Obama 'doing sex' to China's President over Debt (video)
This week’s Saturday Night Live opened with a skit on President Obama’s trip to Asia for the G-20 summit and featured a press conference between Obama and Chinese president Hu Jintao over the $800 billion America owes to China.
Jintao doesn’t accept Obama’s reassurances that the debt will be paid, accusing the U.S. leader of “doing sex” to him.
The best part of the skit occurs when Jintao ac cusses Obama of spending $200 million a day in travel. When Obama disagrees with the cost, Jintao claims he heard the news from Glenn Beck, to which the President responds:
“Again, let me clear. Glenn Beck has no idea what he’s talking about.”
Barack Obama sex doll for sale in China
Americans may have fallen out of love with Barack Obama, but the president of the United States is still an object of affection for the Chinese, who have remodelled him as a blow-up sex doll.
A doll wearing a dark blue suit and red tie, and with Mr Obama's face carefully screen-printed onto its head, was exhibited at the recent 8th Sex Culture Festival in the southern city of Guangzhou.
The doll was photographed by Chinese state media nestling behind several other standard plastic female toys.
Mr Obama is widely popular in China, and a "Maobama" t-shirt, bearing an image of his face crossed with a portrait of Chairman Mao, has become a best-seller.
The Guangzhou show, which was only open to adults, cost 30 yuan (£3)
to enter and was visited by "tens of thousands" of people, according to a spokesman for the Guangdong Gongchuang Economic Development company, the organisers. One star attraction was a female doll costing 98,000 yuan.
"We do not know which manufacturer produced this doll," the spokesman added.
However, the picture of the Obama doll, which circulated on the Chinese internet, drew an wide array of responses. "How could they place the US president behind those other poorly-made models. He is the head of a big country, after all," wrote one anonymous commentator on the Netease internet forum.
"Why can't we have a Mao Tse-tung toy?" asked another.
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