Tim Gunn Is Cool With Hank Paulson Bogarting His Catchphrase
The Treasury secretary really does need to 'make it work' right now.
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The Treasury secretary really does need to 'make it work' right now.
The financial crisis has caused the Treasury Secretary to know the meaning of regulation, and the importance of a catchphrase.
In remarks conspicuously lacking a "my bad," Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson scraps plan of buying distressed assets pretty much altogether.
Masks of our favorite government apparatchiks are available.
The Dow experienced a big bump just before four o'clock — but that doesn't necessarily mean it was a good day.
House Republicans broke with the president, cock-blocked the bailout, and walked out of negotiations, despite Hank Paulson's pleas.
The secretary of the Treasury agreed to cap executive pay as part of the bailout, and we concede we feel bad for him.
The sticking points on the bailout plan do not seem all that complicated.
Just because there's a Depression on doesn't mean we have to be depressed about it.
The secretary of the treasury once had washboard abs.
The only thing that anyone seems really certain about right now is that when the smoke clears, we'll be looking at a different landscape.
The speech served as a Bat signal to stir powerful New Yorkers who can put the governor's urgent message into play.
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