Today's Evil Beet Gossip

When’s Someone Gonna Walk a Red Carpet Wearing a John McCain Shirt?

Come on, closet Republicans of Hollywood. I dare you.

Cutie pie Rachel Leigh Cook hits up the Emmy swag lounges and supports her candidate at the same time.

I think she’s just so adorable.

25 CommentsLeave a comment

  • Oh for goodness sakes! You grammer people freak me out!
    Anyways–maybe Heidi (ida know her last name) or Chuck Norris?
    Ha :-)

  • um, no anastasia. spelt isn’t a word. maybe in kentucky but no where else. i think you nimrods mean SPELLED.

  • She is adorable. Who is she again – I see her name, why is she famous?

    From dictionary, FYI, for the squabblers:

    v., spelled or spelt (spĕlt), spell·ing, spells.

  • She is not famous. She did a bunch of low budget movies peaking at “Josie and the Pussycats” and then quickly disappeared.

    She needs a sex scandal to get back into the news because she can’t get acting work.

    I worked a long time ago on a film with her and she was a bit psycho.

  • LOL….. I really don’t think republicans care if some hollywood actor or actress wears a McCain shirt. It’s more important to win the White House for a 3rd time in a row. just saying……. :-)

  • When’s Someone Gonna Walk a Red Carpet Wearing a John McCain Shirt? Hopefully never, is when.

    Also: spelt is, in fact, a word. It’s a grain, or part of a grain, or some damn grainy thing. Nothing to do with spelling, though.

  • I can’t believe I care…….but, spelt is the past tense of spell, it is indeed a word, commonly used in the UK, New Zealand, Canada, Australia and in the US by well educated/travelled folk.

    John McCain doesn’t have T-shirts. He has button-down shirts. But tees, no.

  • Gabriela you can’t expect Americans to know anything about the rest of the world? If it doesn’t happen in Am-urica it didn’t happen at all.

  • Gabriela–

    I am “well-educated” and have lived my whole life in the U.S. and Canada. “Spelt” sounds very odd to me–and honestly, it sounds rather uneducated–so I’d like to argue that it isn’t “commonly used” in either of these countries. I’d always assumed it was British/Australian/etc.

  • Don’t know about Canada, Australia, or New Zealand, but the word spelt is commonly used in the UK. I agree, seldom used in the US, but our country hardly sets the standard for class or education.

  • If there was anybody who was considering wearing a McCain shirt to the Emmy’s, they probably first asked him or herself, “Do I ever want to work in Hollywood or the TV industry again?” and then determined that the answer is “Yes.”