Dan Gerstein

7K posts

Dan Gerstein banner
Dan Gerstein

Dan Gerstein

@dangerstein

Dan Gerstein is CEO of Gotham Ghostwriters, the country's premier ghostwriting agency. Also part-time political consultant and commentator.

ÜT: 40.740722,-74.005079 Katılım Temmuz 2008
1.5K Takip Edilen2.5K Takipçiler
Sabitlenmiş Tweet
Dan Gerstein
Dan Gerstein@dangerstein·
My first political piece in a long time - a rallying cry to go after the only people that can legally and politically force Trump to leave office - his Republican enablers. Let's do this, let's #HonorUS! @dangerstein/want-to-hold-trump-and-his-republican-enablers-accountable-go-for-the-oath-723ab400c101" target="_blank" rel="nofollow noopener">medium.com/@dangerstein/w…
English
5
11
25
0
Zeus Analytics
Zeus Analytics@Zeus_Analytics·
My Favorite 3 Leg Dinger Lotto is READY 🎉 $10 pays over $1,000 💰 Hit Like 👍 and reply 'HR' to get it sent to your DMs 📥
Zeus Analytics tweet media
English
646
25
1.2K
81.1K
Dan Gerstein
Dan Gerstein@dangerstein·
@Marc_DAmico Infuriating to watch this team devolve into the same sloppy dumbass group that pissed away the Heat series in 2023. Shows the limits of Mazz’s coaching — can’t control the J’s worst tendencies — and how much they miss the discipline and maturity of Jrue. Just embarrassing.
English
0
1
5
404
Marc D'Amico
Marc D'Amico@Marc_DAmico·
I'm old enough to remember a whole lot of pundits saying the Celtics were the cream of the crop in the East after G4. A couple rough losses since, for sure, but let's not act like Boston isn't capable of taking G7 at home and making everyone forget about these last 3 days.
English
73
46
640
31K
Dan Gerstein
Dan Gerstein@dangerstein·
@RickResnick @TheMaineWonk @fbonacci @ossoff that’s a false choice. lead with the corruption but be forceful and truthful in explaining who is primarily responsible. telling the truth to hold the worst perpetrators responsible is far different and much more effective than either blind trump anger or vague both-siderisms.
English
0
0
0
27
Rick Resnick
Rick Resnick@RickResnick·
@dangerstein @TheMaineWonk @fbonacci @ossoff It's the Péter Magyar playbook: Focus on the corruption and what it means to real people. That seems like a better strategy than just railing on Trump (and the GOP) -- no matter how horrible he is -- because that message hasn't worked.
English
1
0
1
44
Maine
Maine@TheMaineWonk·
I’ve written a few campaign ads in my day. But holy shit. This ad from @ossoff might be one of the best I’ve ever seen.
English
242
4.1K
12.4K
267.9K
Dan Gerstein retweetledi
Paul Rees. ex Rucksack.
Paul Rees. ex Rucksack.@HannahIamthest1·
A truck loaded with thousands of copies of Roget's Thesaurus spilled its load leaving New York. Witnesses were stunned, startled, aghast, stupefied, confused, shocked, rattled, paralyzed, dazed, bewildered, surprised, dumbfounded, flabbergasted, confounded, astonished, and numbed.
Paul Rees. ex Rucksack. tweet media
English
1.1K
3.6K
19.3K
844.4K
Dan Gerstein retweetledi
Kelly
Kelly@kellytx2·
Every MLB team should adopt a rescue dog and make them their official Bat Dog!🐶⚾ A shelter pup sprinting out to fetch bats between innings? Pure joy, second chances, and instant crowd favorite. Adopt. Train. Win hearts❤️
English
163
1.1K
6K
147K
Dan Gerstein retweetledi
Rep. Mike Levin
Rep. Mike Levin@RepMikeLevin·
This should be on the front page of every newspaper in America. A Syrian billionaire needed U.S. sanctions lifted so he could cash in on $12 billion in reconstruction contracts. In an attempt to influence American foreign policy, he proposed a Trump-branded golf course, cut Jared Kushner & Ivanka Trump into a multibillion-dollar real estate deal for a resort in Albania, and had someone physically deliver a stone engraved with the Trump family crest to a Republican Member of Congress with instructions to take it to the White House to get the President's attention. Trump threw his weight behind repealing the sanctions. They were lifted. The contracts are moving, the Trump family’s deals are expanding, and not a single Washington Republican is willing to say a word about any of it. This is a corruption of everything the office of the presidency is supposed to stand for, and the American people deserve to know about it. nytimes.com/2026/04/19/us/…
English
881
19.5K
41.8K
1.8M
Dan Gerstein retweetledi
Greg Wyshynski
Greg Wyshynski@wyshynski·
I love this town #LFGM
Greg Wyshynski tweet media
English
3
41
891
60.8K
Dan Gerstein retweetledi
Sally Goldenberg
Sally Goldenberg@SallyGold·
Over a 30-year period ending in 2023, New York lost more than 600,000 units with rents of $1,500 or less and a net increase of about 75,000 units with rents of $5,000 or more, according to city data. nytimes.com/2026/04/18/nyr… via @NYTimes
English
45
122
489
354.7K
Dan Gerstein
Dan Gerstein@dangerstein·
My latest nee hero. Bravo Bill Leroy!
James Tate@JamesTate121

