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-   -   Jon Stewart on Crossfire 10/15 (https://thetfp.com/tfp/tilted-politics/72744-jon-stewart-crossfire-10-15-a.html)

Derwood 10-15-2004 12:59 PM

Jon Stewart on Crossfire 10/15
 
I just finished watching Crossfire Live on CNN and Jon Stewart was the guest. It was brilliant. He wouldn't answer any of their stupid questions, instead choosing to slam their show for it's "partisan hackery" and stating that he thought that American citizen's find it to be "a drag" to watch Crossfire and shows like it after the debates, etc.

He really had them rattled, and they started getting pissed, saying things like "you're much more fun on your show than you are today." Stewart retorts with "and you're a bigger dick when I'm on the show than you are when I watch you on TV".

Jon Stewart is my hero!

Rodney 10-15-2004 01:03 PM

Are they rerunning this? Because I have to see it!

kutulu 10-15-2004 01:04 PM

I'm pissed that this happened while I'm at work

Ace_O_Spades 10-15-2004 01:05 PM

Oh snap, mods can lock/delete my thread, I totally spaced out and didn't check to see if there was a thread already

JumpinJesus 10-15-2004 02:18 PM

What's sad is that there is more honesty and nonpartisanship in his satire than on the "real" news.

The Daily Show is one of the funniest shows on television. I'm reading "America" right now and it is one of the best satirical works I've ever read.

I'm glad Mtv let him go years ago. He's honed his comedy and has gone from being a bit player in Adam Sandler films to a full fledged icon himself.

filtherton 10-15-2004 02:39 PM

The transcript:

http://transcripts.cnn.com/TRANSCRIP.../15/cf.01.html
Quote:

Jon Stewart's America

Aired October 15, 2004 - 16:30 ET

THIS IS A RUSH TRANSCRIPT. THIS COPY MAY NOT BE IN ITS FINAL FORM AND MAY BE UPDATED.


(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
ANNOUNCER: CROSSFIRE. On the left, James Carville and Paul Begala; on the right, Robert Novak and Tucker Carlson.

In the CROSSFIRE:

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, "THE DAILY SHOW WITH JON STEWART")

JON STEWART, HOST: To their credit, once they found out Cat Stevens, who is of Islam, was on the plane, they immediately called out the Air Force and had the plane followed by a (INAUDIBLE)

(LAUGHTER)

(END VIDEO CLIP)

ANNOUNCER: Are world events really a laughing matter? They are if you're Jon Stewart. "The Daily Show" host comes out from behind the desk of comedy's favorite news show for our full half-hour today on CROSSFIRE.

(END VIDEOTAPE)

ANNOUNCER: Live from the George Washington University, Paul Begala and Tucker Carlson.

(APPLAUSE)

TUCKER CARLSON, CO-HOST: Welcome to CROSSFIRE.

Less than three weeks before the election, we're going to take a break from campaign politics, sort of. Joining us will be Jon Stewart, host of "The Daily Show" on Comedy Central and co-author of a new best-seller entitled "America (The Book)."

PAUL BEGALA, CO-HOST: We will spend the next half-hour with the most trusted man in fake news. And he has got pictures of all nine Supreme Court justices naked.

(LAUGHTER)

BEGALA: Worth staying tuned for.

First, though, we will begin, as we always do, with the best little political briefing in television, the CROSSFIRE "Political Alert."

When he wants to look moderate, Dick Cheney invokes his lesbian daughter, Mary, on the campaign trail. When Republican Senate candidate Alan Keyes viciously attacked their daughter, Dick and Lynne Cheney said nothing. When John Edwards praised their evident love for their daughter, Vice President Cheney said this.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

DICK CHENEY, VICE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES: Let me simply thank the senator for the kind words he said about my family and our daughter. I appreciate that very much.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

BEGALA: But now, suddenly, after four debate losses and 18 days until the election, the Cheneys are shocked, shocked, that John Kerry mentioned their daughter in a debate.

There is an important lesson here. If you're gay and you want your rights protected by the Republicans, it helps to have a daddy who wants to distract the country from the millions he made from Halliburton, the billions he ran up in debt, and the war he lied us into.

(CROSSTALK)

(CHEERING AND APPLAUSE)

CARLSON: I have to say, it takes -- it takes -- I admire your stones for defending the indefensible. Even you know that it's wrong, at the very least it's unseemly, to bring up this guy's daughter in two separate debates. And the fact they didn't get into an argument with lunatic Alan Keyes when he attacked their daughter proves nothing, other than they have good manners.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: And the fact -- I'm serious.

BEGALA: No, they have very good manners, Dick Cheney, sure. Really?

CARLSON: What is he supposed to say when John Edwards says, hey, how's your lesbian daughter?

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: He said thank you very much.

(BELL RINGING)

BEGALA: Cheney has raised the issue in the context of campaign appearances.

CARLSON: He has never a single time volunteered anything about his daughter's sexuality.

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: And you know that that is true.

BEGALA: August 24, 2004.

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: In response to a question. He never a single time...

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: He brought her up on the campaign trail.

CARLSON: Yes, I'm sure he did.

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: That's just the one that I -- yes, he did. Check it out on Google.

CARLSON: Yes, my lesbian daughter.

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: August 24, 2001.

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: All right.

Well, there are legitimate, even powerful arguments, to be made against the Bush administration's foreign policy. But those arguments are complicated, hard to explain, and, in the end, not all that sensational.

It's a lot easier just to make things up. And so John Kerry has decided to do just that. In an interview with "The Des Moines Register" yesterday, Kerry warned that there is -- quote -- "a great potential that Americans will be drafted into the armed forces if Bush is reelected president." This is a total crock, as Kerry himself knows well. Virtually no one favors returning to the draft.

Bush is against it. Congress is against it. The Pentagon is completely against it. It is not happening now or anywhere in the near future. Again, John Kerry knows this very well, and yet he pretends otherwise in order to scare college students into voting for him. And they probably will vote for him, but it's still pretty dishonorable.

BEGALA: Well, first off, what is Bush's plan for helping out the Guard and Reserve?

CARLSON: That's a separate...

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: Kerry has a proposal to add 40,000 troops to the Army...

CARLSON: You're making a separate argument.

BEGALA: ... Bush stretched past the limit. What is Bush going to do? What's he going to do?

CARLSON: Well, you're making a separate argument. You're attacking Bush's policy towards the National Guard and Reserves, which I think is completely fair and deserves to be attacked, frankly. But there are no plans to reinstate draft because the Pentagon says that an all-volunteer Army is more effective. It's not going to happen, as you know.

BEGALA: Help me out, though. The guy who says we're not going to have a draft is the same guy who said there were weapons of mass destruction and there was a huge threat from Saddam Hussein.

(CHEERING AND APPLAUSE)

CARLSON: You know what?

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: Bush has no credibility, Tucker.

CARLSON: It's not simply the decision of one man, OK?

(BELL RINGING)

CARLSON: It's a decision that, in the end, Congress will make. And there is no possibility it will make that decision, as you know.

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: Be see.

BEGALA: We'll see.

Terrorists exploded two bombs in the heart of heavily fortified Green Zone in Baghdad yesterday. Another bombing killed another American soldier in eastern Baghdad. Meanwhile, on the home front, the price of oil is hovering around $55 a barrel. The Bush administration has hit the debt limit of $7.4 trillion. They are using accounting tricks to keep the United States of America from going into default like a degenerate gambler with a bookie named Knuckles.

We are critically short of the flu vaccine. Health and Human Services says not to expect any vaccine from Canada, despite what President Bush said in the debate. And yet our president thinks he deserves reelection. In fact, he told reporters -- and I'm quoting here -- "I feel great about where we are."

Well, Newt Gingrich has a different take. "If you don't have some anxiety," the former speaker said, "you're not in touch with reality." Well, Newt, I couldn't have said it better myself.

