Donald Trump Tops GOP Field in New Hampshire, Second in Iowa: Poll

iceberg_is_on_fire

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The great thing about with Bush and Rubio, they cancel each other out in their state. You will never see a ticket with members from the same state. That is the bringing sand to the beach approach. Bush and Rubio would both represent a formidable challenge to Hill-Dawg in the main election. That said, I still feel like that Koch money will get Scott Walker the nomination.
 

88m3

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What We Learned About Donald Trump By Playing His Board Game
Erratic and riddled with contradictions—but enough about the game.
—By Tim Murphy

| Thu Jul. 30, 2015 9:52 PM EDT
trumpgame_0.jpg
Photo by Tim Murphy
Donald Trump's preparation for the upcoming Republican presidential primary debate is "low key, absolutely low stress," adviser Chuck Laudner told theWashington Post on Wednesday. "This isn't 50 consultants locked in a war room, with a fake podium and cardboard cutouts of the other candidates, playing the game of Risk."

Maybe that's because Trump has a different board game of choice—his own. In 2004, as his reality television show The Apprentice was just getting underway, he unveiled the latest in a long line of short-lived ventures. (Hello, Trump Steaks.) It's called TRUMP: The Game, and according to an introductory letter from the billionaire that was included in a set I recently acquired for $4 on Amazon, "the object of the game is to make the most money." Surprise!

trumpdeal.jpg

Live the fantasy! Feel the power! And make the deals! Photo by Tim Murphy
Much like his presidential campaign, TRUMP: The Game was a reboot of an earlier failed Trump venture, a 1988 Milton Bradley product also called TRUMP: The Game. The tagline for that was "It's not whether you win or lose, it's whether you win!" A television ad for TRUMP: The Game 1.0 boasted that all proceeds from the game would be donated to charity. (This was his Paul Newman phase, evidently.) The 2004 version abandoned the charitable pretense, and replaced the old tagline with a bolder, fresher take: "IT TAKES BRAINS TO MAKE MILLIONS. IT TAKES TRUMP TO MAKE BILLIONS."


Did I have the brains to make millions? Did I have the TRUMP to make billions?Was I, in fact, Donald Trump? I recruited three Mother Jones political reporters—Pat Caldwell, Pema Levy, and Molly Redden—to help me take TRUMP: The Game for a spin.

Here are a few things you should know about the game:

  • It's for three to four players. Cramped and short-lived—it's the Trump Shuttleof board games. This is a great game if you don't have very many friends.
  • The box specifies that TRUMP: The Game should only be played by adults. (If you are a child reading this, please stop now.) What? Is this is a board game about pre-nups? Is scalp-reduction surgery involved? If it's for adults, why is an oversized six-year-old on the cover? I kept waiting for the game to reveal some darker, truer, more adult nature, but it never did.
  • The dice have six sides. Five of the sides have the traditional numbers on them. But the sixth side just has a big letter T on it, for "Trump." Anytime you roll a "Trump," you get to steal something from someone else.
  • But you don't roll the dice very often—maybe once every few turns, depending on your strategy. TRUMP: The Game borrows the architecture of a classic game, Monopoly, and then renovates it until there's nothing left but a flashy facade.
  • The most exciting part of the game is bidding on properties. Like Monopoly, you buy properties and try to make money off of them. Trump recommends buying as many properties as you can! But there are only seven properties (including a luxury residence, an international golf course, and a casino—only the finest and most luxurious properties are for sale here), so you can't really do that. It's not possible, either, to simply attach your name on the side of someone else's building in big letters and just own a penthouse there.
  • When a property goes up for sale, players take turns raising their bids or taking a pass, until someone has outbid everyone else. Then that person own the property. Unless someone else ejects that person from the bidding by playing a card that says "You're fired!" (Actually it says, "YOU'RE FIRED! You are out of the bidding and you cannot fire anyone!" Since when can people who have just been fired fire other people?)
trumpfired.jpg

