Archive for the ‘Obama’ Category

Biden enjoys PB&Js and Gatorade: ‘He has the tastes of a 5-year-old’ – Business Insider

President Joe Biden's on-the-go lunch may sound familiar to anyone who packed a bag for summer camp, with the commander-in-chief leaning on a few sweet staples to get him through the day.

For meetings, Biden often packs "a protein bar, a peanut-butter-and-jelly sandwich and a travel-size orange Gatorade," according to The Washington Post's Ashley Parker.

"He has the tastes of a 5-year-old," a seasoned Biden adviser told The Post.

The commander-in-chief' rolls with "not quite a lunch pail, but it's his little bag of stuff, so if he gets peckish in a meeting he can have something healthy," according to Democratic Sen. Chris Coons of Delaware, one of Biden's closest friends in D.C.

Along with orange Gatorade, Biden is partial to Coke Zero, according to The Post.

While Biden will often have a soup and salad with grilled chicken for more formal lunches, he keeps a bevy of sweets on hand to squeeze into his otherwise healthy diet, Parker writes.

The new White House staples are a departure from Obama's basket of apples and Trump's iconic Diet Coke button.

"Instead, Biden has stocked the outer Oval Office with salt water taffy from Dolle's, a staple of the boardwalk in Rehoboth Beach, Del. and his favorite chocolate chip cookies," Parker writes. "In a nod to covid, each cookie is individually enclosed in a wrapper with a gold White House seal, making them hot commodities among staff and visitors."

Biden projects an image of a happy warrior or maybe happy camper when he snags his go-bag of snacks while on the move for meetings in and around the White House.

"He's got his little lunch and stuff, his books, and it's like he's commuting to work," Coons said.

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Biden enjoys PB&Js and Gatorade: 'He has the tastes of a 5-year-old' - Business Insider

Obama visit has passed into the annals of Moneygall history but its impact lives on – Independent.ie

Tenyears on from his historic visit, would Barack Obama still recognise the village where his ancestor Falmouth Kearney left for a fresh start in the New World?

wind farm swishes the air on the approach to Moneygall in Co Offaly and the motorway pitstop that bears his name is now an established feature on the road to Limerick.

A cardboard cut-out of the first couple still stands to greet customers just inside the door, but the focus now is less upon the illustrious connections of the place and more on its ability to soothe the pressing need for its facilities as well as a decent cup of coffee or an ice-cream cone to break the journey.

The Visit for truly it deserves a capital letter has passed into the annals and yet, only last year did a fresh coat of white paint obliterate the dazzling stars and stripes which had decked out a local bungalow in its entirety for the best part of a decade.

A certain glamour and a decided confidence still lingers from that charmed day when the eyes of the world were fixed on Moneygall.

Everybody knows us. Its not that little village anymore that people ask where? says Henry Healy, Mr Obamas famous eighth cousin, who has a job with Teagasc in Dublin but is currently working from home.

Just months ago, Michelle Obama appeared on the US chatshow, Jimmy Kimmel Live, and waxed lyrical about Moneygall and the welcome they had received there even mentioning Obama Plaza, saying: That is real people. That is not photoshopped. Thats in Moneygall.

You cant get a house to rent here, says Henry with some satisfaction, as he stands in the main street and looks around him.

Weve embraced the opportunities the visit gave us.

With the Plaza getting all the business, all the shops in Moneygall are gone. But the village itself is looking trim and polished.

Almost 1m in funding, largely from Offaly Local Development, has helped transform wasteland into a playground that attracts parents with children from miles around, a community garden, outdoor gym equipment and facilities for a soccer club that caters for 200 members all of which came about after locals set up the Moneygall Development Association in the wake of the visit, Mr Healy explains.

Here, he quotes Christian evangelist writer, Leonard Ravenhill: The opportunity of a lifetime must be seized in the lifetime of that opportunity.

But he thinks Bord Filte is missing a trick by failing to pick up the work started by the people of Moneygall themselves to market it properly for tourism.

A 39km cycle route called the Kearney Loop taking in Moneygall, Templeharry and Shinrone, where more Obama relatives originated has yet to attract a single tourist, though it is popular with local wheeler groups.

Mr Healy has spied an opportunity for the village to act as a stopover on the way to the Cliffs of Moher, given that the attraction in Co Clare is operating at limited capacity due to Covid and coaches have to stagger their visits.

You can still see the thick iron supports, long rusted now, that were put into the walls of Falmouth Kearneys old thatched cottage, to transform it into a two-storey house. The community had tried to run it as an attraction for a while after the Obamas came to town, but it was shut down shortly after and has long been rented out as a residence.