(CHEERING AND APPLAUSE)

CARLSON: Well, of course, everyone has some anxiety, but that's not the point Bush is making, as you know.

I found it actually really interesting. There was a poll released today. I'm not exactly sure what it proves, but it does say something interesting; 69 percent of members of the armed services right now support Bush, as compared to less than 30 for Kerry, and that overall they were far more hopeful about the direction the country is moving than the average person. These are people, as you know, who are risking their lives in Iraq. It's not a defense of the Iraq policy, but it does say...

(BELL RINGING)

CARLSON: It says something interesting about perspectives.

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: It says that people in military are overwhelmingly Republican.

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: Which is an interesting question. Why? Why is that?

BEGALA: Because the military has always attracted a disproportionate number of Republicans.

CARLSON: I wonder why, though.

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: Well, first off, because they tend to poll the officer corps a lot more than the enlisted corps.

Look at Michael Moore's new book, "Letters From the Front: Will They Ever Trust Us Again?" Those are enlisted people who have a very different view than the elite officer corps do.

CARLSON: I'll get right on Michael Moore's new book.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: Yes, definitely. I'll take it out of my local library.

BEGALA: You should.

CARLSON: Well, Winona LaDuke, remember that name? Even to students of presidential politics, it might not immediately ring a bell, so here is a refresher. LaDuke is the two-time Green Party candidate for vice president.

Four years ago, she ran with Ralph Nader on the party's stridently pro-hemp ticket. A longtime Indian rights activist, LaDuke rarely joined Nader on the campaign trail, owing in part to legal difficulties she had with her common law husband. He was head of the police at the time.

On one of the few occasions LaDuke did speak to the national press, she offered at least one policy proposal. If elected, LaDuke promised to remove pictures of white people from the White House and replace them with portraits of famous minorities. Down with George Washington. Up with Grover Washington.

This year, LaDuke is working on a wind power project and will not be running for office again. But in statement released this week, she declared that she's no longer supporting Ralph Nader. She's supporting John Kerry. Keep that in mind Election Day. John Kerry, if he's good enough for Winona LaDuke, he's good enough for you.

(LAUGHTER)

(CHEERING AND APPLAUSE)

BEGALA: Come on. I mean, that's...

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: Someone has got to keep track of the celebrity endorsements here, OK?

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: That would be like me saying David Duke endorses George W. Bush.

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: You're missing it. You're missing it. You're missing it, Paul.

BEGALA: The Duke family is all over the...

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: Day after day, you make the argument, look, Barbra Streisand is voting for John Kerry. You should, too. And I'm just saying, there are other people who are voting for John Kerry. It's not just Barbra Streisand. It's also Winona LaDuke.

BEGALA: You know, David Lesar, the CEO of Halliburton, I believe is for George W. Bush.

CARLSON: I hope so.

BEGALA: So, you can go to Halliburton or you can go with David and Winona LaDuke, whoever they are.

CARLSON: Winona LaDuke.

BEGALA: I suspect they're not related, actually.

(BELL RINGING)

CARLSON: Well, he's been called the most trusted name in fake news.

Next, we're joined by Jon Stewart for his one-of-a-kind take on politics, the press and America.

We'll be right back.

(APPLAUSE)

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP, "THE DAILY SHOW WITH JON STEWART")

STEWART: Meanwhile, the president's challenger was also in New York, also facing some difficult questions.

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: How to you stay in shape?

UNIDENTIFIED FEMALE: Do you eat something?

UNIDENTIFIED MALE: Do you have a routine? Do you...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: It's like Nerf CROSSFIRE.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

(APPLAUSE)

BEGALA: Welcome back to CROSSFIRE.

As both of our loyal viewers, of course, know, our show is about all left vs. white, black vs. white, paper vs. plastic, Red Sox against the Yankees. That's why every day, we have two guests with their own unique perspective on the news. But today, CROSSFIRE is very difficult. We have just one guest.

He's either the funniest smart guy on TV or the smartest funnyman. We'll find out which in a minute. But he's certainly an Emmy Award winner, the host of Comedy Central's "Daily Show" and the co-author of the new mega best-seller "America (The Book): A Citizen's Guide to Democracy Inaction," at your bookstores everywhere.

Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to the CROSSFIRE Jon Stewart.

STEWART: Thank you.

CARLSON: Thank you for joining us.

STEWART: Thank you very much. That was very kind of you to say.

Can I say something very quickly? Why do we have to fight?

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: The two of you? Can't we just -- say something nice about John Kerry right now.

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: I like John. I care about John Kerry.

STEWART: And something about President Bush.

BEGALA: He'll be unemployed soon?

(LAUGHTER)

BEGALA: I failed the test. I'm sorry.

CARLSON: See, I made the effort anyway.

BEGALA: No, actually, I knew Bush in Texas a little bit. And the truth is, he's actually a great guy. He's not a very good president. But he's actually a very good person. I don't think you should have to hate to oppose somebody, but it makes it easier.

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: Why do you argue, the two of you?

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: I hate to see it.

CARLSON: We enjoy it.

STEWART: Let me ask you a question.

CARLSON: Well, let me ask you a question first.

STEWART: All right.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: Is John Kerry -- is John Kerry really the best? I mean, John Kerry has...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: Is he the best? I thought Lincoln was good.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: Is he the best the Democrats can do?

STEWART: Is he the best the Democrats can do?

CARLSON: Yes, this year of the whole field.

STEWART: I had always thought, in a democracy -- and, again, I don't know -- I've only lived in this country -- that there's a process. They call them primaries.

CARLSON: Right.

STEWART: And they don't always go with the best, but they go with whoever won. So is he the best? According to the process.

CARLSON: Right. But of the nine guys running, who do you think was best. Do you think he was the best, the most impressive?

STEWART: The most impressive?

CARLSON: Yes.

STEWART: I thought Al Sharpton was very impressive.

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: I enjoyed his way of speaking.

I think, oftentimes, the person that knows they can't win is allowed to speak the most freely, because, otherwise, shows with titles, such as CROSSFIRE.

BEGALA: CROSSFIRE.

STEWART: Or "HARDBALL" or "I'm Going to Kick Your Ass" or...

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: Will jump on it.

In many ways, it's funny. And I made a special effort to come on the show today, because I have privately, amongst my friends and also in occasional newspapers and television shows, mentioned this show as being bad.

(LAUGHTER)

BEGALA: We have noticed.

STEWART: And I wanted to -- I felt that that wasn't fair and I should come here and tell you that I don't -- it's not so much that it's bad, as it's hurting America.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: But in its defense...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: So I wanted to come here today and say...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: Here's just what I wanted to tell you guys.

CARLSON: Yes.

STEWART: Stop.

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: Stop, stop, stop, stop hurting America.

BEGALA: OK. Now

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: And come work for us, because we, as the people...

CARLSON: How do you pay?

STEWART: The people -- not well.

(LAUGHTER)

BEGALA: Better than CNN, I'm sure.

STEWART: But you can sleep at night.

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: See, the thing is, we need your help. Right now, you're helping the politicians and the corporations. And we're left out there to mow our lawns.

BEGALA: By beating up on them? You just said we're too rough on them when they make mistakes.

STEWART: No, no, no, you're not too rough on them. You're part of their strategies. You are partisan, what do you call it, hacks.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: Wait, Jon, let me tell you something valuable that I think we do that I'd like to see you...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: Something valuable?

CARLSON: Yes.

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: I would like to hear it.

CARLSON: And I'll tell you.

When politicians come on...

STEWART: Yes.

CARLSON: It's nice to get them to try and answer the question. And in order to do that, we try and ask them pointed questions. I want to contrast our questions with some questions you asked John Kerry recently.

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: ... up on the screen.

