Breitbart: Early in the day of October 6, Hillary Clinton’s campaign was preparing to buy a large block of ad time on the Weather Channel during its coverage of Hurricane Matthew. It was a plan that Eric Trump called “evil and sick.”
In an interview with Ohio talk show host Bob Frantz, the GOP nominee’s son slammed Hillary for the pending $63,000 ad buy calling her a “typical politician” for the cynical move.
“I’m a guy who, maybe in a certain crazy way, believes in karma,” Trump said of Hillary’s plan to air the ads. “There’s something pretty evil and sick about that if you ask me.” MORE
Only “postponed” the ads. 🙂
How do people know about ad buys?
“evil and sick”. Not just random epithets with Hillary. Well said, Eric. Especially the “sick” part on Sunday.
Bint is going down.
The bitch is desperate. She knows nobody believes a word she says.
Haitians are saying that destruction from Matthew is worst since Hillary and Bill Clinton ravaged the country.
Barack Obama, Eric Holder, Rahm Emanuel, Lois Lerner, Susan Rice, Kathleen Sebelius, Hillary Clinton, James Clapper, Steven Chu, John Podesta, Tim Geithner, Loretta Lynch, James Comey, John Koskinen – most corrupt administration ever
She wants to extend Florida voter registration past next Tuesday’s deadline. Must need more Puerto Rican ringers than she thought she would.
Look, I’m voting for Trump. But it is perfectly reasonable to buy ad time on the Weather Channel during its hurricane coverage. The Weather Channel exists by selling advertising. And it is reasonable that a candidate would want to advertise on a channel that likely appeals to information-seekers, with an audience different from that than the usual news and business channels. There is nothing “evil and sick” about good marketing that also supports the business of a company doing a useful service.
@Kevin Killion
Regardless of Eric Trump’s comments, she wouldn’t have cancelled if her team liked the optics of a big ad buy cashing in on a hurricane. Especially from a candidate who couldn’t be bothered to show up in Louisiana during e flooding.