I heard that the writers turned down all offers from politicians (right and left) from appearing on the show. There is no chance either side gets clout and I love that❤️
I thought it was joke- presumably, two friends or foes gifting one another a book from a politician they don't agree with. In my mind, Alice gave that lady the Danny Chung book and this is what she's getting back
A book as a political tool - you can do a book tour and get interviewed on TV and radio even before announcing a candidacy, and political supporters can buy copies of it by the container load without it looking like an out and out money donation.
@@keysersoze5032 yeah my family growing up always had some butter in the fridge for cooking and storage and some on the counter in a dish that stayed out. Never went bad and was nice always having softer butter to spread on toast and stuff
im not an american at all so not really get the jokes sometimes. but i really love the show and it gives us outsiders a (i think) real glimpse of the politics there and she's just simply hilarious! caucus |ˈkɔːkəs| noun (pl.caucuses) 1 (in North America and New Zealand) a meeting of the members of a legislative body who are members of a particular political party, to select candidates or decide policy. the Democrats held caucuses on 10 February. • the members of a caucus. he could no longer count on the support of a majority of the parliamentary caucus. 2 a group of people with shared concerns within a political party or larger organization.
Also not from US, but as far as I understand it's basically part of the nomination process for a presidential run. Each party in each state hosts either a caucus or primary. These determine how much backing each candidate will get at the party convention (the event where the winner is voted for). Basically each state has a certain number of delegates who attend the convention and I think the number of delegates who vote for each candidate is decided in various ways by these preliminary campaigns. The Iowa caucus and NH primary are traditionally the first two and they were the two featured on Veep. This is a majorly simplified explanation from basic understanding but hope it is accurate/clear enough. I'm sure others could give a better explanation than I!
"It's like a fruit that way"
I heard that the writers turned down all offers from politicians (right and left) from appearing on the show. There is no chance either side gets clout and I love that❤️
god bless you...etcetera
This is what I hear when politicians invoke Christian pleasantries
I died
the dude who plays richard splett is fucking hysterical
Richard is a great addition to the show
His last name is so ridiculous
If only Selina could know that she would put Richard in her next book's dedication LMAO
"To Alice, this is to get you back" 😂😂
Could you please explain lol i didnt get it😭
@@eva-iv8zf Haha all it means is that person is trying to win back her significant other after breaking up
I thought it was joke- presumably, two friends or foes gifting one another a book from a politician they don't agree with. In my mind, Alice gave that lady the Danny Chung book and this is what she's getting back
@@zac1615 definetly two friends giving eachother gifts from people they hate lmfaoooo
Lol its either someone pranking their friend or pissing off their enemy 😂😂😂
“Hey Richard, no offense -”
“None taken”
“-You’re a catastrophe”
“Ok”
‘What’s your favourite word?’
‘Next’ 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
These people didn't know they were standing in front of TWO future Presidents lol
"blind people are people too!" I can'ttttt😭😭😭
"Next."
"..... Then you got married."
This show constantly makes me LOL! 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
A book as a political tool - you can do a book tour and get interviewed on TV and radio even before announcing a candidacy, and political supporters can buy copies of it by the container load without it looking like an out and out money donation.
"then you got married"
😆😆😆
if it Melted it'll become Texas. lol
‘Blind people are people too’ 😂😂 ‘what’s your favourite word? Next… you think I offended her’ 😂😂
I call it Some New Beginnings because it's plural
God bless you ...etc... lol
He was right about butter.
It’ll melt though
@@Nick_J_ salted and pasteurized butter will go soft but it won't completely melt
@@keysersoze5032 yeah my family growing up always had some butter in the fridge for cooking and storage and some on the counter in a dish that stayed out. Never went bad and was nice always having softer butter to spread on toast and stuff
The smart thing about the joke is that people are torn on this topic… like me 😆
He usually is😂
Sweetest man ever.
What’s your favorite word NEXT do you think I offended her?
thats too loud
LOL
I like Veep so much
It’s confusing.
No it isn’t.
let's raise minimum wage
Shoutout to the editors of these scenes. This phrase has such a comical timing.
2:33 I am a HUGE FAYE KELLERMAN FAN AND HER HUSBAND JONATHON
it’s complex,
Can somebody please explain what a caucus voter is....
im not an american at all so not really get the jokes sometimes. but i really love the show and it gives us outsiders a (i think) real glimpse of the politics there and she's just simply hilarious!
caucus |ˈkɔːkəs|
noun (pl.caucuses)
1 (in North America and New Zealand) a meeting of the members of a legislative body who are members of a particular political party, to select candidates or decide policy. the Democrats held caucuses on 10 February.
• the members of a caucus. he could no longer count on the support of a majority of the parliamentary caucus.
2 a group of people with shared concerns within a political party or larger organization.
Also not from US, but as far as I understand it's basically part of the nomination process for a presidential run. Each party in each state hosts either a caucus or primary. These determine how much backing each candidate will get at the party convention (the event where the winner is voted for). Basically each state has a certain number of delegates who attend the convention and I think the number of delegates who vote for each candidate is decided in various ways by these preliminary campaigns. The Iowa caucus and NH primary are traditionally the first two and they were the two featured on Veep. This is a majorly simplified explanation from basic understanding but hope it is accurate/clear enough. I'm sure others could give a better explanation than I!
Obsessed Atopia I still don't understand; so many political terms lol! Oh well, Veep is still funny
Ha! Sorry - put it this way...if people vote for you at the caucus you are more likely to win the presidential nomination for your party!
Obsessed Atopia Much better, thanks! LOL
Lol!
its exactly like " the thick of it" I get that its Iannucci's style, but the incompetent and oblivious staffers....it gets old
but funny
Not to this 66-year-old Londoner it doesn't. Virtually every scene in every show ranges from funny to clever to hilarious :)
Disagree. Only show in 20 years where I laughed from start to finish and missed punchlines b/c i was laughing so hard