STEWART: If you want to compare your show to a comedy show, you're more than welcome to.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: No, no, no, here's the point.

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: If that's your goal.

CARLSON: It's not.

STEWART: I wouldn't aim for us. I'd aim for "Seinfeld." That's a very good show.

CARLSON: Kerry won't come on this show. He will come on your show.

STEWART: Right.

CARLSON: Let me suggest why he wants to come on your show.

STEWART: Well, we have civilized discourse.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: Well, here's an example of the civilized discourse.

Here are three of the questions you asked John Kerry.

STEWART: Yes.

CARLSON: You have a chance to interview the Democratic nominee. You asked him questions such as -- quote -- "How are you holding up? Is it hard not to take the attacks personally?"

STEWART: Yes.

CARLSON: "Have you ever flip-flopped?" et cetera, et cetera.

STEWART: Yes.

CARLSON: Didn't you feel like -- you got the chance to interview the guy. Why not ask him a real question, instead of just suck up to him?

STEWART: Yes. "How are you holding up?" is a real suck-up. And I actually giving him a hot stone massage as we were doing it.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: It sounded that way. It did.

STEWART: You know, it's interesting to hear you talk about my responsibility.

CARLSON: I felt the sparks between you.

STEWART: I didn't realize that -- and maybe this explains quite a bit.

CARLSON: No, the opportunity to...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: ... is that the news organizations look to Comedy Central for their cues on integrity.

(LAUGHTER)

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: So what I would suggest is, when you talk about you're holding politicians' feet to fire, I think that's disingenuous. I think you're...

CARLSON: "How are you holding up?" I mean, come on.

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: No, no, no. But my role isn't, I don't think...

CARLSON: But you can ask him a real question, don't you think, instead of saying...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: I don't think I have to. By the way, I also asked him, "Were you in Cambodia?" But I didn't really care.

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: Because I don't care, because I think it's stupid.

CARLSON: I can tell.

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: But my point is this. If your idea of confronting me is that I don't ask hard-hitting enough news questions, we're in bad shape, fellows. (LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: We're here to love you, not confront you.

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: We're here to be nice.

STEWART: No, no, no, but what I'm saying is this. I'm not. I'm here to confront you, because we need help from the media and they're hurting us. And it's -- the idea is...

(APPLAUSE)

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: Let me get this straight. If the indictment is -- if the indictment is -- and I have seen you say this -- that...

STEWART: Yes.

BEGALA: And that CROSSFIRE reduces everything, as I said in the intro, to left, right, black, white.

STEWART: Yes.

BEGALA: Well, it's because, see, we're a debate show.

STEWART: No, no, no, no, that would be great.

BEGALA: It's like saying The Weather Channel reduces everything to a storm front.

STEWART: I would love to see a debate show.

BEGALA: We're 30 minutes in a 24-hour day where we have each side on, as best we can get them, and have them fight it out.

STEWART: No, no, no, no, that would be great. To do a debate would be great. But that's like saying pro wrestling is a show about athletic competition.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: Jon, Jon, Jon, I'm sorry. I think you're a good comedian. I think your lectures are boring.

STEWART: Yes.

CARLSON: Let me ask you a question on the news.

STEWART: Now, this is theater. It's obvious. How old are you?

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: Thirty-five. STEWART: And you wear a bow tie.

(LAUGHTER)

(APPLAUSE)

CARLSON: Yes, I do. I do.

STEWART: So this is...

CARLSON: I know. I know. I know. You're a...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: So this is theater.

CARLSON: Now, let me just...

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: Now, come on.

STEWART: Now, listen, I'm not suggesting that you're not a smart guy, because those are not easy to tie.

CARLSON: They're difficult.

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: But the thing is that this -- you're doing theater, when you should be doing debate, which would be great.

BEGALA: We do, do...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: It's not honest. What you do is not honest. What you do is partisan hackery. And I will tell you why I know it.

CARLSON: You had John Kerry on your show and you sniff his throne and you're accusing us of partisan hackery?

STEWART: Absolutely.

CARLSON: You've got to be kidding me. He comes on and you...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: You're on CNN. The show that leads into me is puppets making crank phone calls.

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: What is wrong with you?

(APPLAUSE) CARLSON: Well, I'm just saying, there's no reason for you -- when you have this marvelous opportunity not to be the guy's butt boy, to go ahead and be his butt boy. Come on. It's embarrassing.

STEWART: I was absolutely his butt boy. I was so far -- you would not believe what he ate two weeks ago.

(LAUGHTER)

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: You know, the interesting thing I have is, you have a responsibility to the public discourse, and you fail miserably.

CARLSON: You need to get a job at a journalism school, I think.

STEWART: You need to go to one.

The thing that I want to say is, when you have people on for just knee-jerk, reactionary talk...

CARLSON: Wait. I thought you were going to be funny. Come on. Be funny.

STEWART: No. No. I'm not going to be your monkey.

(LAUGHTER)

BEGALA: Go ahead. Go ahead.

STEWART: I watch your show every day. And it kills me.

CARLSON: I can tell you love it.

STEWART: It's so -- oh, it's so painful to watch.

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: You know, because we need what you do. This is such a great opportunity you have here to actually get politicians off of their marketing and strategy.

CARLSON: Is this really Jon Stewart? What is this, anyway?

STEWART: Yes, it's someone who watches your show and cannot take it anymore.

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: I just can't.

CARLSON: What's it like to have dinner with you? It must be excruciating. Do you like lecture people like this or do you come over to their house and sit and lecture them; they're not doing the right thing, that they're missing their opportunities, evading their responsibilities? STEWART: If I think they are.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: I wouldn't want to eat with you, man. That's horrible.

STEWART: I know. And you won't. But the thing I want to get to...

BEGALA: We did promise naked pictures of the Supreme Court justices.

CARLSON: Yes, we did. Let's get to those.

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: They're in this book, which is a very funny book.

STEWART: Why can't we just talk -- please, I beg of you guys, please.

CARLSON: I think you watch too much CROSSFIRE.

We're going to take a quick break.

STEWART: No, no, no, please.

CARLSON: No, no, hold on. We've got commercials.

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: Please. Please stop.

CARLSON: Next, Jon Stewart in the "Rapid Fire."

STEWART: Please stop.

CARLSON: Hopefully, he'll be here, we hope, we think.

(APPLAUSE)

CARLSON: And then, did U.S. soldiers refuse an order in Iraq. Wolf Blitzer has the latest on this investigation right after the break.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

WOLF BLITZER, CNN ANCHOR: I'm Wolf Blitzer in Washington.

Coming up at the top of the hour, the Pentagon investigator a report that U.S. soldiers refused to go on a dangerous mission in Iraq. We'll have details. In medical news, the FDA prescribes a strongly worded label on antidepressant drugs. And why some experts think the flu vaccine shortage is a grim warning about U.S. vulnerability to bioterrorism.

All those stories, much more, only minutes away on "WOLF BLITZER REPORTS."

Now back to CROSSFIRE.

(CHEERING AND APPLAUSE)

CARLSON: Welcome back to CROSSFIRE.

We're talking to Jon Stewart, who was just lecturing us on our moral inferiority.

Jon, you're bumming us out. Tell us, what do you think about the Bill O'Reilly vibrator story?

STEWART: I'm sorry. I don't.

CARLSON: Oh, OK.

STEWART: What do you think?

BEGALA: Let me change the subject.

STEWART: Where's your moral outrage on this?

CARLSON: I don't have any.

STEWART: I know.

BEGALA: Which candidate do you suppose would provide you better material?

STEWART: I'm sorry?

BEGALA: Which candidate do you suppose would provide you better material if he won?

STEWART: Mr. T. I think he'd be the funniest. I don't...

(LAUGHTER)

BEGALA: Don't you have a stake in it that way, as not just a citizen, but as a professional comic?

