirmative-consent rules were lampooned on "Saturday Night Live" as political correctness run amok, they have become increasingly mainstream.
Others lampooned the entertainment, with many drawing comparisons to the Titanic band's final performance as the ocean liner sank in 1912.
Yes, it both lampooned and torpedoed the ritual that E3 has become, but also: yeah, guys, what about those other guys?
I might not either, if I had the experience that he did last May—being publicly scrutinized and then roundly lampooned.
Twitter told me that the company has no problem with being lampooned, they just don't want their users to be confused.
Mr. Morris lampooned conventional sexist behavior earlier on: His larger point is that men and women often behave just the same.
Ms. DeVos, who has been widely lampooned for her lack of expertise, can't stop talking about how much she loves charters.
On St. Patrick's Day in 2005, O'Keefe lampooned campus political correctness by demanding that the dining hall ban Lucky Charms cereal.
None of President Barack Obama's press secretaries was so memorably lampooned in viral comedy sketches as Spicer, portrayed by Melissa McCarthy.
The show has lampooned a number of cultural touchstones, but also isn't afraid of ruffling feathers whenever it feels like it.
Ten years after JonBenét's death, the 2006 indie feel-good movie Little Miss Sunshine examined and lampooned the child pageant industry.
The sketch lampooned the situation following an assessment by the US intelligence over Russia's election-related hacking that suggested Putin was involved.
It's already problematic that the credibility of the White House and its staff is being lampooned only two weeks into the job.
There's a lot of comedy in motherhood — just ask Ali Wong, who lampooned the experience in her 2016 comedy special Baby Cobra.
The fact that Viagra has been covered by some insurance companies that don't cover birth control was rightly lampooned in the media.
On the next week's episode of SNL, Justin Timberlake lampooned Bon Iver in a sketch with the Grammy nominees he beat out.
The Nintendo Wii was one of the most lampooned product names in history, and that device ended up conquering the console market.
It's an evening of self-congratulation, bad jokes and political bias, where Democrats go to get praised and Republicans to be lampooned.
The bad news: Christie is deeply unpopular in his home state of New Jersey and has been widely lampooned since endorsing Trump.
A Daily Mail columnist last week lampooned Prince Harry for teaming up with Oprah Winfrey for a television series about mental health.
Yet Coover's sardonic revulsion toward the often profligate, prodigal nation his literature has lampooned for 50 years has not yet grown absolute.
It's been 20 years since the release of "Office Space," the Mike Judge movie that lampooned the drudgery of the corporate workplace.
We're told Thomas is a Democrat and hates Trump just like the late-night host ... so he especially hated being lampooned that way.
Will Ferrell's loose impression of George W. Bush as a feckless boy-man lampooned the dangers of letting lovable dopes step into power.
That theory, that they might deter bombers even if they cannot detect bombs, was lampooned on Iraqi television by satirist Ahmed al-Basheer.
Yahoo may be lampooned for not being able to decide whether it's tech or media, but at least it doesn't hide the latter.
Her later portrait photography, critiqued and lampooned the flawless visions of commercial photography, deploying sardonic humor as a means of consolation and defense.
Medvedev was dogged by allegations of graft, which he denied, and lampooned by the Russian media for allegedly falling asleep during Putin's speeches.
The dress worn by Rihanna at last year's Met Gala brought international attention to Guo, though it was lampooned for resembling an omelette.
In The Painted Word, Wolfe lampooned a type of doctrinaire Modern Art he associated with critic and curator Clement Greenberg and other theorists.
Her son Matthew, 33, believes her blog and investigations inflamed a macho hatred among Malta's male elite of being lampooned by a woman.
Not to mention that decryption mandates have been widely lampooned by tech experts for opening the door to third-party hackers across the globe.
This ostensible disinterest is brilliantly lampooned in Thomas Rowlandson's 1788 watercolor, which shows Sir Joseph Banks, patron of explorers, about to eat an alligator.
Its actions have been lampooned among Egyptians on social media who are weary of the military's continuing expansion into economic activities in recent years.
But Snapchat is not the only company to run with a product like this — it's just the only one to get lampooned for it.
On Monday, the first day of Ramadan, the annual satirical television show "Selfie," which runs during the fasting month, lampooned the preoccupation with the plan.
Will Ferrell has lampooned the competitive worlds of car racing, figure skating, basketball and youth soccer, and now he's set his sights on competitive gaming.
While other candidates have been lampooned for robotic redundancies or caricatured as cut-and-paste campaigners, Mr. Sanders has made oratorical consistency his calling card.
Eastern, on Fox The longest winning streak in the N.F.L. belongs to the team lampooned for trading a first-round pick for receiver Amari Cooper.
Gettleman heard that people had lampooned the pick on social media and that fans had booed Jones's selection at a watch party at MetLife Stadium.
According to Mr Brenne, the rumbustious comedies of Aristophanes, in which any bigwig could be lampooned, form a single genre with scribblings on the ostraka.
The comedienne Melissa McCarthy cuttingly lampooned Spicer last weekend on "Saturday Night Live," portraying him as a belligerent spokesman with little regard for the facts.
They instead lampooned the elections by playing music in the streets and at voting centers, even ironically chanting the name of late dictator Enver Hoxha.
