Wednesday, October 10, 2018

Melania Trump To Tell All

Big get: ABC News' Chief National Affairs Correspondent Tom Llamas sat down with Melania Trump (above) during her recent trip to Africa

Daily Mail: Melania Trump to tell all: First Lady sits down for solo TV interview and talks about her husband's infidelity, the state of their marriage and reveals why she wore THAT jacket

* Melania Trump is speaking out about a variety of subjects in an interview with ABC News set to air on Friday
* The First Lady is asked about the state of her marriage, her husband's infidelity and her views on the #MeToo movement
* She is asked why she wore the 'I Really Don't Care Do You?' jacket to visit immigrant children who had been separated at the border
* ABC News' Chief National Affairs Correspondent Tom Llamas sat down with her during her recent trip to Africa

ABC News has managed to land an interview with First Lady Melania Trump.

Being Melania – The First Lady will air this Friday at 10pm on ABC, and no question was off the table.

'You did agree to this interview, to your credit, with no preconditions,' states Chief National Affairs Correspondent Tom Llamas.

'Knowing that there could be some tough questions asked.'

Read more ....

WNU Editor: If the hype is true, this will probably dominate the weekend news cycle.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

pro-tip for all of the sensationalists. There is going to be nothing said that the Trump team doesn't want said.

B.Poster said...

I would tend to agree that nothing will be said that the Trump team doesn't want said. Also, Mrs. Trump is very good with the media. I don't think they are going to trap her in anything.

With that said I don't see any upside to this. In an interview forum like this, there will likely be plenty things the media can twist and take out of context. Additionally by agreeing to gave this aired on Friday evening after prime time when the audience is smaller means it will be easier for the media to distort. I think if she was going to do this she should have insisted on prime time when the viewing audience would be highest.