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: Right, which I hold to be much more important than as a citizen.

BEGALA: Well, there you go.

(LAUGHTER)

BEGALA: But who would you provide you better material, do you suppose?

STEWART: I don't really know. That's kind of not how we look at it. We look at, the absurdity of the system provides us the most material. And that is best served by sort of the theater of it all, you know, which, by the way, thank you both, because it's been helpful.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: But, if Kerry gets elected, is it going to -- you have said you're voting for him. You obviously support him. It's clear. Will it be harder for you to mock his administration if he becomes president?

STEWART: No. Why would it be harder?

CARLSON: Because you support...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: The only way it would be harder is if his administration is less absurd than this one. So, in that case, if it's less absurd, then, yes, I think it would be harder.

But, I mean, it would be hard to top this group, quite frankly.

(LAUGHTER)

(CHEERING AND APPLAUSE)

STEWART: In terms of absurdity and their world matching up to the one that -- you know, it was interesting. President Bush was saying, John Kerry's rhetoric doesn't match his record.

But I've heard President Bush describe his record. His record doesn't match his record.

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: So I don't worry about it in that respect.

But let me ask you guys, again, a question, because we talked a little bit about, you're actually doing honest debate and all that. But, after the debates, where do you guys head to right afterwards?

CARLSON: The men's room.

STEWART: Right after that?

BEGALA: Home.

STEWART: Spin alley.

BEGALA: Home.

STEWART: No, spin alley.

BEGALA: What are you talking about? You mean at these debates?

STEWART: Yes. You go to spin alley, the place called spin alley. Now, don't you think that, for people watching at home, that's kind of a drag, that you're literally walking to a place called deception lane?

(LAUGHTER)

STEWART: Like, it's spin alley. It's -- don't you see, that's the issue I'm trying to talk to you guys...

BEGALA: No, I actually believe -- I have a lot of friends who work for President Bush. I went to college with some of them.

CARLSON: Neither of us was ever in the spin room, actually.

(BELL RINGING)

BEGALA: No, I did -- I went to do the Larry King show.

They actually believe what they're saying. They want to persuade you. That's what they're trying to do by spinning. But I don't doubt for a minute these people who work for President Bush, who I disagree with on everything, they believe that stuff, Jon. This is not a lie or a deception at all. They believe in him, just like I believe in my guy.

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: I think they believe President Bush would do a better job.

And I believe the Kerry guys believe President Kerry would do a better job. But what I believe is, they're not making honest arguments. So what they're doing is, in their mind, the ends justify the means.

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: I don't think so at all.

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: I do think you're more fun on your show. Just my opinion.

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: OK, up next, Jon Stewart goes one on one with his fans...

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: You know what's interesting, though? You're as big a dick on your show as you are on any show.

(LAUGHTER)

CARLSON: Now, you're getting into it. I like that.

STEWART: Yes.

CARLSON: OK. We'll be right back.

(COMMERCIAL BREAK)

BEGALA: Welcome back to CROSSFIRE. We are joined by Comedy Central's Jon Stewart, host of "The Daily Show" and author of No. 1 bestseller, "America (The Book): A Citizen's Guide to Democracy Inaction."

CARLSON: And a ton of fun, I like that too.

BEGALA: Some questions from our audience. Yes sir, what's your name, what's your name?

QUESTION: Hi, my name's David. I'm from Boston.

STEWART: Hi, David.

QUESTION: My question is, what do you think the hump on G.W.'s back during the debate was?

STEWART: Say it again?

QUESTION: What do you think the hump on George's back during the debate was?

STEWART: The hump on his back?

BEGALA: Oh, you're familiar? This is (INAUDIBLE) conspiracy theory. Can I take this one?

STEWART: Yes, please.

BEGALA: It was nothing, his suit was puckering. A lot of people believe he had one of these in his ear. If he was being fed lines by Karl Rove, he would not have been so inarticulate, guys. It's a myth.

(LAUGHTER)

BEGALA: It's not true. There's this huge myth out on the left.

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: Yes, ma'am.

QUESTION: Renee (ph) from Texas. Why do you think it's hard or difficult or impossible for politicians to answer a straight, simple question?

STEWART: I don't think it's hard. I just think that nobody holds their feet to the fire to do it. So they don't have to. They get to come on shows that don't...

BEGALA: They're too easy on them.

CARLSON: Yes. Ask them how you hold...

STEWART: Not easy on them...

(CROSSTALK)

BEGALA: ... saying we were too hard on people and too (INAUDIBLE).

(CROSSTALK)

STEWART: I think you're - yes.

CARLSON: All right. Jon Stewart, come back soon.

BEGALA: Jon Stewart, good of you to join us. Thank you very much. The book is "America: A Citizen's Guide to Democracy Inaction."

From the left I am Paul Begala, that's it for CROSSFIRE.

CARLSON: And from the right I'm Tucker Carlson, have a great weekend. See you Monday.

TO ORDER A VIDEO OF THIS TRANSCRIPT, PLEASE CALL 800-CNN-NEWS OR USE OUR SECURE ONLINE ORDER FORM LOCATED AT www.fdch.com
All i can say is, owned. He owned those douchebags.

A highlight:
Quote:

STEWART: Now, this is theater. It's obvious. How old are you?

(CROSSTALK)

CARLSON: Thirty-five. STEWART: And you wear a bow tie.

(LAUGHTER)

(APPLAUSE)

CARLSON: Yes, I do. I do.
I wish i could've seen it live.

powerclown 10-15-2004 02:39 PM

What an angry, unfunny little pecker.
Weird.

Lebell 10-15-2004 02:47 PM

crikey, that's a long read.

Church 10-15-2004 02:58 PM

Wasn't the Crossfire host a guest on Jon's show a few weeks ago? lol

SecretMethod70 10-15-2004 03:50 PM

That. Was. Awesome.

I find it really hilarious that they think he, the host of a comedy show, should apparently be held to a higher standard of journalism than they are.

kutulu 10-15-2004 04:04 PM

or any standard

"The show that leads into me is puppets making crank phone calls."

That's all that needs to be said about the Daily show. It's not meant to be taken seriously. They don't seem to take themselves seriously. Shows like Crossfire do.

Halx 10-15-2004 04:10 PM

This is why I love Jon Stewart. His compassion will be legendary.

maximusveritas 10-15-2004 04:31 PM

I found a torrent for it here (100 MB avi, with commercials):
http://bitflood.org:8080/file?info_h...%F7%1Es%96A%85

mattevil 10-15-2004 04:34 PM

It was funny to see both of those guys scrambling to defend their show. Jon Stewart kicked them a new one.

powerclown 10-15-2004 05:46 PM

Stewart is such a whiny little hypocrite. He says that his show is a 'comedy show' and shouldn't be held up to scrutiny, while at the same time he knows full well that millions of young and impressionable people follow his show and base much of their political views on his political views. And then he's got the balls to say that because he's just a COMIC, nobody has the right to call him out, and if they do he hides behind his "I'm Just A Comic, I'm Not Supposed to be Taken Seriously, Silly!" bullshit. He works for a giant corporation just like those guys on Crossfire do, and the day he goes against the political agenda of his corporate bosses, he's out on his ass. And he thinks he's better than those two on Crossfire who he mocks. Please.

mused76 10-15-2004 06:10 PM

Jon Stewart did a great job - making others look like fools while maintaining a sense of dignity. He's great - who else would admit to their facts not being totally honest? I vote for JS.