Trump Obama and comedian Seth Meyers lampooned Trump in 2011, as Trump was stoking the "birther" movement alleging Obama was not born in the United States.
While trying to meet his supporters' aspirations, Mr Rouhani must also balance the risk of a backlash by the very forces he lampooned in his campaign.
In essence, Rubio wanted to show his personal side after being lampooned as a scripted and robotic candidate following his run-in with New Jersey Gov.
McCain's core identity as a military man of distinction given his captive past as a prisoner of war was lampooned by the draft dodging Donald Trump.
SketchFactor, an app that billed itself as a user-generated guide for rooting out so-called sketchy neighborhoods, was lampooned as soon as it was released.
Mr Thiel is lampooned in HBO's "Silicon Valley", a brilliantly observed television-comedy series, and portrayed briefly in "The Social Network", a film about Mark Zuckerberg.
In a seven-minute video starring the band, their management, and a couple of '90s stars, the band lampooned those that said their end was near.
Religious ideology and professions of faith, especially Catholic ones, are lampooned as idiotic and venal, but the satire will likely infuriate traditional believers of any stripe.
In 423 B.C., in "The Clouds," the comic playwright Aristophanes lampooned him as making wrong appear right — inspiring the later charges that cost him his life.
Finally, Stephen Colbert lampooned President Trump for using the term "Spygate" to refer to his unsubstantiated accusations that the F.B.I. planted a spy in his campaign.
Kate McKinnon's Saturday Night Live cold open — that's the sketch before the credits — lampooned the real-life Hillary Clinton's recent struggles riding the New York City subways.
On Saturday night's episode, the show lampooned Trump's meeting with former GOP nominee Mitt Romney, who is rumored to be in the running for a cabinet position.
In the first year of his presidency, Donald Trump has lampooned the media any time they've dared to publish criticisms of and negative facts about his administration.
If American politicians have been lampooned for being Luddites, the British Parliament's Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee has built a reputation for thoroughness and detailed questioning.
HARARE, Oct 2380 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Denigrated by friends and lampooned at work, Jimson Hove had a reputation as a ruthless womaniser who would die of AIDS.
" (Queen Latifah played Ms. Ifill when "Saturday Night Live" lampooned the debates.) "My job as a reporter," Ms. Ifill explained, "is not to know what I think.
The GOP nominee was lampooned in a nearly 10-minute-long cold open that depicted him as a racist buffoon in the throes of a debate meltdown.
Critics reached a near-consensus of disapproval, drag queens lampooned it and world-class film professors such as Wesleyan University's Jeanine Basinger placed it in their syllabuses.
Female body types have always cycled in and out of style; yet with men, alternatives to the ideal of imposing physicality have usually been ignored or lampooned.
Astonishingly, the belief that vaccination could turn children into cattle took hold in England – a mass delusion that was lampooned by the cartoonist James Gillray (pictured top).
Bild, a German newspaper, lampooned Mario Draghi, the ECB's soon-to-retire president, as Count Draghila, lamenting the "horror" for prudent savers who are being sucked dry.
He's a comedy signifier, most famously lampooned by Will Ferrell on "Saturday Night Live" for many years, but he also seems to be in on the joke.
Earlier this year, Kate McKinnon lampooned Kellyanne Conway's efforts to spin the news while being interviewed on talk shows in a couple of sketches on Saturday Night Live.
The popularising of Medicare for all is largely owing to Mr Sanders's evangelising during the 2016 presidential primaries, when the idea was lampooned by Hillary Clinton as unworkable.
On soda, he pushed for a tax, then a ban on soda purchases with food stamps, and finally a much-lampooned limit on the size of sugary drinks.
In an article published on a magazine website, he lampooned U.S. golf fans in a crude rant for which both Willet and Europe captain Darren Clarke later apologized.
The tweets lampooned the U.K. for blaming Russia for poisoning a former spy, jokingly claiming that the U.K. would probably blame Russia for unrelated things like bad weather.
Johnson had lampooned that timeline as "laughably unambitious" and acknowledged that accelerating it would cost more, but that it would also offer a major boost to national productivity.
In one of the clips shown by the television network, Kelly lampooned MSNBC and CNN for allowing Trump to call into the network regularly for 30-minute interviews.
But if you want to see this annoying genre lampooned especially mercilessly, the caustic new "Bajillion Dollar Propertie$," on the Seeso streaming service, is the destination for you.
Silicon Valley has been lampooned as the place where entrepreneurs like to declare they're "making the world a better place" when they're actually just trying to make money.
"Saturday Night Live" lampooned the pumpkin spice obsession in a fake commercial that imagined a pumpkin spice "intimate care wash" from the makers of Summer's Eve — Autumn's Eve.
Other pieces targeted the snobbery of New York's social world, lampooned journalistic clichés and concocted playful absurdities, such as the pope giving battle orders to the Swiss Guard.
Other pieces targeted the snobbery of New York's social world, lampooned journalistic clichés and concocted playful absurdities, such as the pope giving battle orders to the Swiss Guard.
The message came into sharp relief when he lampooned the type of building projects his long-defeated 2016 rival proposed during their campaign more than two years ago.