Don't get any ideas! Tim Murphy
  • If you've been fired, you can get back into the bidding by playing a special card featuring Donald Trump's face. This is, for some reason, not called "the Trump Card." Instead it's called a "The Donald"—definite article included. Like "The Gambia." There are 16 You're Fired! cards but only four The Donalds, meaning that bidding wars often consist entirely of people playing the "You're Fired!" card over and over and over. The unemployment rate in Donald Trump's game is 75 percent. I don't know why you can fire people who don't even work for you. But this is how capitalism works.
thedonald_1.jpg

A "The Donald." Tim Murphy
  • Instead of paying taxes to the government, there is a card that, if played, forces other players to pay property taxes to you. ("Trump Tip: I would play this on someone with more than one property.") That is not a tax. That is just a shakedown.
  • At the end of the game, the person with the most money wins. Fair. What's weird is that there's basically no way to lose money, short of occasionally paying taxes to other people. Instead of losing money when you land on properties owned by rivals, as in Monopoly, you take money from the bank that doesn't belong to you (don't worry about paying it back) and give that money to the player who owns the property. All overhead costs are covered by the banks. The result: the bank is sinking much of its money into a giant real-estate bubble. What could go wrong?
  • Trump, apparently pressed for time, borrowed the color-coded currency from Monopoly—the lowest denomination is white; the middle is green; the highest is orange. The major difference is that the lowest denomination is $10 million and the highest is $100 million. He basically took Monopoly money, stuck his face on it, and added a bunch of zeroes.
trumpmoney.jpg

Tim Murphy
Our experimental game lasted a little more than an hour. If there's an upside to TRUMP: The Game, it's that it's hard to envision anyone flipping the board over in disgust after six hours because it's physically impossible for a game to last that long. At no point did anyone have any idea who was winning until Molly bought the casino. Luxury properties are Trump's horcruxes; when the seventh one is taken off the board, the game ends. Molly won.








"I'm Donald Trump now," she said. For a brief moment, I thought I saw a shadow fall across her face.

Afterwards, I asked our team of guinea pigs for their feedback:

"It's like Monopoly, but really dumb," Pema declared.

"Nothing really happens," Pat said. "I think I probably went around the board twice."

"The thing about it is," Pema continued, "it's just a dumb game. Because you can't really lose money. In Monopoly you can get really screwed by landing on other peoples' properties. In this there's very little moving around the board. And when you land on a property, the bank pays them instead of you so there's no real risk."

But the game's flaws—its erratic nature, its contradictions, its singular obsession with the rapid accumulation of wealth for the purpose of acquiring luxury real estate and firing people—are also Trump's flaws. And by the time we'd finished, there were a few signs that the experience of playing Donald Trump had begun to influence us in subtle ways. "I could see us all becoming ruthless and judging each other," Pat said, after a moment of reflection. And more to the point, handling such huge quantities of money seemed to bring us closer, if just a little bit, to the luxurious lifestyle of the Republican front-runner. As Molly put it: "I stopped saying 'million' after a while and started treating them like normal denominations."

Just don't ask any of us to play it again.

What we learned about Donald Trump by playing his board game.
 

NSSVO

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I can't believe this is really life breh. It's wild as hell. I can't wait until shyt really pops off next year. :dead: Motherfukker had a catchphrase! I'm switching to independent, so I really don't care what side wins anymore. :blessed: AMERICA AMERICA MURICA!
 

88m3

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“Suppressed” 1991 Trump Film Released Online by Documentary Producer
By Ben Mathis-Lilley




A somewhat mysterious trailer—narrated by a man with an epic/hammy upper-crust British accent—appeared on YouTube Wednesday advertising a documentary calledTrump: What's the Deal? which is said to have been suppressed when it was completed in 1991.


  • The website associated with the film says it was commissioned in 1988 by mogul (and reputed Trump enemy) Leonard Stern but never released because Trump threatened to sue everyone on Earth who was involved with it. A New York magazine piece about Stern and Trump from 1989 tells a similar story, though I'm not sure it goes so far as to support the verb "suppressed"—more that no broadcasters wanted to deal with the pain in the ass of potential Trump suits (none of which were actually ever filed) over what was seen less as a hard-hitting 60 Minutes exposé than as a kind of dishy tabloid piece. And, as the new site acknowledges, the documentary waspublicly screened in 1991 in the Hamptons by original executive producer Ned Schnurman in a fruitless attempt to find distribution.