Willravel 10-15-2004 06:12 PM

If he can convince one person not to watch the REAL hypocritical crossfire, he's done his job. Stewart is simply backing up what his show said.
Millions of impressionable people watch Lost and America's Top Model. Does that make them irresponsible for portraying islands as having monsters and being skinny as being beautiful? Please. Let's look at this realisticly. Clearly The Daily Show is a political comedy show. It does report on actual events, but it usualyl spinns them in ways that would make wolf blitzer cringe, and they are very conspicuous about it. Also, Jon Stwewrt is not the only writer on TDS. Crossfire is a serious 'debate' show on a news network. It is made to be taken seriously. If you think that a giant corperation controls TDS directly, you've never seen the show. I've seen them bash sponsers and their parent companies.
Kudos John Stwewrt, you owned them!

Halx 10-15-2004 06:19 PM

willravel: 1 powerclown: 0

Great points, will. I will never understand why people insist that a show on a channel famous for obnoxious, ridiculous and frivolous programming be held to any standards at all. To hold such a show to said standards would result in something we all call "selling out." Let's all be grateful that there are still some shows out there who are true to their light-hearted selves.

Willravel 10-15-2004 06:22 PM

Thanks, Halx! And happy b-day.

Halx 10-15-2004 06:32 PM

After watching the video with my boss sitting next to me, we had a little discussion about the issues that were raised. We can both agree that Stewart could have done a lot better. He set up his points, but never explained them. Sure, we all know what he's talking about, but I could only count about 2 times when he made his point clear to those who cannot or refuse to read between the lines. He had a chance to make his points inarguable, but he stopped there.. that, or Tucker Carlson was just talking over him.

Furthermore, I think something happened during that last commercial break. After Stewart called Carlson a dick, he didn't say much else. He was quiet and reluctant when he tried to answer that one lady's question. Was he threatened during the break or something? He just seemed like he has just gotten kicked in the ribs.

Overall, those of us who are familiar with the points that he was trying to make heard him loud and clear. He was awesome.

martinguerre 10-15-2004 06:50 PM

reading the transcript...yeah. i think its interesting that begala didn't take the bait as much. there's no reason carlson should be taking the heat exclusively...but he seemed to lead himself down that path.

"millions of young and impressionable"

Yeah, well...bite me. I'm sorry...but simply trotting out a stereotype of the viewers as stupid is not going to make your arguement hold water. Rush has millions of "impressionable" listeners...do i hear tears beind shed for his partisan antics?

That said, what bit me most was carlson's objections to the kerry interview. McCain has been on there multiple times...the questions were just as softball.

FoolThemAll 10-15-2004 06:57 PM

Reading this transcript, Stewart was pretty funny. I probably would've laughed quite a bit, had I seen it.

I think the idea that Stewart needs standards comes from the fact that many really do take the non-joke portions of the show to be legitimate journalism. I've even seen some here claim that it's more accurate and less biased than network news. Which is moronic. Stewart's hilarious, but he's a hack when it comes to actually reporting the news.

Halx 10-15-2004 07:07 PM

There ya go, still trying to hold the Daily Show up to the standard of a real news broadcast.

FoolThemAll 10-15-2004 07:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Halx
There ya go, still trying to hold the Daily Show up to the standard of a real news broadcast.

I'd agree that it's not really Stewart's fault, and I'm not really the least bit interested in asking for him to have standards. I just understand the desire to ask for such. The left can have their lemmings, it's not like the right doesn't have their own.

SecretMethod70 10-15-2004 07:31 PM

The fact the Daily Show is one of the best sources of election information has nothing to do with it being a real news source or that it should be considered one, but, rather, it has EVERYTHING to do with how POORLY the current REAL news sources are doing their jobs.

powerclown 10-15-2004 07:59 PM

Wasn't Bill Mahrer's show (the last one on network tv, before HBO) political satire? It wasn't hard news. It was supposed to be lighthearted comedy, like Stewart's show. But his political views got him canned. The line between satire and sincerity is in the eye of the beholder. Sure Stewart's show is meant to be lighthearted comedy, but just the fact that Stewart came on CNN, broke with his comic persona and almost had a nervous breakdown attacking a supposed agenda of a CNN program is bizarre at best.

Why did he come on the show in the first place? Most would have thought, ok TGIF, end of the work week, lets hear a few political jokes from the comedian. But instead, he wants to put forth his own political agenda. He came on the show looking for a fight. Why? He should know what CNN is all about; As if he's going to change their programming or something? He made a complete ass of himself. Even Bill Mahrer is smart enough not to do something so stupid.

Picture Letterman doing what Stewart did. Can you picture Letterman, who, on his show jokes about politics all the time, coming onto ANY political talk show to talk hard politics with ANYONE? Hell no, he knows he's no politcal activist, he's a comedian for christ sake. Very weird all around.

martinguerre 10-15-2004 08:16 PM

Quote:

But instead, he wants to put forth his own political agenda.
My goodness. He had an opinion on a political show. Stop the presses...

Journeyman 10-15-2004 08:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by powerclown
Why did he come on the show in the first place?

Quote:

STEWART: In many ways, it's funny. And I made a special effort to come on the show today, because I have privately, amongst my friends and also in occasional newspapers and television shows, mentioned this show as being bad.
BEGALA: We have noticed.
STEWART: And I wanted to -- I felt that that wasn't fair and I should come here and tell you that I don't -- it's not so much that it's bad, as it's hurting America.
CARLSON: But in its defense...
STEWART: So I wanted to come here today and say... Here's just what I wanted to tell you guys.
CARLSON: Yes.
STEWART: Stop.
Quote:

The fact the Daily Show is one of the best sources of election information has nothing to do with it being a real news source or that it should be considered one, but, rather, it has EVERYTHING to do with how POORLY the current REAL news sources are doing their jobs.
Jon Stewart, as a successful comedian, was given the oppurtunity to reach an audience that seeks out information and political discourse/debate, and siezed that oppurtunity to give the audience a heads up on a thing or two about where they're looking.

Paradise Lost 10-15-2004 08:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SecretMethod70
The fact the Daily Show is one of the best sources of election information has nothing to do with it being a real news source or that it should be considered one, but, rather, it has EVERYTHING to do with how POORLY the current REAL news sources are doing their jobs.


This is exactly what Stewart eluded to about many times throughout the interview. He was saying about
how a news organization is looking "to Comedy Central for their cues on integrity", is in bad shape.
Any time your news program is aired directly after puppets making crank calls is also a bad sign that
you really shouldn't be taken seriously, and the fact that they ARE, is making the 'real' news guys look
really bad. And being a fake news organization, they don't really feel the need to press the 'hard' issues
onto candidates, like it'll make a difference. I love it when Ed Gillespe is on the show, because he knows
that it's not really something to take seriously, and he has fun with it. You see him on CNN the next day
in a news clip and he's a totally different guy, being your stereotyped 'Republican' as the media would
showhim. But on the Daily Show, he's just having fun, because he knows better than to take it
seriously.

Powerclown, he came on the show probably because they asked him to. Also, he didn't make a fool
of himself, and I'm sure he knew that nothing was going to be changed (probably the same reason
he doesn't get tough on the candidates or any politcal figure for that matter,) but what he's trying
to do is just show what a joke these Crossfire guys are, and it's true, they're all morons. It's not
really a debate, it's more like the "Debate Sketch" from The Flying Circus, just yelling yes and no
at each other without really answering or questioning anything.