Mr. Zelensky, a comedian, had frequently lampooned Mr. Klitschko on his Saturday Night Live-style variety show, portraying him as a dunderheaded member of Ukraine's shadowy, corrupt elite.
I asked Judge about a rumor that surrounds the film: that Fox spiked it because it lampooned so many of Fox's advertisers, not to mention Fox News itself.
One of Trump's primary election victory speeches in March, held at Mar-a-Lago, was widely lampooned as an infomercial for Trump-branded steaks, water, magazines and wine.
There was a time when his predecessor, Tony Abbott, was lampooned for giving national-security-themed news conferences in front of an ever-growing number of Australian flags.
The Central Asian country once lampooned by Sacha Baron Cohen's bumbling TV journalist character, offers great potential for international retailers, according to research from management consulting firm A.T. Kearney.
Another hit, with, more than 240,000 notes, was a video post featuring Sanders reacting to a Saturday Night Live clip that lampooned Clinton for adopting some of his messaging.
Their ragtag shows lampooned highbrow theater musicals and satirized political events — for instance, their staging of the wedding of Richard Nixon's daughter Tricia ended in an LSD-fueled orgy.
The Democratic National Convention began with an emphasis on outsiders—specifically, the much-derided, much-lampooned, mostly young Bernie Sanders dissidents protesting in the arena and on the streets.
No public figure is spared: several groups also hilariously lampooned Donald Trump, and past politicians that have been skewered include former Philadelphia mayors, Newt Gingrich, and George W. Bush.
He was booed in front of foreign dignitaries at liberation hero Nelson Mandela's memorial service in 2013, lampooned in the media and criticized for overseeing years of economic decline.
Handel, who faces Democrat Jon Ossoff in a runoff next month, lampooned Thursday's federal court decision to reopen voter registration in a Monday fundraising email signed by the candidate.
You were the formerly anonymous blogger behind "The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs," an Internet hit in the mid-00s, which mercilessly lampooned that wearer of black mock turtlenecks.
It was lampooned in Garry Trudeau's "Doonesbury" cartoons: The character of Barbara Ann "Boopsie" Boopstein served on the task force, when not busy channeling one of her previous incarnations.
Since its debut in 2002, the "Resident Evil" movie franchise has been largely lampooned by critics, but it remains the highest-grossing series of video game movies to date.
The White Sox were righteously lampooned for how they complained about how upper management dealt with the presence of Drake LaRoche, the young son of former slugger Adam LaRoche.
For years, Lyons reported on Silicon Valley as a technology editor at Newsweek and lampooned one of its defining icons with his popular blog The Secret Diary of Steve Jobs.
SNL also lampooned our increasingly absurdist prescription-drug ads, which are so pervasively out of control that Super Bowl audiences were treated to a cutesy ad for opioid-induced constipation.
Descending at a stately pace to the foyer, where a crowd of bemused journalists awaited him, the reality-television star was lampooned as a false prophet on a conveyor belt.
Harold Wilson was lampooned by cartoonists and comedians in 1967 when he told voters that the "pound here in Britain, in your pocket" would not change value after a devaluation.
Trump on Wednesday attempted to cast doubt on the future of "Saturday Night Live," which has lampooned presidents and politicians from both parties since it first aired 41 years ago.
Actress Melissa McCarthy also lampooned White House press secretary Sean Spicer in a sketch that reportedly rattled Trump, who allegedly disliked seeing a woman portray one of his top aides.
Spy, the beloved satirical magazine that lampooned the rich, famous, and powerful from 1986 to 1998, has been revived as a digital pop-up for the remainder of the election.
Her decision to do so, despite those objections, may have been influenced by an episode in March, when a German comic, Jan Böhmermann, lampooned Mr. Erdogan with a crude poem.
Albee's earliest plays, such as "The American Dream" (1961), lampooned the American family, and all families that felt they should be protected by the status quo—or by their wealth.
Last year he took a sabbatical from work after Tanzania's government banned one of the group's titles that had published a cartoon by Mwampembwa that lampooned then President Jakaya Kikwete.
An era like the 1950s, which used to be lampooned for its stifling conformity — all those organization men in their gray flannel suits — has since been revered for its stability.
Out-of-context teasing is also fair game: Gritty, the Philadelphia Flyers' mascot, lampooned the Astros at a recent game by whacking a trash can with their logo on it.
Benítez was lampooned for his belief in zonal marking on set pieces and for his insistence on "squad rotation;" now both are employed by most, if not all, English teams.
" A conservative with a penchant for bomb-throwing who has been lampooned by a Georgia reporter for delivering "Wagnerian" pronouncements, he began with what he called his "Georgia Tech hearing.
But the only one laughing is Brent himself: his shrill, awkward laugh is deployed at regular intervals, like the catchphrases Gervais has alternately lampooned and used in his other comedic roles.
Although US data speeds are often lampooned for being laughably slower than other Asian and European countries, the US was a pioneer in creating and adopting 4G and 4G LTE networks.
The government floated another version of a Latin script, featuring digraphs (pairings of letters to represent a single sound, such as sh or ch in English), but it was mercilessly lampooned.
