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[postlink]http://www.mikebarnicle.tv/2024/10/an-amazing-display-of-total-economic.html[/postlink][starttext]
ICYMI: "An amazing display of total economic ignorance yesterday in Chicago,” says veteran columnist Mike Barnicle about former President Donald Trump’s interview with Bloomberg Editor-in-Chief John Micklethwait before the Economic Club of Chicago, where the 2024 Republican nominee defended his protectionist trade policies and other fiscal proposals. “If you ran the interview that Kamala Harris did yesterday and then run the interview that Donald Trump just did yesterday with John Micklethwait at the Chicago Board of Economics, you’d be stunned at the difference between the two in terms of competence, in terms of leadership, in terms of what you know about today's economy.”

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An amazing display of total economic ignorance

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[postlink]http://www.mikebarnicle.tv/2024/10/the-mets-electricity-on-sidewalks.html[/postlink][starttext]
“I'm not a native New Yorker. You know, I'm here three or four days a week each week. I am stunned at the electricity on the sidewalks and in the stores about the Mets, and about baseball in general, but specifically about the Mets. Last night, we were on a text chain, four or five other people during the game texting back and forth. The bases are loaded, and one of the text members, just a one-line text: ‘I feel a grand slam from Lindor.’ And boom. I mean, that's the Mets’ season, and Francisco Lindor is symbolic of the Mets, I think. He's a calming presence when you hear him interviewed, he's a calming presence at the plate, and you just have a confidence and a joy in what he brings to the game each and every day,” says veteran columnist Mike Barnicle during this Morning Joe conversation with Willie Geist and Jonathan Lemire about the New York Mets having reached the National League Championship Series with a 4-1 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies due to Francisco Lindor hitting a grand slam in the sixth inning during the 2024 Major League Baseball playoffs.

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The Mets: "Electricity on the sidewalks"

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[postlink]http://www.mikebarnicle.tv/2024/10/reporting-on-campaign-its-damaging.html[/postlink][starttext]
“I hesitate to do this, but the reportorial coverage of this campaign in a daily basis is abusive to the public mind, to the voters’ minds,” says veteran columnist Mike Barnicle during this Morning Joe conversation with Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski as they discuss the state of the 2024 presidential race following the vice presidential debate between Gov. Tim Walz and Sen. JD Vance. “We've lost our way in covering this campaign. And I think when you lose your way in covering the campaign, the voters' priorities are skewed a bit by reading, especially in the print coverage of the campaign, and it's more than troubling, it’s damaging.” Watch the conversation here.

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Reporting on the campaign: “It’s damaging"

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[postlink]http://www.mikebarnicle.tv/2024/10/barnicle-on-walz-hes-relatable.html[/postlink][starttext]
"Tim Walz is clearly a leadoff hitter...and the campaign isn't taking advantage of a good leadoff hitter. His job is to get on base, but in order to get on base, you have to…talk to people. That's his greatest asset,” says veteran columnist Mike Barnicle in this Morning Joe segment with Joe Scarborough, Mika Brzezinski and Jen Psaki about Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz and his debate performance against Ohio Sen. JD Vance as the two faced off in their first and only scheduled vice presidential debate. "He's a human being, he's relatable. So, he gets off that plane in wherever it is, Paducah, Kentucky, wherever it is; you go right to the local media and you do a two or three minute interview with him, it's on the news that night and people watch him and say, ‘hey, he seems like good guy.'

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Barnicle on Walz: “He’s relatable"

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[postlink]http://www.mikebarnicle.tv/2024/10/remembering-pete-rose.html[/postlink][starttext]
“I think he belongs in the Hall of Fame, but I think everything that he did, both positive and negative, ought to be put on the plaque. I mean, there are a few other people in the Hall of Fame, few other players who were not models of civilization or civility. Just recognize who Pete Rose was: he played 25 years, 25 years in the major leagues. He averaged 194 hits per season. He was a bad guy off the field. Let's get that on the record; but he was a spectacular player, a spectacular player. And yeah, put him in the Hall of Fame, but put it on the plaque,” says Morning Joe veteran columnist Mike Barnicle during this Morning Joe conversation with Willie Geist and Jonathan Lemire as they remember Pete Rose, Major League Baseball’s hit king who then became an outcast for gambling on the game. Rose died at 83 years old, leaving behind a tainted legacy in baseball history.

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Remembering Pete Rose