I can still hear the echo of his feet, pounding on the timber boards and saying: My grandfathers grandfather came from here.

To my mind, it would be the easiest thing in the world to market this as a place to come to, says Mr Healy.

For him, Obamas tour of the ancestral home was the most memorable moment of the entire visit.

But Moneygalls connection with the Obamas did not end that day. In fact, it was only the beginning.

Mr Healy and his uncle, Ollie Hayes, both travelled over to the White House for St Patricks Day the following March and faithfully each year until the end of Mr Obamas term in 2016.

A glass case in Mr Hayess bar contains the proof with formal tickets to prestigious Washington events, an envelope addressed in copperplate flourishes.

Another glass case contains the 50 used to pay for the first couples drinks in Moneygall along with their two unwashed glasses. Secret Service men had wiped the fingerprints from them before handing them back, revealed Mr Hayes.

On one of their visits to Washington, in March 2013, they met up with President Obama at a local bar.

We spent a couple of hours with him. He was quite nervy because he was in a packed pub, says Mr Hayes. But he was absolutely mighty craic. Hes hilarious and we had a great old laugh.

Passing through the streets of Washington, Mr Obama had pointed out a homeless man on a bench, saying: You see a lot of homeless here.

He seemed moved, says Mr Hayes.

He asked them what they thought of the controversial household charge, introduced here in 2011, commenting: You cant run a town without money.

He also spoke about some environmental issues, referring to five million new drivers in China last year and the impact it would have on the environment and on oil prices.

Telling them to keep in touch,in the following days MrObama had organised for them to be invited to a ballet in Washington in his stead.

We declined the invitation, laughs Mr Hayes. Afterwards, President Obama had mischievously asked staff: How did the boys enjoy the ballet?

Another outcome from the connection is that former US ambassador Dan Rooney would call to Mr Hayes and his wife on his way to Kerry, enjoying homemade apple tart and brown bread at the kitchen table.

Mr Hayes had given the White House permission to use his house as a command post on that visit 10 years ago.

It meant that if anything happened that day, the president would be making a decision from our kitchen.

In the run-up to the visit, the advance team had come in with suitcases, installing 16 phone lines. And once the president had left Moneygall, the whole operation was stripped out.

Moving on to the next place, says Mr Hayes, shaking his head in wonder.

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Obama visit has passed into the annals of Moneygall history but its impact lives on - Independent.ie

Damon Weaver, kid reporter who interviewed Obama, dies at 23 – WWLP.com

by: Nexstar Media Wire, The Associated Press

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. (AP) The student reporter who gained national acclaim when he interviewed President Barack Obama at the White House in 2009 has died of natural causes, his family says.

Damon Weaver was 23 when he died May 1, his sister, Candace Hardy, told thePalm Beach Post. Further details were not released. He had been studying communications at Albany State University in Georgia.

Weaver was 11 when he interviewed Obama for 10 minutes in the Diplomatic Room on Aug. 13, 2009, asking questions that focused primarily on education. He covered school lunches, bullying, conflict resolution and how to succeed.

Weaver then asked Obama to be his homeboy, saying then-Vice President Joe Biden had already accepted.

Absolutely, a smiling Obama said, shaking the boys hand.

He used that meeting to later interview Oprah Winfrey and athletes like Dwyane Wade.

He was just a nice person, genuine, very intelligent, Hardy said. Very outspoken, outgoing. He never said no to anybody.

Weaver got his start in fifth grade when he volunteered for the school newscast at K.E. Cunningham/Canal Point Elementary in a farm community on the shores of Lake Okeechobee.

Damon was the kid who ran after me in the hall to tell me he was interested, his teacher, Brian Zimmerman, told the Post in 2016. And right away, I just saw the potential for the way he was on camera. You could see his personality come through. He wasnt nervous being on camera.

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Damon Weaver, kid reporter who interviewed Obama, dies at 23 - WWLP.com

Obama Spills the Tea on UFOs with James Corden – Yahoo Lifestyle

When it comes to aliens, theres some things I just cant tell you on air Pres. Obama spilled the tea on UFOs during a late-night interview with James Corden For more world news and viral videos, subscribe to NowThis News. #Obama #UFOs #JamesCorden #Entertainment #News #NowThis This video "Obama Spills the Tea on UFOs with James Corden", first appeared on https://nowthisnews.com/.

BARACK OBAMA: When it comes to aliens, there are some things I just can't tell you on air. Look, the truth is that when I came into office, I asked. I was like, all right, is there the lab somewhere where we're keeping the alien specimens and spaceship? And they did a little bit of research, and the answer was no.

