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Michelle Obama track this thread

Started by Imperator; Last updated by NewserScooter | View history

Michelle Obama

She's Barack's mate in politics, marriage and life. And she knows how to get press.

Stories

Stories 41 - 60 of 98

  • July 2008
    • Ivanka Tops Best-Dressed List

      Ivanka Tops Best-Dressed List

      (Newser) - Vanity Fair ’s International Best-Dressed List holds few surprises. True, it includes David Beckham while omitting his wife, Victoria, but overall the roster is rich with royals and light on poor people. The top 10: Heiress and exec Ivanka Trump Would-be American first lady Michelle Obama French first lady and pop star Carla Bruni-Sarkozy More »

    • Obamas Keep Girls' Feet on Ground

      Obamas Keep Girls' Feet on Ground

      (Newser) - It can be hard enough to keep kids grounded, but Barack and Michelle Obama's task might be complicated by his quest to be the most powerful leader in the world. Not so, the Obamas tell People, in a look at how they keep it real on the campaign trail. The Democratic candidate says 10-year-old Malia and 7-year-old Sasha are normal kids who make a buck a week for allowance, and fear moving to DC and making new friends should dad get the job. More »

    • VF Spoof Bumps New Yorker

      VF Spoof Bumps New Yorker

      (Newser) - Vanity Fair has taken a jab at the New Yorker , posting a spoof of the magazine’s controversial Barack Obama cover on its website. VF ’s "cover" shows a doddering John McCain gripping a walker and fist-bumping his wife, Cindy, who cradles a pile of prescription drugs. In the background, the Constitution burns in the fireplace under a portrait of President Bush. More »

    • Obama Cover Misses Point of Satire

      Obama Cover Misses Point of Satire

      (Newser) - The now-infamous New Yorker cover depicting Barack and Michelle Obama as Muslim extremists rankled readers because it is not satire, Lee Siegel argues in the New York Times . Satire tackles "social rottenness once it has become a visible and established part of life," writes Siegel. But the New Yorker gave mainstream credence to a notion of the lunatic fringe. More »