Be A Man, McMackin, Everyone's Living On Less These Days
Pay cuts are clearly part of the "new reality." Like this commodities trader will probably take a haircut on his guaranteed $100 million bonus, just because his bank owes taxpayers $44 billion. Then there is Greg McMackin.
The University of Hawaii head football coach accused the Fighting Irish of doing a "faggot dance," and now he has been suspended for 30 days without pay, took an additional 7% pay cut from his measly $1.1 million salary and was forced to apologize in a teary public press conference yesterday.
Maybe Bear Stearns CEO Jimmy Cayne can relate: he called Tim Geithner a small-dicked homosexual and got his whole bank taken away and meanwhile everyone else except Lehman got the little prick to pull together a trillion tax dollars so the bankers and traders who brought the financial system to insolvency would not be forced to try and survive on a bonus pool smaller than $33 billion this year. Or maybe Jimmy Cayne can't really relate, being that he is still worth at least $600 million or so. But you know, it's probably not a bad personal finance rule of thumb to avoid bringing up sexual preference in a professional setting when cash might be at stake and/or you are the guy who has to wear that flower necklace all the time. Call it the difference between "executive pay caps" and "faggot dunce caps."
The New York Knicks Are Inevitable
Top Storylines to Watch as the 2026 FIFA World Cup Kicks Off
Six Things That Must Happen for USMNT to Win the World Cup
Best Betting Picks for Day 1 of the 2026 FIFA World Cup
Three World Cup Futures Bets Worth Making Before Kickoff
- Three World Cup Futures Bets Worth Making Before Kickoff
- Tuesday MLB Best Bets: June 9th Pitcher Props Worth Targeting
- NBA Finals Game 2 Betting Picks and Predictions Spurs vs. Knicks
- MLB Picks Today: Two Sunday Bets Worth Backing
- MLB Predictions and Best Bets for Saturday's Biggest Games
- UFC Vegas 118 Betting Picks: Three Fights to Target on Saturday Night
- MLB Picks Today: Two Pitchers Set Up To Fall Short On Outs Props