During the 1992 campaign, the former Arkansas governor's eating habits became fodder for Saturday Night Live, which lampooned his wavering dedication to low-intensity exercises -- like jogging in very short shorts.
These days, she's one of those people she lampooned all those years ago; her use of Vegenaise and nutritional yeast is now almost comical in its juxtaposition to her past life.
At the time of his death, last week, at seventy-six, he had published more than nine hundred and fifty drawings that lampooned sophisticates and pseudo-sophisticates with dry, incisive jabs.
Millennials have been routinely lampooned as apathetic and lazy — but recent articles (like this one from BuzzFeed) are shifting the discussion to a concern of the generation burning out from overwork.
In the clip above, Mr. Poperechny lampooned how the main state TV news program might cover him, mocking the mannerisms of TV anchor Dmitri Kiselyov, one of the Kremlin's chief propagandists.
"Orange is the New Black", a television show set in a women's prison, recently lampooned a private-prison takeover, after which the inmates are forced to sew lingerie for $1 an hour.
" And last year, he lampooned claims that he was a secret Muslim by remarking on how tough it was to be President "all while finding time to pray five times a day.
Earthbound on the SNES humorously swapped the fantasy trapping of role-playing games for the early '90s American Southwest, and Grand Theft Auto has lampooned American cities since its debut in '97.
The Randy Rogel-penned "Yakko's World" (which Paulsen delivered in one take) became the show's most iconic moment—later to be lampooned when Yakko attempts to rhyme every word in the dictionary.
Lampooned as a hazard on SNL, "hoverboard" fires have been touted mostly as a laughing matter, but the spike in burning accidents has prompted many airlines and even universities to ban them.
It became even clearer that Donald Trump hates Sean Spicer and is blaming him for his administration's many failures—Trump was also apparently particularly disgusted that Spicer was lampooned by a woman.
The overarching theme of the night, of course, was a lack of black nominees, as Mr. Rock repeatedly lampooned the movie industry in an opening monologue and various sketches throughout the show.
It is just the kind of glitzy privatization of public space that gets both celebrated and lampooned with the #LiveLoveLebanon hashtag, and an emblem of angst over the elder Hariri's redevelopment strategy.
Ms. Warren lampooned a recent New York Times opinion article, "Back to the Center, Democrats," by the onetime Clinton strategist Mark Penn and the former New York City Council president Andrew Stein.
Anyone who professes shock about President Trump being lampooned or (in the case of acceptance speeches) criticized either hasn't been paying attention or likely isn't much of a candidate to watch anyway.
Some enchanted evening, you may raise your drug prices ... Pharmaceutical bad boy and accused fraudster Martin Shkreli will be lampooned in a satirical new musical in New York, according to a report Wednesday.
She was also lampooned for a late-night hunt for toilet paper which took her to her posh former home on the Peak after she failed to find any at a convenience store.
Spicer's categorical assertion that "this was the largest audience to ever witness an inauguration - period" was widely challenged in media reports citing crowd count experts and was lampooned on social media as well.
That became clear for Ms. Merkel after a German satirist lampooned the Turkish leader in a crude poem that prompted Mr. Erdogan to sue under a 19th century law on offending foreign leaders.
" In her 413 Democratic convention keynote speech, then-Texas Treasurer Ann Richards had lampooned Bush's upbringing and tongue-tied political style by joking Bush was "born with a silver foot in his mouth.
" Franco Moschino, who lampooned '80s-era materialism and later introduced eco-conscious collections and an awareness-raising show about AIDS (to which he succumbed in 1994), was designated the "designer of the times.
He offers a tough but sympathetic glimpse into a pocket of white America that is too easily lampooned in popular culture, and he does it as only someone who's lived in that world can.
For instance, this is how he responded to a question about Trumps unfounded illegal voters back in January: This sort of coy statement has been lampooned over and over, but it's a careful play.
President Trump continued to toss out ideas for reforming the current press conference protocol, adding that he thinks press secretary Sean Spicer is a "wonderful human being" that gets unfairly lampooned by the media.
But the US State Department's latest travel-warning campaign managed to do just that on Wednesday, after the department's Bureau of Consular Affairs tweeted a warning that was quickly lampooned as sexist and bizarre.
Joe Piscopo – who lampooned Frank Sinatra and played Gumby's horse Pokey during his early '80s tenure on the show – told The Washington Post that he's "very close" to declaring his candidacy for New Jersey governor.
President Trump went after "Saturday Night Live" in a Sunday tweet, after last night's season premiere lampooned Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh's Senate Judiciary hearing and featured Trump supporter Kanye West as the musical guest.
Family Guy leaned into the sorts of ironically racist and sexist humor that was popular in the late '90s, part of a wave of entertainment that lampooned what its creators perhaps saw as liberal overreach.
Diplo is played by James Van Der Beek, who lampooned his own celebrity in 2012 by playing himself on Nahnatchka Khan's short-lived (and criminally underappreciated) ABC sitcom Don't Trust The B in Apartment 23.
"More than being lampooned as a press secretary who makes up facts, it was Spicer's portrayal by a woman that was most problematic in the president's eyes, according to sources close to him," Politico reported.
