
And therein hangs the problem with Piers Morgan and his lack of success in America. He was still being made to pay for the sacking of Washington by General Ross in 1814. Mainstream America wouldn’t let him get on with his important job of soft-balling starlets on book launch tours, because it saw his Britishness, and it was repulsed by the yellow-teeth, stinky-breath, jam-and-buggery horror of it all. The man who broke the story, David Carr at the New York Times, has written a lamentation about Morgan’s "failure to assimilate". There is, according to Carr, an inevitable gulf between a man for whom "the only football he was interested in was the round one", and the mainstream American public upon whom his show depended.“BOOM! Well played Norwich. Think I'll go and make myself some nice Delia Smith recipe roasted spuds to celebrate”, posted the CNN celebutainer, in the last tweet received before news of his sacking broke. To his audience of the sort of Americans so parochial they still feel CNN is the place to get their news, that question might as well have read: ٹھیک ہےNorwich کے ادا کیا. میں کو منانے کے لئے کچھ اچھا Delia اسمتھ ہدایت
بنا ہوا spuds جاؤ اور اپنے آپ کو بنا دیں گے سوچوMuch like the incoming Urdus who can’t name a single fact about Frankie Howerd on their "Life In The UK" test, Morgan had arrogantly decided that he was above the culture that was paying his wages. America would have to assimilate with him. Like St Patrick in Ireland, he decided that he could go over and convert these heathens to Goonerism and a belief in the healing power of Kevin Pietersen, by sheer force of his bluff patronage.
Annoncering
Annoncering