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Sean Spicer Eliminated From ‘Dancing With the Stars’

cigaretteman

HB King
May 29, 2001
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I guess Trump's support didn't help him:

Judges for the dancing competition made little secret that they thought the former White House press secretary should be voted off, despite President Trump’s lobbying on Twitter.

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Sean Spicer and his dancing partner, Lindsay Arnold, during a September episode of “Dancing With the Stars.”Credit...Eric McCandless/ABC
By Daniel Victor and Emily S. Rueb

  • Nov. 12, 2019Updated 9:54 a.m. ET
  • Sean Spicer tried to dance. He wore a floofy neon top. And for eight weeks, he withstood the mockery on social media and the icy commentary from unimpressed judges on ABC’s “Dancing With the Stars.”

    Finally, on Monday, not even President Trump’s support could save Mr. Spicer, and the president deleted a tweet that had asked TV voters to stave off the inevitable: The former White House press secretary was eliminated from the reality show, ending what somehow counts as a chapter in American politics.

    “I’ve loved being on this show, thank you for making me part of it,” Mr. Spicer said after being eliminated.

    [“An untruthful dancer”: Read our dance critic’s review of Sean Spicer’s run on the show.]

    He clearly had a lot of fans, as evidenced by his remaining on the show into the final six contestants. But from the day he was announced as a contestant in August to his elimination on Monday, Mr. Spicer’s presence on the show grated on two groups of viewers: Those unforgiving of his stint as a White House spokesman, and those who like to watch good dancing.

    Continue reading the main story
    On the dancing front, he won over few admirers. The judges routinely criticized his performances and seemed to lose patience with fans voting to keep him around over more qualified contestants. His time on the show may be remembered mostly for the jet-engine-loud, lime-green shirt that he wore during the season premiere in September.

    “He’s as stiff and two-dimensional as a sheet of cardboard, with feet that move as if stuck in slabs of cement and arms that look like they’re still gripping the lectern,” Gia Kourlas, the dance critic for The New York Times, wrote last week.

    On the political front, many viewers and commentators had little desire to rehabilitate the image of an official whom they saw as a mouthpiece for the Trump administration’s dishonesty.

    Mr. Spicer’s time on the show was supported by Mr. Trump, who on multiple occasions urged his vast number of Twitter followers to vote for him.

    Continue reading the main story
    Mr. Trump deleted a tweet, sent before the episode aired on Monday, campaigning for Mr. Spicer to stay on the show, then sent a congratulatory message after his elimination.


More at: https://www.nytimes.com/2019/11/12/...?action=click&module=Features&pgtype=Homepage
 
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