Tuesday, October 30, 2012

Good Riddance, One Less Homosexual on TV

Gloria Vanderbilt, with her son Anderson Cooper.
She "supports" her son's homosexuality,
according to the TV interview on his (now-canned)
day time show, but her smile and suggests
discomfort at his public proclamation.


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The creepy Ellen Degenerate continues to do well with TV ratings, but the creepier Anderson Cooper has had his daytime show canned. About time too. I've only watched his show once, when he brought on his mother, Gloria Vanderbilt to his show. Gloria Vanderbilt was the famous heiress to her father's, Reginald Vanderbilt's, fortunes. She went through bitter child custody battles between her mother and her paternal grandmother over her five-million-dollar trust fund from her father when he died when she was barely two years old. Her aunt won, under whose care Vanderbilt lived during her childhood years. Once an adult, she formed her own independent life as a fashion designer and painter.

Anderson Cooper is her son with her fourth husband Wyatt Cooper. He died when Cooper was a young child. Vanderbilt's other son with Cooper committed suicide at age twenty-three. Anderson Cooper was twenty-one then.

Anderson Cooper is another of those "out" homosexuals. This means that he loudly, regularly and "proudly" proclaims his sin.

I've written about Cooper here, where I say:
Recently, the pathetic CNN "reporter" Anderson Cooper, with his adolescent giggle and "danger zone" reporting, melodramatically announced: "The fact is, I am gay." Who didn't know that? He never made a secret of his "orientation," talking about his boyfriend like a giddy girl. I think this "outing" is his paranoia, where he can sense the negative mood against homosexuals, and like a spoilt and stubborn adolescent (the mental state of all homosexuals?) insists that "this is what I am."

The useless Main Stream Media (via the Daily Mail) puts its arm around his shoulder with:
Cooper's sexuality has long been an open secret in TV circles, but for him to state it publicly is a brave and bold move.
What chutzpah he has!

Other useless "journalists" are saying that he "came out" for the ratings. Why would he do that? It will probably bring down his ratings, since ordinary people are not sympathetic to open homosexuals, unless they are the semi-funny sitcom actors on Will and Grace (and it is not "the gays" who make that show but the two ditzy straight women Grace and Karen, with their perennial gaffes).

Comedians Grace and Karen from Will and Grace
Ellen Degenerate might be able to charm some people (straight women, strangely) with her adolescent humor, but Cooper's dry, self-indulgent reporting clearly didn't win him any day-time fans.

Cooper and his boyfriend