Some dogs beg for treats — Roxie? She begs to go sledding.
The Waukesha, Wisconsin, Sheltie wants nothing more than to ride the frozen wave, according to ABC 7, who reported the story, and her owner is happy to oblige.
“Considering all the other dogs I’ve seen, they are too scared or they jump off right away. Roxie goes full-in, not afraid. She loves it. She begs to go sledding every day,” the dog’s owner Marissa Crowley, 18, told the station.
Playing in the frosty white stuff seems to have become a family affair. “We enjoy being outdoors and playing in the snow,...
The Waukesha, Wisconsin, Sheltie wants nothing more than to ride the frozen wave, according to ABC 7, who reported the story, and her owner is happy to oblige.
“Considering all the other dogs I’ve seen, they are too scared or they jump off right away. Roxie goes full-in, not afraid. She loves it. She begs to go sledding every day,” the dog’s owner Marissa Crowley, 18, told the station.
Playing in the frosty white stuff seems to have become a family affair. “We enjoy being outdoors and playing in the snow,...
- 2/3/2017
- by Amy Jamieson
- PEOPLE.com
Time Magazine reporter Michael Crowley cracked up MSNBC host Chris Matthews and his fellow panel guest on Thursday during a conversation about the future of the Republican Party. Amid a discussion about the Gop’s rebranding efforts, and the seeming willingness of some influential members of the party to embrace gay marriage, Crowley was asked if these changes will help the Gop win national elections again. Crowley replied that the Gop’s problem as a whole is that “it’s intolerant and out of touch.”...
- 3/28/2013
- by Noah Rothman
- Mediaite - TV
Time's Michael Crowley says "it's not easy to get to Michele Bachmann." Not in the sense of getting under her skin, but literally getting close enough to throw a question at her. As Crowley writes, "Her appearance at a rally on Tuesday in Aiken, S.C., attended by perhaps 150 people, featured three uniformed police officers and two plainclothes bodyguards. One of those guards spent much of the day preventing reporters from getting too close to the candidate." Of course, ABC News chief investigative correspondent Brian Ross can't be discouraged by mere bodyguards.
- 7/20/2011
- by Mark Joyella
- Mediaite - TV
Tim Pawlenty high-fives a child.Michael Crowley, in an article for Time magazine, asked presidential candidate Tim Pawlenty when he decided he wanted to be president. American politics has not seen such gotcha journalism since Katie Couric asked Sarah Palin to name a newspaper. Crowley writes: And when I ask Pawlenty, during a second interview in Des Moines, Iowa, exactly when he decided he was up to the grand challenge of the presidency, he answers in less than grandiose terms, explaining how he'd set up a political-action committee in 2009. I try again, saying I am curious about when he first imagined himself worthy of the history books, ready to send soldiers to their deaths and endure the national stage's harsh toll. “I don’t know,” he replies. “I wish I had a good answer for you on that.” We’ve mocked up his answer on some Pawlenty ad materials.
- 5/19/2011
- Vanity Fair
08: A Graphic Diary of the Campaign Trail
By Michael Crowley and Dan Goldman
Three Rivers Press, January 2009, $17.95
Typically, there are two kinds of non-fiction books about big events – first are the quick-and-dirty ones that come out almost immediately, pulled together from news reports or written on the fly or just knocked out by a writer with lightning fingers. The other is the “think piece” – longer, more measured, with time for distance and clarity. They each have their strengths: the quick books can crystallize a mood, and remind us of what we felt at the time, while the slower books tend to be the ones that last. It happens with all kinds of nonfictional topics, from biographies (the quickies come out after the personage has done something major, such as died) to political scandals to social movements.
But the area that attracts more quick books than any other is high-level...
By Michael Crowley and Dan Goldman
Three Rivers Press, January 2009, $17.95
Typically, there are two kinds of non-fiction books about big events – first are the quick-and-dirty ones that come out almost immediately, pulled together from news reports or written on the fly or just knocked out by a writer with lightning fingers. The other is the “think piece” – longer, more measured, with time for distance and clarity. They each have their strengths: the quick books can crystallize a mood, and remind us of what we felt at the time, while the slower books tend to be the ones that last. It happens with all kinds of nonfictional topics, from biographies (the quickies come out after the personage has done something major, such as died) to political scandals to social movements.
But the area that attracts more quick books than any other is high-level...
- 2/9/2009
- by Andrew Wheeler
- Comicmix.com
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