Deporting children to a beautiful country is really not so bad
It is a sad state of affairs when a U.S. Senator cannot differentiate between beachside resorts and the impoverished, dangerous situation in which many Hondurans live.
It is a sad state of affairs when a U.S. Senator cannot differentiate between beachside resorts and the impoverished, dangerous situation in which many Hondurans live.
John Oliver discusses Cuba’s removal from the U.S. state sponsors of terrorism list, and whether the Cubans will really want to stay off that list once they’re overrun with American tourists.
In a long rant about FIFA corruption, John Oliver uses as an example the white elephants created by the 2014 World Cup in Brazil. As he says—referring to the classic Joni Mitchell song, Brazil has literally “paved paradise to put up a parking lot.
Here is John Oliver’s rightly surprised take not only on what President Fernandez de Kirchner tweet but also on China’s lack of response, though ultimately that may have come when the Chinese Premier didn’t include Argentina in his last swing through South America. He who laughs last, we guess, laughs the loudest, even in Beijing.
If there is another crisis of unaccompanied minors crossing the border in 2015, will some policymakers insist again that it’s an invasion? Jon Stewart’s take on the crisis in 2014.
Should Scott Walker win the U.S. presidency in 2016 and Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro remain in power until Walker is sworn in (2017), we face the prospect of two formerly mullet-ed presidents in opposing countries. Who’s mullet was better in the 1980s?
We don’t know which part of this clip we like best, whether it’s the point when the clown hugs the President or John Oliver’s amazement at President Correa’s pettiness.
John Oliver fires back at President Correa after the president attacks the comedian for his previous skit on Correa trashing a kid’s Facebook post.
The Maduro-mango incident has also inspired a new app in which you try to hit the President with a mango.