Still, Mr. Erdogan's call for Turks to boycott American electronic goods, singling out Apple, was swiftly lampooned on social media, not least because the president himself is well known for owning and using an iPhone.
It depicted an Islamist takeover of France's institutions, and it was published on the day of the Charlie Hebdo shootings, when Muslim extremists slaughtered the staff of a satirical magazine that had lampooned their religion.
Kieft, who was later lampooned by Washington Irving in his satirical history as "William the Testy," considered the tobacco habit a waste of time and money and a bane to the morals of his constituents.
In 1980, Mr. Brooks's mother, Shirley Brooks, and his sister, Judi Brooks, opened Just Bulbs in Chelsea, which was once lampooned by David Letterman in a comedy sketch, along with a shop called Just Shades.
It was lampooned by the left, and fans of good music on both sides of the aisle, even as it was reflexively lauded by Fox News and theblaze, the latter of which misspelled McCoy's name.
Colbert paid tribute to the late justice on Monday night, describing how "no one was even making eye contact with me" at the White House Correspondents Dinner in 2006 after he lampooned Bush to his face.
Surrogates seized on the silver lining in the spin room and beyond, and Trump, lampooned for most of his performance, was praised by a good deal of the press for the way he started the debate.
Inspired, he started making videos on YouTube from his laundry room that lampooned the nation's state-run media and ruling elite, a moonlight exercise that eventually got him his own show on an Egyptian television station.
He's constantly lampooned – as he was in a hilarious episode of "Sunday with Lubach", which introduced the Netherlands to Trump by arguing, among other lures, that it has "the best tax evasion system God ever created".
In a tweet on December 19th, Milinovic lampooned SNS politician Vladimir Djukanovic for supporting the activities of the Serbian neo-Nazi group "Srbska Akcija," which had spray-painted the walls of leftist politician Marinika Tepic's house.
In the weeks following the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) announcement of a revised public charge rule, many observers have lampooned acting director of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) Ken Cuccinelli for his clumsy defense.
The DNC's ability to use its opposition research in surprise against Trump has been blunted, and some media outlets lampooned Clinton—not a bad outcome for an operation with little risk or cost for the perpetrators.
For some time now, President Trump has somehow resisted the impulse to open up his Twitter account and take potshots at "Saturday Night Live," the NBC late-night comedy series on which he is frequently lampooned.
"La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein," in which war is declared to brighten the spirits of a fictional grand duchy's ruler, lampooned European politics but also won the admiration of Otto von Bismarck upon its 1867 premiere.
Also on Monday morning, the conservative British television personality Piers Morgan, a host of "Good Morning Britain," lampooned Ms. Watson and the award, which he described as part of an "utterly ridiculous" culture of political correctness.
In perhaps the most famous -- and certainly most lampooned -- scene from "Spartacus," his fellow rebels, captured by the Roman army, rise to proclaim, "I'm Spartacus!" when told their lives will be spared if they identify him.
" He lampooned Mr. Bercow's height by likening him to one of the seven dwarves, recounting an exchange in which the speaker declared, "I'm not happy!" and a junior health minister replied, "Well, which one are you?
After Melissa McCarthy debuted her Sean Spicer impression last week, sources within the White House reportedly told Politico that the president was particularly upset by the fact that his press secretary was being lampooned by a woman.
"More than being lampooned as a press secretary who makes up facts, it was Spicer's portrayal by a woman that was most problematic in the president's eyes, according to sources close to him," Politico reported in February.
After a German comic lampooned Mr. Erdogan with a crude poem, Ms. Merkel initially criticized the verses, giving the impression — which she later said was a mistake — that she advocated curbing the freedom of satire in Germany.
Professor Hershkowitz's archival adventures were put to their most renowned use in "Tweed's' New York: Another Look" (1977), a revisionist look at the powerful machine politician who was memorably lampooned by Thomas Nast, the Harper's Weekly cartoonist.
In 2013, Lars Hedegaard, an outspoken critic of Islam and a defender of Lars Vilks, a Swedish cartoonist who had lampooned Muhammad, was shot at outside his Copenhagen home by a gunman disguised as a postal worker.
The women have also each been lampooned for "copying" other famous women: Melania Trump caught heat for lifting portions of a speech from First Lady Michelle Obama, while Kim Kardashian West has been known to "borrow" Beyonce's style.
DeVos' rocky performance at her confirmation hearing last month — which ended in part by her being lampooned on social media for suggesting schools keep guns for grizzly bears — led to a flood of emails and calls from opponents.
"Veep's" Julia Louis-Dreyfus lampooned Trump's concern about the size of his inaugural crowd by thanking the "million" people in the room, and closed by reading the Writers Guild of America's statement of opposition to the administration's policy.
The late-night host lampooned the press secretary for hiding from press among the bushes and he got so sick of hearing Spicer claim Trump to be doing a "phenomenal" job that he created a Muppets-themed remix.
The rambunctious former mayor of London has insulted or lampooned a series of world leaders including U.S. President Barack Obama, Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan, German Chancellor Angela Merkel and both the Democratic and Republican candidates to succeed Obama.
His "Jesus Christ Pose" lampooned the absurd self-deification of the Perry Ferrell's of the world, but was still subtle enough to earn Soundgarden a spot on Lollapalooza '92; while his "Big Dumb Sex" ethered cock rock bravado.
