Welcome to DU! The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards. Join the community: Create a free account Support DU (and get rid of ads!): Become a Star Member Latest Breaking News Editorials & Other Articles General Discussion The DU Lounge All Forums Issue Forums Culture Forums Alliance Forums Region Forums Support Forums Help & Search

General Discussion

Showing Original Post only (View all)

Beringia

(5,655 posts)
Sat Dec 28, 2019, 09:18 PM Dec 2019

10 million in Trump change, a column by Mike Royko on Trump from 1991 [View all]

March 29, 1991
Chicago Tribune

Mike Royko was a columnist for the Chicago Tribune when he wrote this column.

The character in the essay, Slats Grobnik, is a fictitious personae, a comically stereotyped working class Polish-Chicagoan.






$10 million in Trump change

I admit that when it all began, 1 was on Ivana Trump's side. It seemed that she was being treated shabbily by The Donald, as she called her husband.

It wasn't merely that he had been unfaithful. Sad to say, such things can happen when a man enters his 40s. This is known as the midlife crisis. And the crisis can be even more acute for a handsome, ruthless billionaire with an ego the size of a sperm whale and who numbers among his acquaintances many lustful models who have a strange fondness for handsome, ruthless billionaires.

But he wasn't a gentleman. Had he been a gentleman, he could still have carried on like a cad, but discreetly. A suave Frenchman, for example, would have stashed his perky tart in a flat on the other side of town and spent afternoons there calming his midlife crisis. But he would return home sauteing the snails properly. You have to admire the French; they know how to mess around.

Instead, Trump flaunted his misconduct. He stashed his young sweetie in an apartment in his very own building. And he even had her tag along on a ski trip, which led to harsh words and an angry scene between Ivana and the sweetie in the ski lodge. As Slats Grobnik put it: "It would be like me playing around, then having the wife and bimbo both show up at my bowling league. This guy ain't got no class."

And then the final act of degradation: Trump actually discussed these personal matters with New York gossip columnists. The journalistic transom-peekers who make their livings tattling about who is nibbling whose earlobe in which chic restaurant, who was seen with which trollop on his arm at a charity ball and which unhappy couple is believed to be going to "Splitsville."

For any normal person, it would be bad enough just being mentioned in such columns. But it's a measure of Trump's lack of character that he actually volunteered information to people whose idea of a good time is sifting through someone's laundry hamper.

And I finally decided that he was totally loathsome when, in addition to his other flaws, he turned out to be a cheapo. As you may recall, he whipped out an old prenuptial agreement and said that all he had to give Ivana was $25 million and a mansion or two.

That seemed like a fortune to some people. I recall asking my wife if she would accept such a settlement, and she said: "Let me think about it for a moment or so. Yes I suppose so. But I would also demand custody of the cat."

But at the time, Trump was said to be one of America's richest men, a billionaire. (For math flunkouts. a billion is one thousand million.) And for a billionaire, his marital buyout amounted to little more than a pittance.

So when Ivana demanded half of everything Trump had, I wrote a column expressing my support. Which made her day, I'm sure.

Her demand seemed fair to me. She had been a good wife: faithful, supportive, loving, and she never was seen in public with curlers and floppy slippers. And it was rumored that to keep herself youthful and attractive, she had undergone those surgical tucks and nips. That's risky business. If you let the doc stretch your facial skin too often, it can snap and roll up like a window shade, and your nose and lips end up somewhere around the back of your neck.

But now everything has changed and I'm officially withdrawing my sympathy from Ivana. That's because Trump's empire collapsed, and he is no longer a billionaire. Or even a millionaire. In fact, he's so deep in hock that under normal circumstances he could be considered a bum. But he owes all those hundreds of millions to banks, and they can't let him become a bum because they have so much invested in him. (That's why I don't understand bankers. They'll repossess your car. but they give a deadbeat like Trump a few million a year in spending money.)

So now he's up to his sneer in a mountain of debt. He's become such a pathetic wretch that when he calls the gossip columnists. they actually put him on hold.

Yet, he talked the bankers into advancing him $10 million to pay off Ivana. And he arranged for her to get one of the mansions.

Under the circumstances. $10 million and a mansion is not a bad deal. There are many women who would accept that even if their husbands had not played around with anything prettier than a pinball machine.

But Ivana brushed it off. She didn't even show up at the courtroom, where Trump stood helplessly waving the $10 million check like a guy trying to hail a cab.

Is that fair? She once demanded half of everything. Now everything is less than nothing. Yet, she turns down 10 biggies and a good place to flop.

I hate to say this, but I think she's being vindictive. Women can be like that. Men, too, but they're not as well known for it.

Slats is probably right when he says: "I figure she won't be happy until he has gone all the way down, to the final resting place for low-down unfaithful husbands."

She wants to see him in hell?

"No. Living in a room at the YMCA. Let him try to sneak a bimbo in there."




https://www.billygoattavern.com/2016/05/27/mike-royko-on-donald-trump/



Mike Royko first wrote a daily column in the Daily News, a Chicago paper from 1964 to 1978. In 1972, Royko received the Pulitzer Prize for commentary as a Daily News columnist. When the Daily News closed in 1978, he worked for the Chicago Sun-Times until Rupert Murdoch bought the paper in 1984. He then went to work for the Chicago Tribune and worked there until his death in 1997.

Royko commented that "No self-respecting fish would want to be wrapped in Murdoch paper", and "His goal is not quality journalism. His goal is vast power for Rupert Murdoch, political power".

21 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
AND NOW, HE'S THE POTUS........ a kennedy Dec 2019 #1
IMPOTUS Skittles Dec 2019 #7
Royko was one of the greats. What brought this column to your attention? Hekate Dec 2019 #2
Yeah I always liked him captain queeg Dec 2019 #4
Royko was great - never missed his columns and grieved his passing. Marie Marie Dec 2019 #6
Royho tagged Jerry Brown with the 'Moonbeam' thingy and Jerry loves him for it Brother Buzz Dec 2019 #9
I went down a rabbit hole Beringia Dec 2019 #13
Great read...Trump's only gotten worse. Karadeniz Dec 2019 #3
That's why I don't understand bankers localroger Dec 2019 #5
Royko must be spinning in his grave. greatauntoftriplets Dec 2019 #8
I saw him once too Beringia Dec 2019 #11
I miss reading his take on things. greatauntoftriplets Dec 2019 #12
I used to read Royko before anything else CanonRay Dec 2019 #10
Royko was great Cartoonist Dec 2019 #14
I read Mike Royko all the time mountain grammy Dec 2019 #15
Thanks for this. I was a big fan of Mike Royko - would love to see his take on today. yonder Dec 2019 #16
I can believe that, that he bluffed his way in Beringia Dec 2019 #17
Royko was the absolute best. nt coti Dec 2019 #18
I always believed he lied about financial troubles to stiff Ivana. nt live love laugh Dec 2019 #19
As a Chicagoan, I really miss Mike Royko Martin Eden Dec 2019 #20
Royko was great, and this column had tRump pegged perfectly. Mc Mike Dec 2019 #21
Latest Discussions»General Discussion»10 million in Trump chang...