Good Old-Fashioned Comedies Like ‘Ricky Stanicky’ Never Go Out Of Style

[rebelmouse-proxy-image https://thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Screenshot-2024-04-04-at-12.24.40 PM-1200x675.png crop_info="%7B%22image%22%3A%20%22https%3A//thefederalist.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Screenshot-2024-04-04-at-12.24.40%5Cu202fPM-1200x675.png%22%7D" expand=1]'Ricky Stanicky' is a welcome throwback to the comedy movies of yore that could make audiences laugh by being stupid and fun.

Another Democratic transvestite faces possible disqualification from Ohio race for hiding his 'deadname' from voters



Another Democratic transvestite pursuing political office has been caught flouting Ohio law. He has, however, found a champion in the state's nominally Republican governor, Mike Dewine.

The Democrat in question, a man originally from from Virginia who changed his name to Arienne Christina Childrey in 2020, seeks to unseat state Rep. Angela King (R) in Ohio District 84. Childrey, an Auglaize County resident, has largely campaigned on his antipathy for King over her House Bill 245, which would ban sexual and obscene cabaret performances such as drag shows in front of children and in locations other than adult cabarets.

Childrey is the founder of a radical transvestite activist group called Northwest Ohio Trans Advocacy. He was previously an assistant manager at Kohl's and a manager at Big Lots.

Much like Jeremy Michael Adams — now Vanessa Joy — in Stark County, Childrey's campaign might be dead in the water, for he too failed to disclose his previous name on his petition paperwork, reported the Associated Press.

Ohio law states that "if any person desiring to become a candidate for public office has had a change of name within five years immediately preceding the filing of his statement of candidacy, both his statement of candidacy and nominating petition must contain, immediately following the person's present name, the person's former names."

While Childrey was initially certified on Dec. 21, Mercer County GOP Chairman Robert Hibner wrote to the local election board, asking the board to reject Childrey's campaign petition on account of its apparent illegitimacy, according to the Mercer County Outlook.

The Mercer County Board of Elections is set to vote Thursday on whether the Democrat's contravention of the law is disqualifying.

The Mercer County Democratic Party passed a resolution objecting "to Republican Chair Bob Hibner's protest of our Democratic Candidate's right to run for office."

The county's Democratic Vice-Chair Don Holtvoigt stated, "Mr. Hibner's protest is nothing but a hateful attempt to further discriminate against a community not meeting the GOP definition of 'normal.' A radical approach to alienate qualified candidates and stifle the will of the voters. There is no acceptable explanation to pursue this challenge when no guidance to candidates has been provided."

Gov. DeWine swooped in to defend the transvestites contravening state law on Tuesday, suggesting the Democrats should not be disqualified on account of their ignorance, reported Cleveland.com.

"We shouldn't be denying ballot access for that reason," said DeWine. "It certainly should be fixed."

Childrey has parroted Joy's ignorance defense, claiming the candidacy guide provided to prospective candidates does not provide explicit instructions concerning the provision of past legal names.

"I would note that the name change provision is not included in the Candidate Guide issued by Secretary of State Frank LaRose's office, nor any of the other paperwork or forms," Childrey noted on his campaign site. "In fact, had I known of this provision and tried to comply - which I certainly would've, my legal name and deadname simply could not have fit in the space provided on the candidacy documents."

Melanie Amato, a spokeswoman for the Ohio secretary of state, stressed the guide "does not include every statute pertaining to candidates — in fact the first paragraph offers that disclaimer and urges candidates to consult with their legal counsel."

Amato added, "The law applies to everyone."

State Rep. Brian Stewart (R) underscored on X, "There's nothing uneven about the application of the law. There's no evidence in these stories that the law has been disregarded for other candidates. If you change your name you have to disclose it. It's been that way for decades."

Past names may be of great interest to potential voters, as they correspond with histories candidates might otherwise want to preclude the public from looking into. For instance, under his previous name, Joy recently filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy.

Investigative journalist Andy Ngô highlighted that Joy also failed to mention his side hustle as a pornographer. As recently as November 2023, he was sharing images of himself masturbating to photographs of women to his OnlyFans page under the handle "Vanesstradiol."

Joy reportedly also fathered a child who he indicated in an Oct. 25 social media post had — at on at least one occasion — sat with him while he kept his post-op pelvic wound open with a dilator.

Joy's effort to appeal his disqualification proved unsuccessful last week. He has since threatened to sue Stark County for discrimination.

