Harry Reid's camp is taking the humor route to win over Nevada voters. In another hilarious ad, Reid's camp produced a fake infomerical for Sharron Angle's "crazy juice." The made-up canned beverage supposedly contains "non-chlorinated water, so you know it's safe from socialism" and boasts real "DeMint."
Drinking the Sharron Angle crazy juice
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Mon Oct 11, 2010 6:53 PM EDT





Non-chlorinated? I thought it was fluoridated water which was supposed to "sap and impurify our precious bodily fluids?"
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N1KvgtEnABY (This sounds so contemporary on so many different levels, that it belies the very notion of progress itself.)
I agree, fix the "fluoridated" quote in the text...seriously...someone wake up it's not that late.
Sharron Angle must either be the literal, or at least metaphorical offspring of Gen. Jack D. Ripper—she learned everything she'll ever need to know, or in any event, everything she ever will know, sitting on ol' Jack D.'s knee, as he read to her from that fine collection of anti-Communist, anti-subversive fairy tales published by the combined offices of The John Birch Society and The Daughters of the American Revolution, in which Jack and Jill roll down the hill together, but manage to keep their precious bodily fluids to themselves.
Seriously though, a deserved nod to a great acting performance carried off by the underrated Sterling Hayden, briefly a member of the U.S. Communist Party and later a namer of names, who ten years after this role played the Irish cop who got shot in the neck by Al Pacino while dining on veal in the Italian restaurant scene in Godfather I.