Bill O’Reilly compared Joe Biden to this Super Bowl champion
Joe Biden left office and everyone in the media wanted to give their appraisal of his term.
Some of the takes are out there.
And Bill O’Reilly compared Joe Biden to this Super Bowl champion.
Bill O’Reilly says Joe Biden is leaving the stage like Aaron Rodgers
Joe Biden delivered one of the worst speeches in Presidential history with his farewell address.
Biden used the speech to whine that social media wasn’t censoring conservatives and that the Supreme Court didn’t allow him to put Donald Trump in prison.
The speech was roundly panned by pundits.
“The first half of Biden’s farewell address sounds like it was written by ChatGPT. The second half: Like a column by Al Neuharth in USA Today in 1985. Pretty close to being the worst Oval Office speech, as a matter of rhetoric, ever delivered. Trying to think of a worse one,” commentary editor John Podhoretz wrote on X.
Bill O’Reilly offered his assessment on Chris Cuomo’s NewsNation program.
O’Reilly compared Biden shuffling off the stage with a 61% disapproval rating to the end of the road for New York Jets quarterback Aaron Rodgers.
“I want to make a sports analogy so Stephen A. is happy,” O’Reilly began. “Joe Biden is going out the same way Aaron Rodgers went out.”
“Oh, you think he’s done?” Cuomo wondered.
“I do,” O’Reilly said of Rodgers.
“Ouch,” Smith replied as comparing Rodgers to Biden is about as low it can get for the one-time Super Bowl champion and surefire NFL Hall of Famers.
“Analogizing him to a Jets player, that’s low, Bill,” Cuomo quipped that it was really bad news for Biden to get compared to the Jets, a franchise with an historical level of failure having not appeared in a Super Bowl since the 1968 season where the Jets won the title in the famous game where Joe Namath guaranteed victory over the heavily favored Baltimore Colts.
Joe Biden’s future
O’Reilly explained that the Jets acquired Rodgers to all the hype in the world only to see the Jets endure two more losing seasons and Rodgers contemplating a future that doesn’t involve New York is analogous to Biden entering office with sky high expectations in 2021 only to see his party shove aside where Biden now faces a future where he is persona non grata in Washington, D.C.
“It’s based on performance. Rodgers comes in with all of the money, with the hope that he’s going to drive the team into the playoffs,” O’Reilly stated. “And he goes out whimpering because he failed. It’s the same thing with President Biden.”
Fellow guest, ESPN host and Democrat Stephan A. Smith applauded O’Reilly’s analogy but had one difference.
Smith predicted Rodgers would still be in the game next year whereas Biden would fade off into obscurity.
“You’re analogy is really, really good,” Smith declared. “With one exception. Aaron Rodgers is probably going to come back and play. Biden ain’t coming back!”