Senate President Matt Huffman and Ohio Senate GOP spokesman John Fortney indicated that if people are looking for someone to blame, they could start with the Ohio House Democrats' campaign staff," reported the Plain Dealer Cleveland.

"There should be a Democratic House organization that ... [will] say 'Hey, we're going to make sure, we're going to have somebody review your petitions [and] make sure this is all right, and do whatever special things have to be done on any particular day," said Huffman.

State Sen. Kristina Roegner (R) similarly suggested, "It would seem to me that, in these cases, that the Democratic Party failed these candidates."

"You could always have someone else check your work. You can go down to the local board of elections," added Roegner.

Childrey, who may yet remain certified, told the Guardian that "regardless of what happens in this hearing, if they boot me off the ballot, I have every intention to refile."

"And in that next election, on that form, I'll put my current name, I'll put my deadname, I'll put the age I was potty-trained, whatever details they need."

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14-year-old out fishing hooked farmer's lost wallet, full of cash. Like his old man, he knew not to keep something he hadn't earned.



14-year-old Connor Halsa of Moorhead, Minnesota, was out fishing with his family on Lake of the Woods when he hooked bills instead of gills.

"We were doing a walleye drift, so we stopped the boat, put some spinners on, and let the waves take us," Halsa told WDAY-TV.

Of all of the places he could have drifted to on the lake — some 85 miles long and 56 miles across at its widest — those serendipitous waves brought Halsa over the resting place of Iowa farmer Jim Denney's lost wallet, stuck 20 feet below in the glacial deeps.

The summer prior, Denney reportedly came up against rough waters and went overboard. Although he managed to bring himself out of the murk all right, Denney later realized when readying to pay his final bill at the resort that the pocket on his overalls was down one billfold and $2,000 dollars.

"They had to float me the money for the whole deal. That's the (worst) feeling I ever had, didn't have a penny on me," Denney told the station.

This summer, Halsa struck on the wallet, but mistook it for a nibble.

Ready for a fight, the boy "set the hook really hard."

The incoming freshman at Moorhead High School came out victorious, but what came out of the water was no walleye. Rather, the 14-year-old had reeled in Denney's billfold, packed with $2,000 in cash.

"My cousin opened the wallet up, and he said some words you probably shouldn't say," Halsa told WDAY. "He showed everyone, and we took the money out and let it dry out."

$2,000 can go a long way, especially for a 14-year-old, but Halsa explained, "We didn't work hard for the money. He did. It was his money."

"My dad said we should give it to the person, and I said we should too," Halsa recalled.

After setting the cash out to dry, the family looked for some way to identify the owner. All they could find inside the water-logged wallet was a business card with a phone number belonging to a livestock owner in western Wisconsin — and that proved to be enough.

They called the number on the card and eventually got in touch with the owner of the wallet.

Although the wallet made its way to his farmhouse in Mount Ayr, Iowa, Denney traveled to Moorhead to visit Halsa, amazed by his luck and the boy's virtue, reported the Star Tribune.

"I tell you what, I have the billfold in my hands, and it is still hard to believe," said Denney.

The farmer reportedly offered to give the boy a reward, but Halsa refused.

"To meet people like that, who are that honest, I tried to get them to take the money, and they wouldn't do it," said the farmer.

While Halsa refused a reward, the Iowan gifted him a custom-made cooler and paid him a compliment: "I would take Connor as a grandson any day, and I would fight for him any day."

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Teen hooks wallet full of cash while fishingyoutu.be

Video: CNN's John King on election night tells viewers to 'trust us ... a news source that you know and trust to be honest.' Reactions are hilarious.



CNN's John King — an anchor and chief national correspondent — urged viewers Tuesday night to "trust us" as midterm election night issues surface.

What did King say?

"Stay off social media, people," King said as anchor Jake Tapper elicited a chuckle. King added: "If you're trying to figure out, 'Are there really issues with voting?' trust your local officials, trust us here, trust a news source that you know and trust to be honest about this. They're doing their job, and they're doing it right."

