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cheapbag214s
Posted: Thu 0:11, 26 Sep 2013
Post subject: Stephane Dujarric
dozens of articles under Debat’s byline, including a June 2007 interview with Barack Obama that the presidential candidate’s office is now saying never took place. The lies were uncovered by Rue 89, a terrific online journal.What galls me is that it took so long for this guy to be outed. The ABC Blotter online reports earlier red flags:In fact, Stephane Dujarric, the deputy communications director for the U.N. secretary-general, said he called the fabricated interview to the attention of the editor of the magazine, Patrick Wajsman, in June 2005.“I told him that if he went ahead with it, we would denounce the interview as a fake,” the U.N. official said. “This was not some obscure guy. This was the sitting secretary-general of the U.N., and the magazine was told it was a fake,” he said.The magazine’s editor, Patrick Wajsman, explains his inaction:The magazine editor, Wajsman, told ABCNews.com he thought the problem with the Annan interview, one of the first he submitted, was “maybe a technical one” or a misunderstanding.Now wait an eye-poppin’ minute. If someone called my boss and told him I had completely fabricated an interview with a VIP that ran in TIME, you can bet I’d be out on my butt before I could say boo. I suspect Debat’s golden credentials afforded him a shield of credibility that even his bosses didn’t want to crack. And yet–here’s the kicker–his creds were faked, too, as we learn from this New York Times piece by Bill Carter:ABC fired Mr. Debat in June after discovering that his claims of having earned a doctorate from the Sorbonne were false. The network then investigated the reports Mr. Debat had participated in and found “they absolutely checked out,” Mr. Ross said.This really makes me wonder. How many sterling careers are built on the backs of resumé lies? Or do we only hear about it when the lies belong to superstars?One Beefy Birthday: Oscar Mayer’s Wienermobile Turns 75Courtesy Oscar MayerEmailPrintShareFacebookTwitterTumblrLinkedInStumbleUponRedditDiggMixxDeliciousGoogle+Comment Follow @timenewsfeedLike any hot dog on a sizzling grill, the classic Wienermobile has plumped up a bit through the ages. But its hot dog evangelizing mission has remained the same since 1936. And nothing has changed with its iconic orange and yellow shell, either (trust us – they just didn’t have color film back in the ‘30s!). The Wienermobile continues to roll on as a piece of classic Americana. And today,http://www.tinfoti.com, it dons a party hat in celebration of its 75th birthday.(MORE: $50 Hot Dogs Come to New York)Throughout its history, the Wienermobile has crisscrossed the nation, spreading the hot dog love. But it began as a strictly local affair. The original 1936 version of the Wienermobile was a small, metal wiener-shaped shell that stretched 13 feet long, often seen cruising through Chicago’s streets to promote Oscar Mayer’s wieners. Carl Mayer, Oscar’s nephew, hatched the idea,[url=http://www.tinfoti.com]Christian Louboutin Sale[/url], and then became the lucky man tasked with driving the machine.As the company boomed – in no small part because they had a giant hot dog on wheels as their de facto mascot – children of all ages knew to look out for the Wienermobile when it came through their town. Even as the Oscar Mayer expanded their product line to include B-O-L-O-G-N-A, bratwurst, bacon and,[url=http://www.tinfoti.com]Christian Louboutin Men[/url], um,[url=http://www.tinfoti.com]Christian Louboutin Outlet[/url], Lunchables, the Wienermobile rolled on as the traveling symbol of the company.Diane Bondareff / AP Images for Oscar MayerThe current Wienermobile model is now more than double its original length, stretching 27 feet long (or 60 hot dogs long, as the company notes in their preferred measurement units), and has spawned five sausage-shaped siblings. But the fleet of six vehicles is rarely together, as each bubble-nosed wiener on wheels is assigned to a different part of the nation.(VIDEO: How to Eat 15 Pounds of Hot Dogs)As the jingle goes, “I wish I were an Oscar Mayer wiener,” but that job is reserved for a select few. No, they don’t actually become hot dogs, but each
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