Donald Trump thought he could score cheap political points by calling Bill LeRoy an “insult to Jesus” because the veteran catcher and captain of the Savannah Bananas is “beyond woke” and believes that God does not discriminate on the basis of gender. Standing in front of a roaring, sold-out Banana Ball crowd, LeRoy didn’t just clap back — he delivered a powerful, no-nonsense response that shook the stadium. “The president of the United States just said that I insulted Jesus,” LeRoy began, gripping the mic with calm intensity. “You want to know what’s a real insult to Jesus? Turning your back on people who need help while giving more to those who already have everything.” “You know what insults Jesus?” he continued, gesturing toward the crowd. “Separating families, shutting doors on those in need, and forgetting what ‘love thy neighbor’ actually means. That’s not the message I stand for — and it’s not the message this team stands for.” “You know what insults Jesus? Preaching values while ignoring compassion. Talking about faith while practicing division. That’s not faith — that’s politics dressed up as religion.” “I’m not a perfect Christian,” he said, a small smile crossing his face. “There’s only been one perfect man, and I’m not him. I’m just a catcher who believes in treating people right.” “Jesus told us to love our neighbors as ourselves… So why do we keep choosing hate, division, and fear instead?”

English
0
0
1
98
Dan Gerstein
Dan Gerstein@dangerstein·
what a story
j wall ✡@jwhaifa