\u201cCNN's John King: "Stay off social media, people. If you're trying to figure out are there really issues with voting, trust your local officials and trust us here."\u201d
— Greg Price (@Greg Price) 1667950243

Twitter reactions to King's plea were quite humorous:

  • "Does @JohnKingCNN give seminars in self-awareness?" conservative podcaster Ron Coleman asked.
  • "I trust CNN about as much as the CDC," one commenter stated.
  • "I trust gas station sushi more than I trust CNN, John King, and local officials," another user revealed.
  • "The network that's hemorrhaging viewers and can't afford to keep their staff due to lack of credibility wants us to trust ... their election coverage," another commenter observed. "Right. Next I'll be asking David Depape to fix my door locks."
  • "I’d rather trust a vasectomy performed on a trampoline," another user quipped.
  • "They do comedy now," another commenter noticed.
  • "Trust the organization that gave us Lemon and Acosta?" another user wondered.
  • "Yeah I’d trust Casey Anthony babysitting my two yr old nephew over trusting CNN," another commenter declared.

The background you're all likely well aware of

After former President Donald Trump famously called out CNN as "fake news" way back when, more than a few things have taken place at the cable network that prompted speculation that Trump's accusation might have had some truth to it.

In August, before his program "Reliable Sources" was tossed in the trash, CNN's then-chief media correspondent Brian Stelter admitted that the Hunter Biden laptop story was real after previously downplaying it as right-wing exaggeration. Critics have often labeled Stelter a "hall monitor" for the media, and attacks against him — particularly for biased reporting — seemed to grow louder and more frequent over time.

CNN as a whole has been repeatedly accused of left-wing bias and specifically called out for pushing misinformation that's resulted in loss of trust. That may be why pundits brutally mocked CNN in January over the cable network's announcement that it would be creating a news team "dedicated to covering misinformation."

And beyond all of that, CNN has suffered numerous recent scandals, including the exits of disgraced legal analyst Jeffrey Toobin, former CNN head Jeff Zucker, and anchor Chris Cuomo — not to mention the embarrassingly fast demise of CNN+ earlier this year.

CNN's Chris Cuomo dares Twitter user to name just one time he's denied facts he doesn't like — then the replies come rolling in



After the tongue lashing President Joe Biden gave CNN's Kaitlan Collins for her Vladimir Putin question earlier this week — for which Biden later apologized — far-left actress Rosanna Arquette was in no mood to make nice with the media.

Instead, she tweeted that the president was "right to lose his patience with a journalist or any journalist who tries to twist his words. Calling that crap out is the way forward. Enough bulls**t. The truth and nothing but the truth."

With that CNN's Chris Cuomo replied to Arquette that the "problem is truth is now at the mercy of what people want to be true. If you don't like it...it isn't the truth."

That apparently was too much to take for another Twitter user, who promptly called out Cuomo: "The story of your life, you constantly deny facts you don't like."

Uh oh.

Given the CNN host once threatened a guy in public who referred to him as Fredo, the weak brother in "The Godfather," Cuomo shot back and challenged his Twitter adversary to "name one" example:

It's on!

As you might guess, Twitter went a little nuts after Cuomo threw down — and his tweet has been getting ratioed ever since, showing about 2,500 replies to just 741 likes as of Friday afternoon.

And what did some of those replies contain? Well, a decent number answered Cuomo's dare to name just one example of him denying facts he doesn't like.

Commentary writer Drew Holden offered a few examples:

@ChrisCuomo Rebekah Jones https://t.co/jV0KbgwXDy

— Drew Holden (@DrewHolden360) 1623938217.0

@ChrisCuomo Antifa https://t.co/9Hb66i8s3A

— Drew Holden (@DrewHolden360) 1623938250.0

The Daily Caller chimed in, too:

@ChrisCuomo https://t.co/aFMwe3olRK

— Daily Caller (@DailyCaller) 1623939880.0

This guy put a humorous spin on his contribution:

@ChrisCuomo https://t.co/VH3IaTldiv

— Greg Price (@greg_price11) 1623939425.0

Also:

@ChrisCuomo Will you admit that the Hunter Biden laptop isn’t Russian disinformation or are you still clinging to that lie?

— Arthur Schwartz (@ArthurSchwartz) 1623985364.0

Another user offered a doozy of a reply: "Not enough Twitter space for your idiocy. Michael Avenatti BS; Covington kids lies; Brett Kavanaugh distortion; Russia Collusion over and over; Your Covid deception, etc. When people look for the 'Great Deceiver' on CNN they will say…'I knew it was you, Fredo. I knew it was you!'"

Here's more on the matter from Sky News:

Twitter roasts CNN's Chris Cuomo after he dares them to show examples of him denying factsyoutu.be