SecretMethod70 10-15-2004 08:41 PM

Journeyman, not sure if you were trying to debate me or agreeing with me. If you were trying to debate me though I think you misunderstood what I said.

powerclown: there's a big difference between letterman and stewart. Stewart's show FOCUSES on politics and Letterman's show HAPPENS to sometimes mention it. Letterman is a comedian, and Stewart is a POLITICAL comedian. He oberves politics constantly and finds humor in it - and a lot of it. Thus, he is doing what any other political celebrity does and going on a show to talk about it. Only, he's doing it intelligently, unlike, say, Cameron Diaz. I don't think his presence on Crossfire is in any way contradictory to the fact his show is comedy. It's not his fault the other news networks and shows suck so much that they can't even top a COMEDY show when it comes to dispersing information on the presidential election (if you don't know, there was a study done on this).

quicksteal 10-15-2004 08:42 PM

Jon Stewart definitely stuck it to them...and he's right, too (just look at the first segment before he comes on, it's exactly what he's talking about). But he can't expect Crossfire to change, it's how the show has been since I've watched it. I'd like to see Stewart put his money where his mouth is and start the show that he's talking about.

powerclown 10-15-2004 08:45 PM

I'll say this much then step down: I wasn't aware that Stewart's basic schtick was to rip on the political scene in general, so this deal with CNN seems to be in character for the guy. That's fine. I thought it was more a case of a mainstream 'straight' talk-show host like a Kilborn or Letterman jumping completely out of character and going nuts on CNN for political points. I see now this was to be expected from Stewart.

ed. - Let me also say real quick that I've watched Crossfire for a while as well. It's a bipartisan, mainstream discussion of the issues. You've got a right-wing guy who can be overbearing and obnoxious at times, and he's balanced by an intelligent left-wing co-host. (By the way, the left on Crossfire also has James Carville, who can kick some ass.) I don't see what the problem is in Crossfire being part of the political landscape.

guthmund 10-15-2004 08:51 PM

I thought it was funny.

I too noticed that after that last commercial break, Stewart was a little less conspicuous. I don't know if I'd attribute that to him being bullied. I don't know the guy from Adam, but he did call Tucker Carlson a dick on national television. I wouldn't think he'd shirk from some suit threatening him from a different network. Maybe he was just tired of trying to shout over Carlson.

The Daily Show is what it is. It's funny. It's a slanted sideways look at the absurd events of the day. It's not meant to be taken seriously, but it is, I believe, intended to get the public talking and independently thinking.

CNN is supposed to be a globally respected news organization. "More people get their news from CNN...." blah blah blah. Instead of the continuous repetition of talking points and the endless regurgitation of non-issues, they should be discussing the election and world events. They should position themselves to helping the general public to understand and inform, not whipping them up into a frenzy and giving them a target.

You may not agree with Jon Stewart. You may not like Jon Stewart, but you have to respect Jon Stewart for coming into a hostile situation and holding his own.

FoolThemAll 10-15-2004 09:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SecretMethod70
The fact the Daily Show is one of the best sources of election information has nothing to do with it being a real news source or that it should be considered one, but, rather, it has EVERYTHING to do with how POORLY the current REAL news sources are doing their jobs.

But that's just it. It ISN'T one of the best sources of election information. It's not even close. It's a horrible source.

SecretMethod70 10-15-2004 09:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FoolThemAll
But that's just it. It ISN'T one of the best sources of election information. It's not even close. It's a horrible source.

As I mentioned in a later post, it actually IS. There was a study done on it - a study done by such a reputable source, in fact, that I spent an entire political science class discussing this. Taking into account education, and various other demographics, the Daily Show viewers were more informed about the presidential election than viewers of any other show.

And you're right - it's a horrible source of info - which is what makes this so sad.

edit: got it - University of Pennsylvania National Annenberg Election Survey....

Quote:

The Annenberg survey found that people who watch The Daily Show are more interested in the presidential campaign, more educated, younger, and more liberal than the average American or than Leno or Letterman viewers. “However, these factors do not explain the difference in levels of campaign knowledge between people who watch The Daily Show and people who do not,” Young pointed out. “In fact, Daily Show viewers have higher campaign knowledge than national news viewers and newspaper readers -- even when education, party identification, following politics, watching cable news, receiving campaign information online, age, and gender are taken into consideration.”
Quote:

Young people who watched The Daily Show scored 48% correct on the campaign knowledge test while young people who did not watch any late-night comedy scored 39% correct. Meanwhile, young people who watched four of more days of network news scored 40% correct, equally frequent cable news viewers 48% correct and newspaper readers 46% correct.

irateplatypus 10-15-2004 10:06 PM

jon stewart has become such a tool. the argument that he is absolved from presenting the truth because he is on a comedy channel is bogus. jon stewart actively involves himself in the political process and relishes his role, but has the luxury of hiding behind this smokescreen of supposed irrelevancy. whether he likes it or not, people (sadly) do take his show seriously. he has no right to criticize any other personality for not doing their most to effect a positive change on politics while he continues to deny the effect he himself has on it.

he represents what is wrong with the current political climate. you're kidding yourself if you think he is somehow a catalyst for independent thought or strictly pointing out absurdity. stewart is merely an extension, the logical conclusion to the process that is in its more infant stages on cnn. this notion that news and politics can be reduced to soundbites and a laugh... they're all in the entertainment business.

stewart has come to believe his own press. he fancies himself as a reformer of what is wrong with mainstream media not realizing he himself is the wretched product of their triviality.

Journeyman 10-15-2004 10:08 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SecretMethod70
Journeyman, not sure if you were trying to debate me or agreeing with me. If you were trying to debate me though I think you misunderstood what I said.

Agreeing with you. As you said, it's bad that people look to Stewart, a comedian, for journalistic integrity. I'm saying that Stewart knows this, and as a conscionable citizen, accepted the invitation from Crossfire so that he can address the issue a little bit.

OpieCunningham 10-15-2004 11:06 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by irateplatypus
jon stewart has become such a tool. the argument that he is absolved from presenting the truth because he is on a comedy channel is bogus. jon stewart actively involves himself in the political process and relishes his role, but has the luxury of hiding behind this smokescreen of supposed irrelevancy. whether he likes it or not, people (sadly) do take his show seriously. he has no right to criticize any other personality for not doing their most to effect a positive change on politics while he continues to deny the effect he himself has on it.

he represents what is wrong with the current political climate. you're kidding yourself if you think he is somehow a catalyst for independent thought or strictly pointing out absurdity. stewart is merely an extension, the logical conclusion to the process that is in its more infant stages on cnn. this notion that news and politics can be reduced to soundbites and a laugh... they're all in the entertainment business.

stewart has come to believe his own press. he fancies himself as a reformer of what is wrong with mainstream media not realizing he himself is the wretched product of their triviality.

Or...

He knows he's the 'logical conclusion to the process that is in its more infant stages on cnn', and that is precisely his point. In essence, he's saying - Hey guys, you're only a hop, skip and a step away from my show, but you have the gall to claim you're serious and then turn around and question MY integrity?

In which case, Stewart is a almost a genius.

martinguerre 10-16-2004 12:42 AM

irate...i guess i don't see your point. are you saying that satire and comedic revue don't have a legitimate role to play? if stewart was the only news media around...you would be right...he's far too flip and insubstantial. but why is his claim to being a satirist not sufficient for you? because it's popular? because some people don't fully get that it's a joke?

Halx 10-16-2004 01:30 AM

powerclown.. so you just said all of that trash about Jon Stewart without knowing the slightest bit of information about him? Yikes.

evilbeefchan 10-16-2004 01:33 AM

I agree with everything you said Guthmund! I'm so happy I was able to catch the clip on ifilm. I just love the fact that the 2 hosts kept trying to be cute with Stewart, trying to get him back to being funny and sell his book, but forgot that this guy might actually have some real opinions. Yes, he was brought on to sell the book, promote his show and make the funny, but that's what all those other late night entertainment shows are for. I've never watched Crossfire before, but I assume that the show is meant to present arguments from differing sides of the political spectrum, and hopefully come up with some conclusion at the end. They figure that since Stewart has some sort of relation to politics, they can have him on the show and maintain their reputation as a political show. Stewart came on with those cute faces and lines, and the hosts bought into them. Then he unleashes his true intentions, and the hosts are visibly shocked by it. They try and devalue his arguments by acting sarcastic and making everything into a joke. They criticize his show for not being serious enough about the election, when that is exactly what his show is about. They mock the travesty that these news shows try and present themselves to be. They ask ridiculous questions to supposedly important people because that's what those shows are doing. They know their audience is smart enough to understand what they are trying to do, so they don't have to put up those stupid "this is not meant to be taken seriously" warnings. But these crossfire guys continue to try and harm his reputation and image when it comes to politics, when Stewart already does it on his own show! The ridiculousness of the segments should be proof of this. But the only reason why people watch him is because they know he's making a mockery of it all. He's being satirical because it's the best way to tell the truth. And sadly, these so called political experts seem to forget about this. They spend the entire time criticizing his show, instead of his own opinions. His own opinions as a human being and citizen of this nation. I cannot wait to see if Stewart mentions this on his own show, and make it even more ridiculous. Thank you John Stewart!