My daughter got detention for defending her late Marine father — but when FOUR MEN IN UNIFORM walked into the school the next day, the entire building went silent. "Mrs. Harrison, you have to understand: Grace’s behavior was completely UNACCEPTABLE. We respect your husband’s service to this country, but..." her teacher said. My 14-year-old daughter sat beside me, her eyes glassy. The day before, one of her classmates had made a joke about Grace not having a father. He was a Marine. Grace was only three when we lost him. So when that girl laughed and said, "Maybe your dad just didn’t want to come back," something inside Grace snapped. She shot to her feet so fast that her chair slammed to the floor. Through tears, she shouted, "My dad was a HERO. Don’t you ever talk about him like that again!" She was the one who got detention. She barely said a word the whole way home. That night, I found her sitting on the floor in my husband’s old sweatshirt. "I’m sorry I got in trouble," she whispered. "I just couldn’t let her say that about him." My heart cracked wide open. The next morning, the school called an emergency assembly. I assumed it had something to do with Spirit Week. A few minutes after the first bell, Grace texted me from the auditorium. Then my phone rang. "Mom..." she whispered, her voice shaky. "You need to come." I stood up so fast I knocked over my coffee. "What happened? Grace, are you okay?" There was a long silence on the other end. "Mom... four men in uniform just walked into the school." "Hide right now. What’s happening? I’m calling the police!" But Grace laughed. "No, Mom, they’re not doing anything bad. You have no idea WHAT JUST HAPPENED! Just get here, please!" she said, before the line went dead. I didn't bother grabbing my purse. I threw my keys into the ignition, my heart hammering against my ribs, and sped to the high school. When I burst through the double doors of the auditorium, I stopped dead in my tracks. The room, packed with over eight hundred teenagers, was completely, eerily silent. Down the center aisle stood four imposing figures in impeccable Marine Corps Dress Blues. The brass buttons caught the overhead lights, and their crisp white covers were tucked sharply under their arms. I recognized the man at the front immediately. It was Staff Sergeant Miller—my late husband’s closest friend and squad leader. I had called him in tears the night before, just needing someone who understood the weight of the disrespect Grace had faced. I hadn't expected him to do *this*. The principal, Mr. Davis, stood awkwardly at the podium, looking completely out of his depth. Staff Sergeant Miller didn't wait for permission to speak. He stepped up to the front, taking the microphone from the stand, and his booming, authoritative voice echoed through the massive room. "We apologize for the interruption, Principal Davis," Miller said, though his tone suggested he wasn't sorry at all. "But we received word that a young lady in this school was being disciplined for defending the honor of a fallen United States Marine." A collective gasp rippled through the student body. The teacher who had given Grace detention slunk back into her seat in the front row, her face turning crimson. Miller’s heavy gaze swept across the bleachers. "Where is Grace Harrison?" Grace stood up slowly from the middle row, still wearing her dad’s oversized sweatshirt. "Come down here, Grace," Miller commanded gently. As she walked down the bleacher steps, the three other Marines broke formation and fell perfectly into step behind her, creating an impromptu honor guard. They escorted her to the center of the floor. Miller turned to face the silent crowd. "Captain Mark Harrison didn't just 'not want to come back.' He gave his life pulling three wounded men out of a burning transport vehicle in the middle of a firefight. I know, because I was one of those men. None of us standing here today would be breathing if it weren't for Grace's father." The silence in the room was absolute. You could have heard a pin drop. A few rows up, the girl who had made the cruel joke the day before was staring at her shoes, visibly crying. Miller turned back to Grace and dropped to one knee, bringing himself to eye level with her. He pulled a small, velvet box from his pocket and opened it, revealing a gleaming Challenge Coin from their old unit. "Grace," he said, his voice thick with emotion but loud enough for the microphone to carry. "Your father was the bravest man I ever knew. You stood your ground yesterday, just like he would have. You protected his honor, and now, his squad is here to protect yours. We have your back. Always." He pressed the heavy metal coin into her palm, stood up, and then all four Marines snapped a crisp, perfectly unified salute to my fourteen-year-old daughter. Tears streamed down Grace's face, but they weren't tears of anger or shame anymore. She stood tall, squared her shoulders, and returned a clumsy but beautiful salute of her own. Suddenly, from the back row of the bleachers, a single student stood up and started clapping. Then another. Within seconds, the entire auditorium erupted into a deafening standing ovation. Even Mr. Davis and the teachers were on their feet. I hurried down the aisle, wiping away my own tears, and wrapped Grace in a massive hug. Staff Sergeant Miller tipped his head to me, a fierce, protective glint in his eye. Before we could leave the building, Principal Davis rushed over to us in the hallway. He looked thoroughly chastised. "Mrs. Harrison, Grace," he stammered, wringing his hands. "I... I want to formally apologize. The detention has been completely wiped from her record. We will be handling the bullying incident with the other student appropriately, and frankly, I think our staff needs a heavy refresher on empathy." Grace squeezed the coin in her hand, looking up at the four men in uniform who had dropped everything to stand by her side. She didn't need to say a word. The message had been delivered loud and clear. Captain Mark Harrison had left a legacy of courage behind, and that day, an entire school learned exactly what it meant to be a hero's daughter.

English
0
0
0
78