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Introduction
Know Jay Carney? Of course you do, he is the Press Secretary of the American White House. Feel quite impressive, yet? He has a very good image in people's mind with his rimless rectangular glasses, the most effective glasses as he may think. There are lots of good things about rimless rectangular glasses. First of all, it broadens your vision range with wide lenses and makes you feel more comfortable with proper short height. Unlike any other so-called fashionable large sized glasses, these rimless rectangular glasses are focused on economic and practical use. As a politician, Jay Carney may have used it as a manifestation of being an environmentalist, saving materials to the largest extent. Though economically made, you cannot say Jay Carney looks bad in these glasses. Instead, his image is always intelligent, sincere and integral with his rimless rectangular glasses. If you also want to have his style, stay at Firmoo.com where the most diverse rimless rectangular glasses are produced.
More info about him
James "Jay" Carney is an American journalist and President Barack Obama's second White House Press Secretary. Prior to his appointment as Press Secretary, replacing Robert Gibbs, he was director of communications to Vice President Joe Biden. Carney previously served as Washington Bureau Chief for Time magazine, a post he held from September 2005 until December 2008, and as a regular contributor in the "roundtable" segment of ABC News' This Week with George Stephanopoulos.
After being hired as a reporter for The Miami Herald in 1987, Carney joined Time magazine as its Miami Bureau Chief in 1989. Carney worked as a correspondent in Time's Moscow Bureau for three years, covering the collapse of the U.S.S.R.. He came to Washington in 1993 to report on the Bill Clinton White House.
He has written and reported about the presidency of George W. Bush, and was one of a handful of reporters who were aboard Air Force One with President Bush on September 11, 2001. Carney later won the 2003 Gerald R. Ford Prize for Distinguished Reporting on the Presidency.
On December 15, 2008, Carney went from the private sector to public service as Director of Communications to Vice President Joe Biden.
In January 2011 Carney was selected to become the Obama administration's second White House Press Secretary. He was named the successor to previous White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs by White House Chief of Staff, William Daley. Carney was one of fourteen White House appointees announced by Daley on January 27.