As controversies have mounted, Mr. Trump's poll numbers have shown that his base of support is still with him, as the NBC anchor Lester Holt (played by Michael Che) noted in this sketch that lampooned a recent interview.
For Lifetime, "You" -- already renewed for a second season -- thus feels like a shrewd evolution of its much-lampooned women-in-jeopardy formula into something more ambitious, wittier, and in its jaundiced way, just a little bit unnerving.
After an early sketch lampooned President Johnson (in a silly, but not very funny, segment about his top-secret barbecue sauce), the president complained in a late-night call to the home of the network's chairman, William Paley.
But by nightfall it had become the site of a made-up massacre, and by the morning that fake massacre was being lampooned across the internet and even had a fake donations site set up in its name.
They were co-authors of Mr. Obama's 2011 speech at the White House Correspondents Association dinner that lampooned Mr. Trump so harshly that it helped form his decision to make a real presidential bid, I'll-show-'em style.
The current crop of measured, forward-thinking artists—Simon Denny, Claudia Maté, Sarah Meyohas, Darren Bader—are making works that address notions of liquidity: Denny's mid-2015 show The Innovator's Dilemma lampooned the market; Maté's summer 2014 Sweet Finances!
PARIS (Reuters) - France's widely lampooned environment minister denied having a taste for the high life and said on Friday he would not resign over accusations he squandered taxpayer money, in a scandal that risks upsetting the government's reform drive.
Stylistically, this is not new terrain for Yan, whose fiction has lampooned some of the darkest moments in Chinese history, including the Great Leap Forward, the Cultural Revolution and the 1990s AIDS scandal in his home province of Henan.
Their acclaimed Comedy Central series may have been best known for President Obama's "anger translator," but it often lampooned scary movies with a specificity that could come only from a connoisseur of things that go bump in the night.
Speaking of turnout: While Biden needs to mull and put in place strategies to do better with young voters than he has done to date, he shouldn't get so carried away that the effort becomes an easily lampooned charade.
All politicians repeat good lines, but Mr. Sanders — lampooned as a freewheeling radical or rumpled professor who impulsively speaks his mind — is turning out to be perhaps the most on-message and disciplined of the candidates in the 2016 field.
Last year, they emceed the show just days before the election and toed the line with their monologue, in which they lightheartedly lampooned infamous moments from Clinton-Trump race, from Trump's "nasty woman" dig to Clinton's "basket of deplorables" comment.
Rubio's repetition of the same anti-Obama line while Christie relentlessly hammered him during Saturday's debate was widely lampooned online, putting one of Rubio's strengths as a candidate -- his ability to stay crisply on-message -- into a potentially major liability.
It was even cultural, becoming shorthand for both the best of social gaming and the worst of nerdom, indirectly boosting Felicia Day's career , being lampooned on South Park, and featuring in the most mainstream thing I can imagine: a Toyota commercial.
In 2004, President George W. Bush lampooned his Democratic opponent, Senator John F. Kerry of Massachusetts, with a video clip of Mr. Kerry in a wet suit that made him appear to be windsurfing back and forth across the water.
For one thing, Bill Hader, who clearly loved the movies he lampooned, does not appear in these episodes; he is off making the second season of Barry, his HBO comedy series about a hitman who aspires to be an actor.
With their flair for satirical wit, they perfectly lampooned the loathed American president with "Trump Baby," a 19-foot floating balloon in the shape of a wailing orange baby in a diaper holding a cellphone with Twitter on the screen.
Industry executives were not happy with the paper's stance, but they got especially upset when it produced a video, part of a biweekly commentary called La Pulla, that lampooned tax opponents for ignoring scientific evidence about the risks of excess sugar.
I was part of a campaign to oppose a Parliamentary bill [the Racial and Religious Hatred Act] in 2006 because I draw a distinction between race and religion, and I think religious practices and beliefs can and should be lampooned.
The response so far among everyday Americans and Britons reflects, at least in part, the toxic effects of their populist leaders -- the ones most recently lampooned by The Economist as "Twitterdum and Twaddledee" -- on the democratic institutions of their respective countries.
There were several tweets from Darcy's account in which CNN was lampooned for low ratings and messages critical of CNN when then-staffer Donna Brazile allegedly leaked town hall questions to Clinton during the Democratic primary against Bernie Sanders back in 2015.
They later lampooned George Clooney on June 6 at the AFI Lifetime Achievement Award ceremony in his honor, where they quoted the Friends theme song and took credit for his success, saying their sitcom gave his breakthrough show E.R. a bigger audience.
A recent episode of the snappily named "The stage of optimism that Songun presented -- Volume 11," which airs on state-controlled Korea Central Television (KCTV), lampooned the US leader and "oppressed" South Koreans ahead of the North's nuclear warhead test this month.
In other words: Far from undermining the Times' credibility or hurting its bottom line, Stephens and Weiss (and to a lesser extent, David Brooks, Thomas L. Friedman, and other easily lampooned Times opinion makers) were good for business because people hated them.