(The New York piece, FWIW, is also highly recommended reading for '80s NYC nostalgia fans. And it mentions that Leonard Stern also funded an '80s publication called 7 Days, which was founded by current New York editor-in-chief Adam Moss, who is also the person who hired me, the writer of this Slate blog post, for my first job in magazine journalism more than a decade ago. All these connections—it's like a conspiracy movie, but boring!)

In any case, the finished Trumpumentary has been revived and posted online by Libby Handros, a producer on the original project who says she inherited the footage from her mentor Schnurman when he passed away in 2004. Leonard Stern is still alive, and in 1991 told the Times he did not believe that Ned Schnurman had legal rights to the footage but that he (Stern) was not going to retaliate against "a little guy with no money" for screening it. (Handros says Stern is "definitely not" involved in the online release.)

Here's a Huffington Post piece about the documentary by its original writer, and here's the press release announcing the online debut—it appears that the film covers some allegations, like Trump's connection to Mob-affiliated companies and hisalleged exaggeration of his own wealth, that still figure quite prominently in Trump's public persona. If you'd like to watch it in full, click here. And FYI—the narration for the trailer was recorded by Libby Handros' friend Peter Foges, whose LinkedIn pagesays he was the BBC's New York bureau chief from 1979 to 1984.

Trump! Trump! Trump!
“Suppressed” 1991 Trump Film Released Online by Documentary Producer

the trailer is in link and brilliant. I hope it gets released.

:mjlol:
 

Robbie3000

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What We Learned About Donald Trump By Playing His Board Game
Erratic and riddled with contradictions—but enough about the game.
—By Tim Murphy

| Thu Jul. 30, 2015 9:52 PM EDT
trumpgame_0.jpg
Photo by Tim Murphy
Donald Trump's preparation for the upcoming Republican presidential primary debate is "low key, absolutely low stress," adviser Chuck Laudner told theWashington Post on Wednesday. "This isn't 50 consultants locked in a war room, with a fake podium and cardboard cutouts of the other candidates, playing the game of Risk."

Maybe that's because Trump has a different board game of choice—his own. In 2004, as his reality television show The Apprentice was just getting underway, he unveiled the latest in a long line of short-lived ventures. (Hello, Trump Steaks.) It's called TRUMP: The Game, and according to an introductory letter from the billionaire that was included in a set I recently acquired for $4 on Amazon, "the object of the game is to make the most money." Surprise!

trumpdeal.jpg

Live the fantasy! Feel the power! And make the deals! Photo by Tim Murphy
Much like his presidential campaign, TRUMP: The Game was a reboot of an earlier failed Trump venture, a 1988 Milton Bradley product also called TRUMP: The Game. The tagline for that was "It's not whether you win or lose, it's whether you win!" A television ad for TRUMP: The Game 1.0 boasted that all proceeds from the game would be donated to charity. (This was his Paul Newman phase, evidently.) The 2004 version abandoned the charitable pretense, and replaced the old tagline with a bolder, fresher take: "IT TAKES BRAINS TO MAKE MILLIONS. IT TAKES TRUMP TO MAKE BILLIONS."


Did I have the brains to make millions? Did I have the TRUMP to make billions?Was I, in fact, Donald Trump? I recruited three Mother Jones political reporters—Pat Caldwell, Pema Levy, and Molly Redden—to help me take TRUMP: The Game for a spin.

