1. The New Republic looks at Mitt Romney's claims that President Obama lost two million jobs while he, at Bain Capital, created 100,000 jobs. They find a bunch of bullshit:

From the get-go, Romney's argument was weak. Among the many flaws: Romney calculates the Obama era job losses by using, as a baseline, the employment rate as of January, 2009, when Obama first took office. That’s absurd. The economy was in free-fall when Obama took over. But job losses slowed, then turned into job gains, once the Recovery Act kicked in...Still, that was only part of the story. The real whopper turns out to be the 100,000 figure, which the Washington Post’s Glenn Kessler picked apart. At Kessler’s request, the Romney campaign supplied the source for that claim. Was it a calculation from respected economists? A report from an investment or management consulting firm? Uh, no. It was three newspaper clips, reporting jobs gains from the companies that Bain had taken over. No effort was made to calculate offsetting jobs losses. And did I mention that the job gain figures were recent, from long after Romney had left Bain?

2. The Romney campaign is furiously backpedaling from gay pride fliers that Romney's gubernatorial campaign allegedly made in Massachusetts in 2002. It seems silly to try to distance yourself from something that can be proved by witnesses, though. Even better: Reports are surfacing that Romney nearly marched in the Pride parade that year, which will not sit well with South Carolina social conservatives at all.

3. The Washington Examiner digs up one of Mitt Romney's minor failures at Bain Capital: A company called Lifelike Co. that created dolls called "My Twinn," which were dolls that were exact replicas of the little girls who owned them. Romney was "personally involved" in Bain's 2.1 million dollar voyage into Creepy Valley. Here's a video of the product: