
- #JILL LAWRENCE WASHINGTON DC ORGANIZER PROFESSIONAL#
- #JILL LAWRENCE WASHINGTON DC ORGANIZER SERIES#
- #JILL LAWRENCE WASHINGTON DC ORGANIZER FREE#
My first five-letter guess on Wordle is always the same: “TYRANNY.” It’s an excellent guess, though I can already hear the radical puzzle Marxists out there saying things like “that’s definitely not the right word” and “in fact, that’s seven letters, not five.” To which I calmly respond: “DON’T TRY TO CANCEL ME WITH YOUR SO-CALLED FACTS!!” A US trucker convoy to the rescue To paraphrase former President Donald Trump on the day he definitely didn’t incite a crowd of angry supporters to violently disrupt the peaceful transfer of power: “If you don't fight like hell, you're not going to have a Wordle anymore.” My Wordle victory was stolen from me, and the American people will not stand idly by and let this crime of the century go unnoticed. So I hereby call on The New York Times to immediately OVERTURN the results of Sunday’s TOTALLY RIGGED Wordle.


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#JILL LAWRENCE WASHINGTON DC ORGANIZER FREE#
This column from Rex Huppke is free to read. It’s the only logical explanation that doesn’t require me to acknowledge I might have failed at something. Also, Big Tech and the lamestream puzzle media are censoring me by refusing to say I actually got the Wordle answer right on the first try.
#JILL LAWRENCE WASHINGTON DC ORGANIZER PROFESSIONAL#
One is a professional violinist and the other is a composer for movies and TV.After pondering my alleged failure and watching 18 consecutive hours of Fox News, I reached the following conclusion: The puzzle is RIGGED, probably by communists. Her sons have opted out of the family business. Her husband is a longtime editor and public management fanatic. Her second paying job was at UPI in Charleston, W.Va., where she started out writing radio splits and taking stringer reports on triple-A baseball. She later earned a master's degree in journalism at New York University. While studying for a music literature degree at the University of Michigan, she wrote for the Michigan Daily, the feminist newspaper herself, and – her first paying job in the field - the weekly Plymouth Community Crier. On Twitter, Lawrence's mini-biography begins with the phrase "Life sentence in journalism." She has been reporting, writing, editing and opining since she was on her junior high and high school newspapers. She has taught journalism at American University and volunteered in high school classes for the News Literacy Project. Lawrence has discussed political and policy developments on MSNBC, C-SPAN, Sirius-XM, public radio, and many other media outlets. In 2003, the IRE Journal published an article Lawrence wrote about how and why the towns were chosen, and the tools she used to find the information she needed. The stories were based on research and reporting throughout 2001, both before and after the 9/11 attacks, in the archetypal blue and red towns of Montclair, N.J., and Franklin, Tenn.
#JILL LAWRENCE WASHINGTON DC ORGANIZER SERIES#
A highlight of her tenure at USA Today was "One Nation, Divided," a series which she proposed after the stalemated 2000 election and which ran in 2002.

In her columns, essays and analyses, Lawrence has offered sharp insights on everything from the state of the parties and their leaders to the way House of Cards and This Town make Washington seem even worse than it really is. Washingtonian magazine included her on its list of 50 "best and most influential journalists" in 2005. Columbia Journalism Review named her one of the top 10 campaign reporters in the country in 2004. She has also written about politics, policy and culture for Al Jazeera America, The Daily Beast, The Atlantic, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and other publications.Īmong Lawrence's national awards and honors are a 2010 Sigma Delta Chi award from the Society of Professional Journalists for her Politics Daily columns and a 1995 National Headliner Award for her AP columns. Lawrence's positions have included senior correspondent and managing editor for politics at National Journal, senior correspondent and columnist for AOL's Politics Daily, national political correspondent for USA Today, and national political writer for The Associated Press. Jill Lawrence has been passionate about politics, policy and journalism since she was a tween, the stage formerly known as "pre-adolescent." An award-winning reporter and analyst, she has covered every presidential campaign since 1988, as well as other historic events such as the Three Mile Island nuclear accident the 1994 Republican takeover of Congress the Clinton impeachment the Florida recount, and the 19 battles over health reform.
