Who is omarosa crying about




















With that brutal fake-out out of the way, Omarosa celebrated her victory with tears -- lots of tears. As for Dee's team, they weren't too concerned about the emotional outburst. They just wanted to know who was going home. After one more fake-out "Penn, you're fired! I'm only kidding" , Trump sent Dee packing. What did you think of Sunday night's action? The October phone conversation was said to be with Lynne Patton, then-assistant to the president's son Eric Trump, campaign spokeswoman Katrina Pierson, and campaign communications director Jason Miller.

Patton: "He goes, 'How do you think I should handle it? And he said, 'Well, why don't you just go ahead and put it to bed. Trump has denied using the N-word and disputes that a recording of him using the word exists.

Pierson appeared on Fox News on Monday night before the release of the audio and denied the call ever took place. That did not happen. Sounds like she is writing a script for a movie," Pierson said, referring to the host, Ed Henry. Manigault Newman told "CBS This Morning" on Tuesday that she made tapes because she was watching her own back and everyone in the administration lies. Pierson later clarified her comments in a statement to NBC News on Tuesday in which she claims Manigault Newman was the sole source of the rumors regarding the alleged tape and that she appeased Omarosa's "obsession" to "move the discussion along.

In her secret tape recording of me, it was one of many times that I would placate Omarosa to move the discussion along because I was weary of her obsession over this alleged tape," Pierson said in the statement. Trump said anything. That discussion was nothing other than sifting through unconfirmed rumors regarding the Apprentice tape and the transcript supports my statement. Manigault Newman, who has painted a damning picture of Trump and alleged there is a videotape of him using a racial slur, told The Associated Press she is not going away.

I will not be intimidated. That slam follows a pattern of inflammatory language about women and minorities. Maxine Waters, basketball star LeBron James and TV journalist Don Lemon, all African-Americans, and has repeatedly attacked black football players for kneeling during the national anthem in social protest. In her book, she casts herself as a strong black woman who overcame humble beginnings and has often navigated hostile work environments with aplomb.

Central to her argument that Trump is racist is her claim that she had heard an audiotape of him using the N-word.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000