Gayle King Hilariously Defends Vacationing with Obamas; ‘Not Political’ Spending Time with ‘Friends’
On Friday’s Access Hollywood, CBS This Morning co-host Gayle King responded to the fact that she had recently vacationed in Tahiti with, among others, the Obama family, pathetically claiming that it was “not a political statement” and no big deal since her “friends” are out of the White House.
“Gayle’s Obama vacation under fire. Welcome to Access Hollywood. Did vacationing on a yacht with the Obamas get Gayle King in hot water with her CBS colleagues,” reported Access Hollywood co-host and former Today newsreader Natalie Morales.
Morales’s fellow co-host Liz Hernandez added: “As a co-anchor of CBS This Morning, Gayle covers the White House, but did she step over the line given that President Obama is no longer in power?”
Correspondent Scott Evans tracked King down at a Variety event in which King was named to the Power of Women list in New York. King showed her liberal colors, hypocritically ignoring a significant rule taught in journalism classes, which is to maintain independence from those you cover.
On Friday’s Access Hollywood, CBS This Morning co-host Gayle King responded to the fact that she had recently vacationed in Tahiti with, among others, the Obama family, pathetically claiming that it was “not a political statement” and no big deal since her “friends” are out of the White House.
“Gayle’s Obama vacation under fire. Welcome to Access Hollywood. Did vacationing on a yacht with the Obamas get Gayle King in hot water with her CBS colleagues,” reported Access Hollywood co-host and former Today newsreader Natalie Morales.
Morales’s fellow co-host Liz Hernandez added: “As a co-anchor of CBS This Morning, Gayle covers the White House, but did she step over the line given that President Obama is no longer in power?”
Correspondent Scott Evans tracked King down at a Variety event in which King was named to the Power of Women list in New York. King showed her liberal colors, hypocritically ignoring a significant rule taught in journalism classes, which is to maintain independence from those you cover.