A man who acts like a baby. If he doesn't get his way, he becomes crabby and unable to work with. thinks he's always right. Can be angered and upset by anything.
Must proceed with caution!
If you come into contact with a Manbaby, back away quickly and run like hell.
Manbaby's are good at concealing themselves amongst society. They seem normal at first but throw fits not long after dating them. Be wary.
Julie: He was bitching about not going to the party because I said I didn't want him to go.
A man in constant need of nurturing and attention. The manbaby thinks his problems are fascinating and far more important and tragic than anyone else's. He cannot handle rejection in any form and will lament every breakup he has had throughout his lifetime, and cry over how he was mistreated by women decades in the past.
Susan: Why is Peter crying?
Elaine: He was just telling us about a girl he took out once in 1987 who didn't like him that much.
(CNN)Jon Stewart launched a stinging new round of criticism against Donald Trump on Monday, calling the presumptive Republican presidential nominee a thin-skinned hypocrite who ridicules political rivals and minorities but implodes when faced with even a minor slight.
"He is a man-baby," Stewart told David Axelrod during a live taping of "The Axe Files," a podcast produced by CNN and the University of Chicago Institute of Politics. "He has the physical countenance of a man and a baby's temperament and hands. ... (Vanity Fair editor) Graydon Carter did a joke about Donald Trump's hands 25 years ago, he's still not f---ing over it."
If Trump really wants to engage a politically incorrect debate, Stewart said, he should tell voters, "The problems in this country are not because of Mexicans and Muslims."
Stewart also talked about Trump's likely opponent this fall, Democrat Hillary Clinton.
He described the former secretary of state as "a very bright woman without the courage of her convictions."
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"That's not to say that she is not preferable to Donald Trump," he added, "because at this point I would vote for Mr. T over Donald Trump."
Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
On October 5, Donald Trump said there would be a "collapse" and "depression" in television ratings if he ended his presidential campaign. Later Trump suggested he would skip a CNN debate unless the network gave him $5 million. CNN refused, and Trump later backtracked.
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
On November 22, Trump repeated his claim -- widely regarded as false -- that he saw television reports of Muslims in New Jersey celebrating the 9/11 terrorist attacks. No footage to back up Trump's assertions has been found.
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
In the wake of December's San Bernardino, California, shootings, Trump called for a travel ban on all Muslims from entering the United States "until our country's representatives can figure out what is going on." He did not give details on how Muslims would be identified, but the Republican candidate did not rule out special identification cards.
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
Donald Trump has developed an unlikely bromance with Russian President Vladimir Putin during the campaign. Trump had previously praised Putin as a leader he would "get along very well with." Then, on December 17, Putin further stoked the flame, describing Trump as "a bright and talented person." This led Trump in turn to make more positive comments about the Russian leader.
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
An unrelenting Trump took the run-up to Christmas as a chance to insult Democrat hopeful Hillary Clinton. He said Clinton's bathroom break in a TV debate was "disgusting" before saying she "got schlonged" by Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential race. "Schlong" is a Yiddish word for penis.
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
On January 24, Donald Trump boasted at a campaign rally in Sioux Center, Iowa, that support for his presidential campaign would not decline even if he shot someone in the middle of a crowded street.
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
Donald Trump has gone from outsider to controversial front-runner in the race to become the Republican Party's 2016 presidential candidate. Trump began his bid with an announcement speech on June 16, calling for a massive wall on the U.S. border with Mexico -- for which he said he would make Mexico pay. At this stage he was tied for 10th place in the polls, at just 3%.
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
On week five of the campaign, Trump turned on Sen. John McCain at the Family Leadership Summit in Ames, Iowa. McCain is regarded by many as a war hero after being captured and held in Vietnam for more than five years. After the comments, Republicans rushed to condemn Trump, with rival candidate Sen. Lindsey Graham calling him "a jackass."