FoolThemAll 10-16-2004 07:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SecretMethod70
As I mentioned in a later post, it actually IS. There was a study done on it - a study done by such a reputable source, in fact, that I spent an entire political science class discussing this. Taking into account education, and various other demographics, the Daily Show viewers were more informed about the presidential election than viewers of any other show.

That's really odd. I turn on the Daily Show, and then I turn on CNN or MSNBC or even Fox News, and I see much more honest and thorough coverage in the latter three. I don't see any possible way that one could become decently informed by the Daily Show. I'm perplexed.

powerclown 10-16-2004 07:34 AM

Halx, I know about the guy. I think of him as Bill Mahrer Lite, a Howard Stern everything-I-don't-agree-with-is-repressive type; another of those strange tv mutants who call themselves politico-comedians. He tries to hide his liberal political agenda behind his comedy. Fine. He likes to criticize the US media, fine. Along with Michael Moore, I think he should be grateful he lives in country that so richly rewards him for his criticism. Send him to Mexico for a year, and as soon as someone steals his Porsche, and he can't get a Starbucks he'll want back into the bad old US-of-A. I think he has an overblown sense of self-importance, and I still think he made an ass of himself yesterday on CNN.

tecoyah 10-16-2004 07:40 AM

We will all see.....that which we wish to see. Only a few will see beyond what they already "know" to be the truth, into the fog of enlightenment. Comedy can indeed, open doors shut tight by anger, and burn this fog into no more than a haze. Laughter can crack the walls, that a closed mind creates.

irateplatypus 10-16-2004 07:53 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by martinguerre
irate...i guess i don't see your point. are you saying that satire and comedic revue don't have a legitimate role to play? if stewart was the only news media around...you would be right...he's far too flip and insubstantial. but why is his claim to being a satirist not sufficient for you? because it's popular? because some people don't fully get that it's a joke?

no. that's a good question and i'm glad you asked. i'm proposing that satire and comedic revue no longer have their well-defined contextual position that once made it so valuable in political discourse. satire and comedy now IS political discussion. stewart obviously runs a comedy operation, but our entertainment culture tends to attribute to him more credibility than he deserves or even wanted in the beginning.

stewart certainly has the right to run a comedy show supported by his own comedic talents. hell, when the man is sticking to comedy... he's got an exceptional gift. he crosses the line when he admonishes others for a supposed destruction of political discussion when he himself is the posterboy for such abuses.

it's not his fault personally that the public discourse is arranged so, but to come on crossfire w/such a smug demeanor to criticize others for not effecting positive change when he is the one who could be the most help is hypocritical. it'd cost him some ratings and some book sales... but he could do more than any other tv personality to get things on track, instead he prefers to snipe at those who do the same thing as he w/out the protection of being on a particular channel.

bottomline: stewart is a big part of the problem he makes money attacking. whether that is by design or circumstance... i cannot say. the minute he begins to deny his own role in the media and starts lecturing others is the instant he can no longer hide behind his format and must begin to take the responsibility for change that he encourages in others.

powerclown 10-16-2004 08:30 AM

tecoyah-san:
pass me that opium pipe, will ya?
Then come over here and teach me all about truth & enlightenment. :lol:

Willravel 10-16-2004 08:35 AM

*ears perk up* did someone say opium?

JumpinJesus 10-16-2004 08:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by powerclown
Halx, I know about the guy. I think of him as Bill Mahrer Lite, a Howard Stern everything-I-don't-agree-with-is-repressive type; another of those strange tv mutants who call themselves politico-comedians. He tries to hide his liberal political agenda behind his comedy. Fine. He likes to criticize the US media, fine. Along with Michael Moore, I think he should be grateful he lives in country that so richly rewards him for his criticism. Send him to Mexico for a year, and as soon as someone steals his Porsche, and he can't get a Starbucks he'll want back into the bad old US-of-A. I think he has an overblown sense of self-importance, and I still think he made an ass of himself yesterday on CNN.


I have trouble with opinions like this. What I'm getting is, in effect, since he lives in a place where he has the freedom to be satirical and express his political opinions in a way that makes fun of the current administration, he should be grateful for it and quit making fun of it. In essence, what I'm getting is that you're saying to people like them, "Be glad you have the freedom, now stop using it."

maximusveritas 10-16-2004 08:56 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by FoolThemAll
That's really odd. I turn on the Daily Show, and then I turn on CNN or MSNBC or even Fox News, and I see much more honest and thorough coverage in the latter three. I don't see any possible way that one could become decently informed by the Daily Show. I'm perplexed.

The study SecretMethod referenced compared the Daily Show to Leno and Letterman, not to the news networks, so the result is not too surprising.

I agree that if you just watch the Daily Show, you're not going to become very informed. The show really acts as a comedic supplement to the normal, straight news that you might get on a CNN or NY Times. I doubt that many Daily Show viewers only get their news from that single source, because if they did that they probably wouldn't understand half the jokes.

powerclown 10-16-2004 09:17 AM

Dear Jesus,
Where did I say "Stop Using It?"
Where did I say Jon Stewart should stop doing his schtick?
Show me, please. Did I say this? Somewhere, Anywhere?

I didn't say anything of the sort. These are you're own phantom ideas conjured up and falsely attributed to me. Naughty, naughty...a debate faux paus, sir. For the record, I don't think he should stop what he does, why should he? This is AMERICA!!, where you are free to take the good with the bad. Do I think he's a disingenuous, hypocrital little weasel? Most definitely, but I don't think his opinions should be censored, no way. Are you implying that I don't have the right to criticize him?

Now, please join willtravel, me & tecoyah-san over at the opium pipe. We're going to learn about Truth & Enlightenment!!! :p

FoolThemAll 10-16-2004 09:32 AM

Sir, I may not agree with your opium use, but I'll defend to the death your right to view pink elephants and little leprechauns and little Stewarts criticising others for being partisan hacks...oh wait, that last one's real.

Quote:

Originally Posted by maximusveritas
The study SecretMethod referenced compared the Daily Show to Leno and Letterman, not to the news networks, so the result is not too surprising.

I agree that if you just watch the Daily Show, you're not going to become very informed. The show really acts as a comedic supplement to the normal, straight news that you might get on a CNN or NY Times. I doubt that many Daily Show viewers only get their news from that single source, because if they did that they probably wouldn't understand half the jokes.

That makes much more sense to me. Thanks.

I think irate put it much more eloquently than I could have hoped to.

OpieCunningham 10-16-2004 09:33 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by maximusveritas
The study SecretMethod referenced compared the Daily Show to Leno and Letterman, not to the news networks, so the result is not too surprising.

The study compared late-night comedy show viewers (which included Daily Show viewers) with non-late-night comedy show viewers. This allowed a comparison between Leno/Letterman/Stewart, but overall it demonstrated that, all else being equal (whether or how much non-comedy news information was viewed), viewers of late-night comedy were more knowledgeable about current events than non-viewers of late-night comedy.