But what is true-- and I'm actually being serious here-- is that there's footage and records of objects in the skies that we don't know exactly what they are. We can't explain how they moved their trajectory. They did not have an easily explainable pattern. And so I think that people still take seriously trying to investigate and figure out what that is. But I have nothing to report to you today.

JAMES CORDEN: It's OK.

OREN LIEBERMANN: An object, skimming the surface, apparently at high speed, when--

- Whoa! Copy! Woo-hoo!

OREN LIEBERMANN: Bullseye. The aircraft sensors home in on the thing, the unidentified flying object. It's one of a few videos of these UFOs the Pentagon confirmed as authentic.

ALEX DIETRICH: You know, I think that over beers, we've sort of said, hey, man, if I saw this solo, I don't know that I would have come back and said anything because it sounds so crazy. Your mind tries to make sense of it. I'm gonna categorize this as maybe a helicopter or maybe a drone. And when it disappeared, I mean, it was just--

OREN LIEBERMANN: Alex Dietrich has never told her story publicly. She's one of several Navy pilots who spoke with "60 Minutes" who've seen or picked up on sensors, similar objects, often moving fast with odd shapes and no obvious method of propulsion.

Story continues

DAVID FRAVOR: There's definitely something that-- I don't know who's building it, who's got the technology, who's got the brains, but there's something out there that was better than our airplane.

OREN LIEBERMANN: No one is using the word aliens here. The Pentagon calls them UAPs, unidentified aerial phenomena.

- There's a whole fleet of them. Look on ASA. My gosh! They're all going against the wind. The wind is 120 knots to the west.

OREN LIEBERMANN: Pilot, Ryan Graves, picked this up on his infrared sensor in 2004 off the coast of San Diego.

- Look at that thing. It's rotating.

RYAN GRAVES: The highest probability is it's a threat observation program.

BILL WHITAKER: Could it be Russian or Chinese technology?

RYAN GRAVES: I don't see why not.

OREN LIEBERMANN: Late last year, the Pentagon created a task force to look at the nature and origin of UAPs. What are these things, where do they come from, and is there an intent here? The government sees this as a possible threat, something that may be able to outperform military capabilities. Lawmakers are demanding it be treated seriously.

MARCO RUBIO: We have things flying over our military bases and places where we're conducting military exercises, and we don't know what it is, and it isn't ours. So that's a legitimate question to ask. If it's something outside this planet, that might actually be better than the fact that we've seen some technological leap on behalf of the Chinese or the Russians or some other adversary.

OREN LIEBERMANN: Next month, the Director of National Intelligence and the Defense Secretary are scheduled to deliver an unclassified report on UAPs to Congress. Former director of National Intelligence, James Clapper, applauds the transparency, but isn't expecting too much yet.

JAMES CLAPPER: I expect this report will be filled with ambiguity as well. And people, depending on their leanings, will extract what they want out of this.

- Whoa! Copy! Woo-hoo! There's a whole fleet of them. Look on ASA. My gosh! They're all going against the wind. The wind is 120 knots to the west. Look at that thing. It's rotating.

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Obama Spills the Tea on UFOs with James Corden - Yahoo Lifestyle

Barack Obama says UFO sightings appear real

Former President Barack Obama has laughed off rumors that the US government has a secret stash of aliens and their spacecraft while conceding that there really are UFO sightings that the government cant explain.

When it comes to aliens, there are some things I just cant tell you on air, the 44th commander-in-chief teased James Corden in a video chat on The Late Late Show aired early Tuesday.

Look, the truth is that when I came into office, I asked, Obama told the British comedian with a laugh.

I was like, All right, is there the lab somewhere where were keeping the alien specimens and spaceships?

They did a little bit of research and the answer was, No,' he deadpanned to laughter.

But what is true and Im actually being serious here is that theres footage and records of objects in the skies that we dont know exactly what they are, he said of growing reports of unidentified flying objects.

We cant explain how they moved, their trajectory they did not have an easily explainable pattern, he said of growing reports of sights, many recorded by the Navy.

So I think that people still take seriously trying to investigate and figure out what that is. But I have nothing to report to you today, he said, without elaborating on his own views on what the mysterious objects likely were.

Obama then joked that the shows bandleader, Reggie Watts who had first asked him about them aliens might secretly be an alien.

When he asks all these questions, hes deflecting, he joked, asking, Do we know what he looks like behind those glasses?

The former president also said life was pretty darn good now he has less stress, less burden of not being blamed for every single story in the news.

I get a lot more time with Michelle, he said of his wife, saying they also had the blessing of spending lockdown with their college-age daughters.

Michelle thinks Im a little cuter now, a little sexier, he said with a smile.

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Barack Obama says UFO sightings appear real