‘Do not email or content me again. Should we do again we will news to a suitable authorities.’
That’s a content Axios’s Mike Allen pronounced he received from Sean Spicer. Not a jovial, laugh-at-himself Spicey who was a goddess of a Emmys ball. No, this was some-more a Sean Spicer we knew from Trump’s White House.
Allen triggered Spicer by requesting a criticism on word that he kept “notebook after notebook” filled with highlights from meetings during a Republican National Committee, a Trump debate and during a White House. “Sean documented everything,” a source said.
Allen called these records “a intensity sugar pot” for special warn Bob Mueller as he continues his investigation.
So Allen understandably texted Spicer, whom he’s famous for some-more than a dozen years, to ask about it. He pronounced a sell went like this:
Spicer: “Mike, greatfully stop texting/emailing me unsolicited anymore.”
Allen: “?”
Spicer: “Not certain what that means. From a authorised standpoint we wish to be clear: Do not email or content me again. Should we do again we will news to a suitable authorities.”
Allen combined that one source told him, “People are going to wish they’d been nicer to Sean… He was in a lot of meetings.”
On amicable media, nobody seemed all that endangered with being nice. The sell was only too irresistible:
Mike Allen was condemned to 22 years in jail currently for texting Sean Spicer, a crime customarily punishable by death.
— John Podhoretz (@jpodhoretz) September 21, 2017