Over the years, the rock documentary has become an increasingly lampooned genre of filmmaking, giving rise to such parodies as Hard Core Logo, Brothers of the Head, and Documentary Now's Gentle and Soft: The Story of the Blue Jean Committee Part 1.
Palin was catapulted to national stardom when she was picked by Arizona Senator John McCain to be the Republican vice presidential nominee during the 2008 election, when her folksy demeanor and gaffes on the campaign trail were lampooned by Saturday Night Live and countless others.
In the year since gunmen murdered 251 people in Paris in an attack aimed at Charlie Hebdo, a satirical weekly newspaper that had lampooned Islam, jihadists have embarked on an ever-widening campaign of global bloodletting that would appear to have little strategic value.
As the risks of his trade war become apparent in key electoral battlegrounds, his low-yield summits with the leaders of Russia and North Korea are lampooned and the Russia investigation threatens, the President is trying to do what he does best -- bend political reality.
In the postwar decades, he and other builders turned home building into a large-scale production, lowering the cost of homeownership with standardized layouts and designs that would be lampooned by cultural critics but were crucial to the growth of the American middle class.
Yet some Democrats, having witnessed how Mr. Trump lampooned and eventually bulldozed the Republican field in 2016, are nervous that Mr. Trump has shrewdly chosen to define Mr. Biden as the front-runner early on, identifying him as the greatest threat in a general election.
In 23, David Cameron supported a backbencher's private bill to push UK time forward by an hour, but it was eventually filibustered and then lampooned by Jacob Rees-Mogg, who jokingly proposed Somerset deserved its own time zone a quarter of an hour behind London's.
Its components — a barker, musicians, shallow stage, painted curtain — created a scene so familiar to people of all classes that the sideshow became a format for riotous caricatures and political cartoons that lampooned the changing regimes of 2000th-century France from the 247s on.
While Kim is often lampooned over his hairstyle, his style of dress and the rudimentary state of North Korea's civilian air fleet, he has demonstrated an impressive ability to consolidate power and to conduct an aggressive and strategic foreign policy since becoming supreme leader in 2011.
Mr. Johnson lampooned the Labour Party leader, Jeremy Corbyn, when he balked at the prime minister's call for an early election, calling him a "chlorinated chicken" (his reference was to chemically-treated poultry from the United States, which many Britons fear would flood the country after Brexit).
"Notwithstanding the fact that serious scientists, military leaders, business people, and average citizens are interested in the subject of intelligent life in the universe, political leaders tend to worry about whether they will be lampooned if they broach the subject," he told me in an email.
Politico reported: More than being lampooned as a press secretary who makes up facts, it was Spicer's portrayal by a woman that was most problematic in the president's eyes, according to sources close to him… "Trump doesn't like his people to look weak," added a top Trump donor.
In a post-mortem interview with the Washington Post, Wilmore conceded, "I lost the room early," but added that he was "thrown" by the fact the media figures he lampooned didn't seem willing to laugh at themselves -- another tradition, frankly, which hasn't reflected particularly well on the attendees.
Fernando Llorente, a 34-year-old who spent a good portion of the last few months being lampooned for his lack of mobility, nudged home the strike that made it 4-3 on the night, and 4-4 on aggregate, putting Spurs back on top and City out.
A gardening spade with chains dangling from it lampooned racist terminology; bottle caps gathered from bars were used to adorn comically tall basketball hoops in a 22015 public installation called "Higher Goals"; hair swept from the floors of black barbershops became a leitmotif of many sculptures and installations.
Standards for the metre and kilogram were duly cast in solid platinum, and while Napoleon lampooned the new units, the Système international d'unités (SI, or the metric system, as it is better known) descended from them and became the official measurement in all countries except Myanmar, Liberia and the United States.
The classic scavenger hunt still exists today, of course, but it's doubtful many of them are quite the way they were in their 1930s heyday, when New York socialites conducted such outlandish ones that they were lampooned in the 1936 screwball comedy "My Man Godfrey," starring William Powell and Carole Lombard.
Like when Diane Abbott, a British politician, was caught drinking a canned mojito on the London Overground and was lampooned in the press, and Gay Twitter master Louis Staples did what we do best and created a thread of Diane Abbott dressed in the same color combinations as tinned cocktails.
Another comedian with a popular Twitter account lampooned Sun's sensibility: doctor: sir ur dyingjomny sun: flowmers are beautifel n we shld kiss all the cloumds Sun is aware of the limits of this tactic, but as he points out, Twitter is a very crowded room in which to be heard.
Just recently, the company announced a Trust and Safety Council dedicated to paring down the platform's huge troll problem, but in the same breath suspended Trusty Support, a popular parody account that lampooned the company for its propensity for sending out canned responses to users who said they were receiving harassment and threats.
But at a party at London's Ritz hotel, Farage was cheered by his financial backers before offering guests pyramids of Ferrero Rocher chocolates, a joking reference to a long-running and much-lampooned 'ambassador's reception' TV advert in which the gold-foiled confection is cast as the delicacy of choice for diplomats.
Trump's fighting with McCain and Graham, of course, stems back to the 2016 campaign, in which Trump lampooned opponent Graham -- at one point offering the senator's cell phone number on national television -- and said that McCain wasn't a war hero when he was captured in Vietnam and held as a prisoner of war.
