
Nothing wrong is wrong when the beloved but lonely accountant Norm Peterson enters the fictional TV bar “Cheer”.
“Specification!!!” From mailing operator Cliff Clavin to former Major League Baseball pitcher Sam Malone shouted in unison.
If only the previous one House Speaker John Boehner, Rep. Buz Lukens of R-Ohio or R-Ohio has been recognized by R-Ohio (R-Ohio), an actor George Wendt who plays Norm in the sitcom.
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Winter was in Age 76 years old. Wendt created everyone, everyone’s “Willy Loman” character is one of the most iconic in comedy television history. Wendt’s portrayal of Norm earned him six Emmy nominations, best actor in the Primetime Series.
But in Bona’s first game For Congress In 1990, Winter accidentally established a strange and permanent connection with a future House spokesperson.
In 1989, Luckens represented Ohio’s 8th Congressional District. But wsyx-tv in Columbus, Ohiosecretly recorded Lukens during a conversation with a teenage girl in McDonald’s. Lukens talked to the woman about a government job. He hopes that she will remain silent with her daughter.

In Boehner’s first Congressional game in 1990, Winter inadvertently established a strange and permanent connection with a future House spokesperson. (Reuters/Gripas)
Luckens denied any misconduct in public. He was charged and later convicted of a minor offense. The House Ethics Committee initiated an investigation. But Luckens refused to resign. Between Lukens, the three-way Republican primary between the former Congressman, the late Rep. Tom Indenness, Ohio, R-Ohio and Boehner.
Bona was a state legislator at the time. Scandal Reel Lukens offers a rare opportunity to travel to Washington.
Although it seems strange now, Boehner is the least known of the three Republican candidates, a cruel primary. But Bona’s innate political acumen continued decades before he took the Speaker’s Suite.
Despite the scandal, Luckens is still very popular in the area. He served as a member of Congress decades ago and returned to the House of Representatives, when the kind Senate opposed the late stage. John Glenn, D-Ohio, 1986. With the Lukens scandal, Kindness hopes his job will come back. Bona hopes to take advantage of this opportunity.
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Can you have such a name? “Mr. Congressman is kind.” No wonder this is a challenge for upstarts, future speakers, and with the unpronounceable Teutonic surname.
But Bona won. Even if he beat Luckens and kindness, it wasn’t a deal to win the election.
Boehner vs. Mayor of Hamilton, Ohio, the largest city in the 8th Congressional District. Jolivette is famous for changing the name “Hamilton” to “Hamilton!” In the 1980s. He also ran Jolly’s drive in Hamilton. Imagine a 1970s hamburger that you can order from a car and lie in the orange condition.
But what we are talking about here is “cheering.” Not a “happy day”.
Wendt was at his popularity at the peak of the summer of 1990, as Boehner and Jolivet faced the election. So Wendt appeared on late night TV on “Arsenio Hall Show.”
Head up, kids.
Hall’s joint show will never beat NBC’s “Tonight’s Show with John Carson” in ratings. But the program received major headlines in 1992, when future President Bill Clinton played saxophone on the show to attract a younger crowd that attracted Hall instead of Carson.

Wendt’s portrayal of Norm earned him six Emmy nominations, best actor in the Primetime Series. (Herb Ball/nbcu Photo Gallery/NBCUNIVERAL via Getty Images)
Clinton’s appearance is a groundbreaking moment American politics And probably helped him win the election. Of course it is the most important political activity in Hall’s performance. Winter’s appearance proves important.
Jolivet is Wendt’s brother-in-law. He regularly parachuted into the 8th District of Ohio, running for Jolivet and against Boehner. So Hall asked him about Winter’s political participation and Joe Levitt.
Wendt essentially starts to slander Libel Boehner. Wendt never mentioned Boehner. But Winder mixed Lukens and his sexual scandal with Bona. On national television, many.
“The guy he met had some problems,” Winter said. “The guy in District 8 had some beliefs, some felony or misdemeanor or something. So I thought it was time to make a change. I know, I know, Greg won’t go Become a criminal. ”
Hall is a native of Ohio. But he was obviously not familiar with the Luckens scandal – although it was a national story and directed the daily headlines. He did not ask further or correct Wendt. After all, it’s a late night comedy and variety show. Not “see the media”.
Hall’s PR staff blamed Winter entirely on the issue, saying the host couldn’t control “what (the guest) was going to say.”
When Boehner’s team made a statement, the situation then became annoying.
“We, like many viewers, were confused by the conversation last night. We don’t know if they were talking about Congressman Luckens’s issue or the theft complaint filed against Greg Jolivet with Hamilton (Ohio) against Greg Jolivette.”

American comedian and talk show host Arsenio Hall is a portrait pose for sitting on a chair in Los Angeles, circa 1991. (Bonnie Schiffman/Getty Images)
Jolivet’s campaign believes it’s an old allegation, and that’s not the case. They then asked Boehner Fire Barry Jackson, Boehner’s campaign manager. Jackson calls this episode “cheap gutter politics.”
Boehner himself fixed the wrongly identified case on Wendt. He believes the actor should have greater responsibility for what he said on national television.
Bona did not fire Jackson. Jackson worked with Boehner for many years and later served as Chief of Staff as a Representative.
Wendt’s loser is not fatal to Boehner. Even though the Republicans registered in the Eighth District at the time had almost a majority of Democrats, they had been elected for many years. Bona beat Jollivit 61-39% in the election.
The rest is Boehner’s history.
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Fast forward to today. Boehner took it To x After the actor died. The former spokesman explained that Winter was his rival brother-in-law and “took on late night TV and said some tough things.”
Boehner said Wendt “confused me with the others. He called to apologize later and we had a great conversation. Raising a glass to the American man tonight will always remember that it is the norm.”
Or, as they might say on the show, “cheer.”