Here are a few things you should know about the game:

  • It's for three to four players. Cramped and short-lived—it's the Trump Shuttleof board games. This is a great game if you don't have very many friends.
  • The box specifies that TRUMP: The Game should only be played by adults. (If you are a child reading this, please stop now.) What? Is this is a board game about pre-nups? Is scalp-reduction surgery involved? If it's for adults, why is an oversized six-year-old on the cover? I kept waiting for the game to reveal some darker, truer, more adult nature, but it never did.
  • The dice have six sides. Five of the sides have the traditional numbers on them. But the sixth side just has a big letter T on it, for "Trump." Anytime you roll a "Trump," you get to steal something from someone else.
  • But you don't roll the dice very often—maybe once every few turns, depending on your strategy. TRUMP: The Game borrows the architecture of a classic game, Monopoly, and then renovates it until there's nothing left but a flashy facade.
  • The most exciting part of the game is bidding on properties. Like Monopoly, you buy properties and try to make money off of them. Trump recommends buying as many properties as you can! But there are only seven properties (including a luxury residence, an international golf course, and a casino—only the finest and most luxurious properties are for sale here), so you can't really do that. It's not possible, either, to simply attach your name on the side of someone else's building in big letters and just own a penthouse there.
  • When a property goes up for sale, players take turns raising their bids or taking a pass, until someone has outbid everyone else. Then that person own the property. Unless someone else ejects that person from the bidding by playing a card that says "You're fired!" (Actually it says, "YOU'RE FIRED! You are out of the bidding and you cannot fire anyone!" Since when can people who have just been fired fire other people?)
trumpfired.jpg

Don't get any ideas! Tim Murphy
  • If you've been fired, you can get back into the bidding by playing a special card featuring Donald Trump's face. This is, for some reason, not called "the Trump Card." Instead it's called a "The Donald"—definite article included. Like "The Gambia." There are 16 You're Fired! cards but only four The Donalds, meaning that bidding wars often consist entirely of people playing the "You're Fired!" card over and over and over. The unemployment rate in Donald Trump's game is 75 percent. I don't know why you can fire people who don't even work for you. But this is how capitalism works.
thedonald_1.jpg

A "The Donald." Tim Murphy
  • Instead of paying taxes to the government, there is a card that, if played, forces other players to pay property taxes to you. ("Trump Tip: I would play this on someone with more than one property.") That is not a tax. That is just a shakedown.
  • At the end of the game, the person with the most money wins. Fair. What's weird is that there's basically no way to lose money, short of occasionally paying taxes to other people. Instead of losing money when you land on properties owned by rivals, as in Monopoly, you take money from the bank that doesn't belong to you (don't worry about paying it back) and give that money to the player who owns the property. All overhead costs are covered by the banks. The result: the bank is sinking much of its money into a giant real-estate bubble. What could go wrong?
  • Trump, apparently pressed for time, borrowed the color-coded currency from Monopoly—the lowest denomination is white; the middle is green; the highest is orange. The major difference is that the lowest denomination is $10 million and the highest is $100 million. He basically took Monopoly money, stuck his face on it, and added a bunch of zeroes.
trumpmoney.jpg

Tim Murphy
Our experimental game lasted a little more than an hour. If there's an upside to TRUMP: The Game, it's that it's hard to envision anyone flipping the board over in disgust after six hours because it's physically impossible for a game to last that long. At no point did anyone have any idea who was winning until Molly bought the casino. Luxury properties are Trump's horcruxes; when the seventh one is taken off the board, the game ends. Molly won.








"I'm Donald Trump now," she said. For a brief moment, I thought I saw a shadow fall across her face.

Afterwards, I asked our team of guinea pigs for their feedback:

"It's like Monopoly, but really dumb," Pema declared.

"Nothing really happens," Pat said. "I think I probably went around the board twice."

"The thing about it is," Pema continued, "it's just a dumb game. Because you can't really lose money. In Monopoly you can get really screwed by landing on other peoples' properties. In this there's very little moving around the board. And when you land on a property, the bank pays them instead of you so there's no real risk."

But the game's flaws—its erratic nature, its contradictions, its singular obsession with the rapid accumulation of wealth for the purpose of acquiring luxury real estate and firing people—are also Trump's flaws. And by the time we'd finished, there were a few signs that the experience of playing Donald Trump had begun to influence us in subtle ways. "I could see us all becoming ruthless and judging each other," Pat said, after a moment of reflection. And more to the point, handling such huge quantities of money seemed to bring us closer, if just a little bit, to the luxurious lifestyle of the Republican front-runner. As Molly put it: "I stopped saying 'million' after a while and started treating them like normal denominations."