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
During the Republican presidential debate on August 6, Megyn Kelly pressed Trump about misogynistic, sexist comments he made in the past, such as calling some women "fat pigs, dogs, slobs and disgusting animals."
Trump slammed Kelly for this, calling her questions "ridiculous" and "off-base."
After the first GOP presidential debate, Trump said: "You could see there was blood coming out of her eyes ... blood coming out of her... wherever." Many accused him of making a lewd comment about menstruation.
Trump told CNN's State of the Union that only a "deviant" or "sick" person would think otherwise. On ABC's This Week, Trump said: "I have nothing against Megyn Kelly, but she asked me a very, very nasty question."
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
In an effort to defend himself from critics of his remarks about the Fox anchor, Trump explained why it is hard for others to insult him -- his own good looks. Trump spoke about the backlash on NBC, saying: "There's nothing to apologize (for). I thought she asked a very, very unfair question."
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
Trump was quoted in Rolling Stone magazine on September 9, mocking Republican rival Carly Fiorina's appearance. On the same day, Trump told crowds: "We are led by very, very stupid people."
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
On October 5, Donald Trump said there would be a "collapse" and "depression" in television ratings if he ended his presidential campaign. Later Trump suggested he would skip a CNN debate unless the network gave him $5 million. CNN refused, and Trump later backtracked.
Hide Caption
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
On November 22, Trump repeated his claim -- widely regarded as false -- that he saw television reports of Muslims in New Jersey celebrating the 9/11 terrorist attacks. No footage to back up Trump's assertions has been found.
Hide Caption
7 of 11
Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
In the wake of December's San Bernardino, California, shootings, Trump called for a travel ban on all Muslims from entering the United States "until our country's representatives can figure out what is going on." He did not give details on how Muslims would be identified, but the Republican candidate did not rule out special identification cards.
Hide Caption
8 of 11
Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
Donald Trump has developed an unlikely bromance with Russian President Vladimir Putin during the campaign. Trump had previously praised Putin as a leader he would "get along very well with." Then, on December 17, Putin further stoked the flame, describing Trump as "a bright and talented person." This led Trump in turn to make more positive comments about the Russian leader.
Hide Caption
9 of 11
Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
An unrelenting Trump took the run-up to Christmas as a chance to insult Democrat hopeful Hillary Clinton. He said Clinton's bathroom break in a TV debate was "disgusting" before saying she "got schlonged" by Barack Obama in the 2008 presidential race. "Schlong" is a Yiddish word for penis.
Hide Caption
10 of 11
Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
On January 24, Donald Trump boasted at a campaign rally in Sioux Center, Iowa, that support for his presidential campaign would not decline even if he shot someone in the middle of a crowded street.
Hide Caption
11 of 11
Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
Donald Trump has gone from outsider to controversial front-runner in the race to become the Republican Party's 2016 presidential candidate. Trump began his bid with an announcement speech on June 16, calling for a massive wall on the U.S. border with Mexico -- for which he said he would make Mexico pay. At this stage he was tied for 10th place in the polls, at just 3%.
Hide Caption
1 of 11
Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
On week five of the campaign, Trump turned on Sen. John McCain at the Family Leadership Summit in Ames, Iowa. McCain is regarded by many as a war hero after being captured and held in Vietnam for more than five years. After the comments, Republicans rushed to condemn Trump, with rival candidate Sen. Lindsey Graham calling him "a jackass."
Hide Caption
2 of 11
Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
During the Republican presidential debate on August 6, Megyn Kelly pressed Trump about misogynistic, sexist comments he made in the past, such as calling some women "fat pigs, dogs, slobs and disgusting animals."
Trump slammed Kelly for this, calling her questions "ridiculous" and "off-base."
After the first GOP presidential debate, Trump said: "You could see there was blood coming out of her eyes ... blood coming out of her... wherever." Many accused him of making a lewd comment about menstruation.
Trump told CNN's State of the Union that only a "deviant" or "sick" person would think otherwise. On ABC's This Week, Trump said: "I have nothing against Megyn Kelly, but she asked me a very, very nasty question."