Bucking the then-popular slasher trend for a pastoral vibe that hits closer to home, this adaptation of a Stephen King short story about possessed children who murder all of the adults in their Nebraska town was lampooned in a South Park episode, so you know it's part of the cultural unconscious.
Feasting on the laughing-stock the White House spokesman had become, the satirists at "Saturday Night Live" lampooned Mr Spicer as a raging lunatic, prone to battering amazed journalists with his podium, and, what is more, a tragic figure—an example of the chewed-up former collaborator that Mr Trump's career path is strewn with.
BERLIN — President Recep Tayyip Erdogan of Turkey tried again to silence one of his German critics, but failed this time when a court denied his request on Tuesday to block an open letter by the head of one of Germany's most powerful media companies expressing support for a comedian who lampooned the Turkish leader.
His manner was sympathetic — fawning, to some, and often lampooned — but the formula worked, and among the 21954 or so stars he interviewed were some of the brightest: Paul Newman, Alec Baldwin, Neil Simon, Sally Field, Dennis Hopper and Sidney Lumet, to name a few — and they came along in just the first season.
Whether or not Reno actually liked or understood the impression doesn't change the fact that she was lampooned for being herself: a less than traditionally feminine woman who was just trying to do her job in a male-dominated arena while under constant scrutiny that had nothing to do with her actual performance in office.
This also includes comic gems like "Politics and Poker," in which cynical back-room deal-making is lampooned to a frisky waltz; and, best of all, "Little Tin Box," a deliciously clever song mocking the feeble excuses that corrupt city officials might make before a judge to explain how their bank accounts ballooned, even as their salaries remained meager.
They have lost far more than they won, endured more agony than ecstasy and been lampooned for everything from their attendance to their uniforms, and for all those reasons — and more — a city that had not claimed a champion since the Braves won the World Series in 1995 was ready to celebrate with abandon once more.
That trend has continued, however, since Trump's inauguration, with sketches featuring Alec Baldwin's Trump and Melissa McCarthy as Press Secretary Sean Spicer becoming their own version of must-see TV. Throughout awards season, performers like Meryl Streep and Julia Louis-Dreyfus made remarks that poked at Trump, in the former case eliciting a Twitter response ("overrated") that became its own much-lampooned meme.
Though lampooned as "trickle-down economics" in retrospect, this tax reform had a firm economic vision: The basic concept behind Reaganomics is that cutting government spending, deregulating the corporate sector, and reducing taxes would create a business-friendly environment that would ultimately support the middle class by encouraging companies to raise wages and hire more employees (the results of this assumption are shaky).
I talked with The New Yorker's Isaac Chotiner about these issues... Here's the Q&A... Read more of Tuesday's "Reliable Sources" newsletter... And subscribe here to receive future editions in your inbox... FOR THE RECORD -- Stephen Colbert's "Late Show" lampooned Trump's speech with a "Bird Box" parody... ("Late Show") -- Bret Baier has signed a new multi-year deal with Fox News.
Late-night host Jimmy Kimmel on Monday lampooned President TrumpDonald John TrumpFacebook releases audit on conservative bias claims Harry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Recessions happen when presidents overlook key problems MORE's refusal to say that he believes the Kremlin interfered in the 2016 election during a press conference with Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Finding new voices for cartoons may be more challenging, because there are so few outlets producing one-panel gags, but also because readers and artists have come to expect something very specific from The New Yorker cartoon, the gently observed comedy-of-manners-style that "Seinfeld" lampooned in an episode in which Elaine confronts an editor who can't explain the joke of a cartoon.
He has lampooned those universal welfare programs as unrealistic and more beneficial to the rich than the poor—"I'm skeptical of spending [tax revenue] on millionaires and billionaires"—and defended his work for the corporate-downsizing artists at McKinsey, hoping his steady gradualism on health care, taxes, and education will win over party elites, wealthy donors, and the well-to-do suburban and exurban base voters who fear that the stable status quo of the Clinton and Obama years is being disrupted by a surging left.
Those factors, combined with Cable's detail about his daughter Hope and Deadpool 2's use of time travel, makes it seem like the 2008-'09 version of the team (give or take a few members) is the most likely X-Force scenario: In this version (which was written by Craig Kyle and Chris Yost, who coincidentally have co-writing credits in Thor: Ragnarok), X-Force is a black-ops team that Cyclops sends on missions too bloody for the X-Men, who have a hard line against killing, as was mercilessly lampooned in Deadpool 2.
Kamala HarrisKamala Devi HarrisHarry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Warren offers plan to repeal 220006 crime law authored by Biden Sanders leads Democratic field in Colorado poll MORE (D-Calif.) and O'Rourke in the Democratic dash for cash (The New York Times) … "Saturday Night Live" lampooned former Vice President Joe BidenJoe BidenHarry Reid: 'Decriminalizing border crossings is not something that should be at the top of the list' Warren offers plan to repeal 2202 crime law authored by Biden Panel: Jill Biden's campaign message MORE after allegations of inappropriate contact emerged over the last week and a half … Tommy Tuberville, the former football coach at Auburn University, announced his candidacy for the GOP nod to take on Sen.

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