Just don't ask any of us to play it again.

What we learned about Donald Trump by playing his board game.

:heh: That Trump is leading the GOP in the polls for PRESIDENT feels like we are living in a bizarro world.
 

Piff Huxtable

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Donald Trump is a piece of shyt human being but i will give him gredit for one thing:

unlike Walker, Bush and even Paul he is not depending on that Koch Bros. money or taking trips to Sheldon Adelson's mansion to pledge loyalty to the zionist cause
 

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Donald Trump is a piece of shyt human being but i will give him gredit for one thing:

unlike Walker, Bush and even Paul he is not depending on that Koch Bros. money or taking trips to Sheldon Adelson's mansion to pledge loyalty to the zionist cause
That's his best selling point. All he has to say on stage is he's the only one not invited to the Koch brothers BBQ for a reason.
 

Robbie3000

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That's his best selling point. All he has to say on stage is he's the only one not invited to the Koch brothers BBQ for a reason.

Trump's only redeeming quality is that he is exposing these politicians as fully owned subsidiaries of billionaires. For that he should actually be commended.
 

88m3

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Iowa Killjoys Won’t Let Donald Trump Land Helicopter in Middle of State Fair
By Beth Ethier

150730_SLATEST_TrumpHelicopter.jpg.CROP.promo-xlarge2.jpg

Donald Trump wants the children of Iowa to experience the greatest helicopter in the history of the United States.

Photo by Jeffrey MacMillan for The Washington Post via Getty Images

There’s not a lot right now that can put the brakes on Donald Trump, but he has apparently been thwarted in his latest quest to bigfoot the Republican primary by the bosses of the Iowa State Fair.

The British tabloid the Daily Mail published an interview with Trump Thursday in which the candidate talked excitedly about Iowa’s “World's Fair,” which gets underway in early August, and where Trump was planning on bringing his 12-passenger Sikorsky helicopter to entertain the kids and prevent any attention from accidentally being paid to any of his 2016 rivals.

“We’re going to fly it out to Iowa and I’m going to have it there,” he said in his Manhattan office, initially referring to the annual event as “The World’s Fair.”
“I look forward to that. I went there once years ago,” he said. “It was so great. So many people.”
And so many Republican primary voters. With children.
“I’m going to try giving kids lifts in the helicopter,” he said near the end of a half-hour interview that ranged in topics from high finance to Hillary Clinton’s “low class.”
“You know, young kids. Yeah!” Trump said, sounding like a kid who’s just built his first pinewood derby car.
Sadly for Trump, and the many cable television producers looking forward to video of him being mobbed by hordes of helicopter-crazed children, state fair officials say aTrump touchdown “will not be happening” at the fair. “Trump did not ask for permission to do so, nor would he be granted permission if he does indeed seek it,” according to the Des Moines Register.

Trump could still find a way to land somewhere near the fairgrounds, but it might be better to deploy this particular stunt at a different event anyhow. Maybe Trump hasn’t spent much time on the ground at the Iowa State Fair, where outrageous, borderline-dangerous foodstuffs are an indispensible part of its storied culture. Does he really want to use a $7 milllion chopper full of cream-colored Italian leather and gold-plated seatbelt buckles to take 10 children who’ve been stuffed with Deep Fried Nacho Ballsand Ultimate Bacon Brisket Bombs, then baked all day in the midwestern sun, on their first helicopter ride?


Iowa Killjoys Won’t Let Donald Trump Land Helicopter in Middle of State Fair
 

Robbie3000

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Talking about the Koch Brothers retreat this past weekend:

"Trump wasn't as generous in his assessment of Rubio and the others who came to the Koch retreat, writing on Twitter: "I wish good luck to all of the Republican candidates that traveled to California to beg for money etc. from the Koch Brothers. Puppets?""
 
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