Hide Caption
3 of 11
Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
In an effort to defend himself from critics of his remarks about the Fox anchor, Trump explained why it is hard for others to insult him -- his own good looks. Trump spoke about the backlash on NBC, saying: "There's nothing to apologize (for). I thought she asked a very, very unfair question."
Hide Caption
4 of 11
Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
Trump was quoted in Rolling Stone magazine on September 9, mocking Republican rival Carly Fiorina's appearance. On the same day, Trump told crowds: "We are led by very, very stupid people."
Hide Caption
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Photos:Trump campaign: 11 outrageous quotes
On October 5, Donald Trump said there would be a "collapse" and
Can Trump Stop Talking About Himself Long Enough to Go Negative on Clinton?
When it's all about "Me! Me! Me!" it can be hard for a politician to exploit his opponent's vulnerabilities.
This may seem to be an odd critique of a politician who is a connoisseur of the well-wrought insult, but veteran political observer Stu Rothenberg wonders if Donald Trump is too narcissistic to go negative effectively. He makes a point worth pondering:
[M]ost competitive presidential campaigns are about a single objective: making the race a referendum on the opponent, particularly if he or she is a long-time politician who has high negatives.
That’s how Barack Obama won a second term. He defined Mitt Romney and ran against that caricature he created (with Romney’s help, of course).
But whether it’s because he really doesn’t understand campaigns, or more likely, that his obvious narcissism makes it impossible for him to see that any topic could be more interesting than himself, Donald Trump continues to make the 2016 election a referendum on his accomplishments, his past statements and his beliefs.
That braggadocio may have worked in a crowded primary with weaker-than-anticipated opponents and a GOP grassroots that wanted red meat and a pure outsider with a flair for entertainment. But it is much less likely to work in a two-way sprint for the White House.
Failing to use the earned media a major-party nominee automatically receives to keep the focus on his opponent's vulnerabilities certainly squanders some important opportunities. For one thing, Clinton's negatives are the sole common ground for Republicans in this general election. For another, incumbent fatigue after two Democratic presidential terms is a significant asset for the GOP. Trump's narcissism could help Democrats make the election a "two futures" choice in which the natural desire for change in a period of high "wrong-track" sentiment does not accrue to the GOP.
Indeed, Trump is showing signs of missing cues to go after that other object of his party's unifying hatred, Barack Obama, and to tie Clinton to his perceived failures. As Rothenberg points out, last weekend the mogul could have been exploiting the fears aroused by May's deeply disappointing jobs report, instead of picking a self-destructive fight with the federal judge presiding over the time bomb of Trump U.
More generally, not to put too fine a point on it, it would be smart for Trump to make swing voters — and marginal Democratic voters — think about anything and everything other than his own self. This may be the one thing he finds impossible. Every politician from the lowliest aspirant to town dogcatcher probably looks in the bathroom mirror and occasionally sees glimpses of a future president of the United States. But Trump manages to stand out as someone who sees a Sun King, the focal point of his very own solar system.
I don't know of anyone in the thin ranks of his advisers who could go to Donald Trump and say, "Boss, you need to get over yourself!" But that may be the advice he needs to hear.
"depression" in television ratings if he ended his presidential campaign. Later Trump suggested he would skip a CNN debate unless the network gave him $5 million. CNN refused, and Trump later backtracked.
Stewart pinned some of the blame for Trump's rise on what he described as the failure of Democrats to transform the public sector into a more dynamic actor.
"The door is open to an a--hole like Donald Trump because the Democrats haven't done enough to show people that government, that can be effective for people, can be efficient for people," he said. "And if you can't do that, then you've lost the right to make that change and someone's going to come in and demagogue you."
Stewart also took aim at the political class, asking, "Why are we so good at campaigns and so bad at governance?"
"The government we have is hard to move," Axelrod responded, defending his former client and boss President Barack Obama and the current administration. "We moved a lot in the first two years when Obama was president."