The cast includes a seasoned drunk, a honey-tongued scandalmonger, a veteran who can never quite synchronise lines and moves, and a fretful worrier anxiously seeking the motivation for every piece of comic business. |
|
Wendy Williams, a radio D. J. who last week began a four-city tryout as the host of her own daytime talk show on Fox, is a real-life scandalmonger, the kind of beauty-salon savant who wishes famous people the worst. |
|
Thus it falls to a scandalmonger who has relentlessly castigated the vice president for his fund-raising excesses to provide a behind-the-scenes glimpse of Al and Tipper Gore under pressure. |
|
The reporter for the tabloid called himself a journalist but was really nothing more than a scandalmonger. |
|