Details:
Quote:

Polling conducted between July 15 and Sept. 19 among 19,013 adults showed that on a six-item political knowledge test people who did not watch any late-night comedy programs in the past week answered 2.62 items correctly, while viewers of Late Night with David Letterman on CBS answered 2.91, viewers of The Tonight Show with Jay Leno answered 2.95, and viewers of The Daily Show with Jon Stewart answered 3.59 items correctly. That meant there was a difference of 16 percentage points between Daily Show viewers and people who did not watch any late-night programming.

The Annenberg survey found that people who watch The Daily Show are more interested in the presidential campaign, more educated, younger, and more liberal than the average American or than Leno or Letterman viewers. “However, these factors do not explain the difference in levels of campaign knowledge between people who watch The Daily Show and people who do not,” Young pointed out. “In fact, Daily Show viewers have higher campaign knowledge than national news viewers and newspaper readers -- even when education, party identification, following politics, watching cable news, receiving campaign information online, age, and gender are taken into consideration.”

http://www.business-journal.com/NoJo...KnowIssues.asp

maypo 10-16-2004 09:36 AM

Quote:

posted by foolthemall
But that's just it. It ISN'T one of the best sources of election information. It's not even close. It's a horrible source.
I disagree with calling the Daily Show a horrible source of information. They have been one of the few media outlets to address how the media spins news (with the assist of partisan hacks) and what a dominating player big media has become. This spin of the truth is actually the undiscussed news story of our age, it is a kind of gridlock that is impossible to break out of. It afflicts TFP constantly in threads, including this one.
Quote:

originally posted by powerclown
He likes to criticize the US media, fine. Along with Michael Moore, I think he should be grateful he lives in country that so richly rewards him for his criticism. Send him to Mexico for a year, and as soon as someone steals his Porsche, and he can't get a Starbucks he'll want back into the bad old US-of-A. I think he has an overblown sense of self-importance, and I still think he made an ass of himself yesterday on CNN.
Have we really gotten back to "Love it or Leave it Hippy" This is exactly what Jon Stewart is talking about. Powerclown's qoute isn't a discussion, it's dogma.
It is part of the power of the daily show to operate in the realm of comedy. Anyone who has seen the loop of flacks pronouncing Kerry and Edwards first and fourth most liberal in the exact same language over and over will know what it means.

filtherton 10-16-2004 10:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by powerclown
Halx, I know about the guy. I think of him as Bill Mahrer Lite, a Howard Stern everything-I-don't-agree-with-is-repressive type; another of those strange tv mutants who call themselves politico-comedians. He tries to hide his liberal political agenda behind his comedy. Fine. He likes to criticize the US media, fine. Along with Michael Moore, I think he should be grateful he lives in country that so richly rewards him for his criticism. Send him to Mexico for a year, and as soon as someone steals his Porsche, and he can't get a Starbucks he'll want back into the bad old US-of-A. I think he has an overblown sense of self-importance, and I still think he made an ass of himself yesterday on CNN.

I get the impression that stewart somehow personally wronged you. Perhaps you should try not to get so emotional about him. I don't think you really know anything about the man, since you seem to have huge misconceptions about his opinion of america. He is no micheal moore, or howard stern, or bill marher. Maybe you should try to address what he was talking about, instead of making emotional misstatements about the man's character.


Irate it seems to me you think that he has no right to be a media critic, since he works in the media. I think he is in the perfect position to call bullshit on the media when it takes itself too seriously. The difference between stewart and carlson is that stewart isn't claiming to be a journalist. He isn't claiming to have the public's best interest in mind. His job is to make people laugh. His job is satire, which by its very nature requires a certain amount of smug self righteousness.

canuckguy 10-16-2004 10:29 AM

just saw that clip this morning, off of fark, damn that was the funniest thing ever. wish i would have saw it live.

ARTelevision 10-16-2004 10:30 AM

I'd watch his show if I thought he was funny.
I used to watch it until I decided it wasn't.

trickyy 10-16-2004 10:50 AM

they should either change the show to CROSSTALK, or spice up the transcripts using the term CROSSFIRE at the appropriate moments.

also i noticed stewart's message of integrity was blantantly ignored minutes later...

Quote:

CARLSON: All right. Jon Stewart, come back soon
i almost agree with stewart. personally i find crossfire unwatchable, i'm surprised he said that he watches regularly. and it takes balls to criticize these people to their face, although the name-calling kind of diminshes his point.

but i think cable news, like the daily show, is what it is. honest intelligent debate does not always earn great ratings. if it did, pbs would be the top news source. foxnews is most watched, yet leaves viewers poorly informed. i'm not saying it's impossible to have an intelligent news show on cable. it's just very hard. i've seen chris matthews in person and he said his ideal job would be a charlie rose-type show. yet he doesn't change because he is trying to catch cnn and fox in the ratings. it's a question of how much info- people want with their -tainment.

perhaps, though, stewart has pioneered a new ratings getter in cable news - bashing cable news. then again, the show is an easy target. i mean, the name is caps locked. but, it's interesting when the cable minions are threatened. unfortunately, it's doubtful much will change unless people stop watching these shows (but i really don't know anyone who watches them now, come to think of it).



speaking of cable news shows, what's going on with larry king lately? when i flip past the shows are laci peterson this, princess diana that. (or michael jackson.) talk about a real bottom feeder.

ARTelevision 10-16-2004 11:40 AM

Just to be fair, I also think "Crossfire" is a terrible, unwatchable show. One of the worst things out there.

Halx 10-16-2004 12:00 PM

If you think name calling diminishes his point, then you need to lay off the estrogen pills. He made his point, we can all agree he had one, then he just made some quality television.

and powerclown, you are flagrantly misstepping your points. I insist on you getting to know more about who you talk about in the future.

JumpinJesus 10-16-2004 12:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by powerclown
Dear Jesus,
Where did I say "Stop Using It?"
Where did I say Jon Stewart should stop doing his schtick?
Show me, please. Did I say this? Somewhere, Anywhere?

I didn't say anything of the sort. These are you're own phantom ideas conjured up and falsely attributed to me. Naughty, naughty...a debate faux paus, sir. For the record, I don't think he should stop what he does, why should he? This is AMERICA!!, where you are free to take the good with the bad. Do I think he's a disingenuous, hypocrital little weasel? Most definitely, but I don't think his opinions should be censored, no way. Are you implying that I don't have the right to criticize him?

Now, please join willtravel, me & tecoyah-san over at the opium pipe. We're going to learn about Truth & Enlightenment!!! :p

I apologize if I jumped to conclusions about your stance. I guess I should have asked, instead, "How should he show his gratitude?" Isn't exercising his rights and freedoms to make fun of the administration the best gratitude he can show? Isn't that how we judge if a family member or friend likes our gifts, by using them?

Now, we have been talking exclusively of his portrayals of the Bush Administration, but he does take equally biting jabs at Kerry and his followers on his show.

I think what he was criticizing on Crossfire was their format and the formulaic format of other "debate" shows where talking heads and pundits shout over each other. He was saying that this type of political discussion does a serious disservice to intelligent discourse and helps polarize the populace. I happen to agree with him. I lump all the Bill O'Reillys, Sean Hannities, Michael Moores, James Carvilles, et al in the same dungheap of paritsan bitchfest-ers. They are not interested in truthfulness and intelligence; they are only interested in dumbing down issues to the lowest common denominator then spinning this dreck into a ratings extravaganza that makes their producers gleeful. We watch them and end up increasingly ignorant.

Janeane Garofalo was a guest on Bill O'Reilly after the Democratic Convention. O'Reilly was trying to lure her into a contradictory statement and she was refusing to take the bait. She said to him that she was tired of the mouthpieces on television and radio that play "gotcha" with their guests in a game of semantics that served no purpose other than to embarass the guest. This is done on both sides; and while Ms. Garofalo and Mr. Stewart might not be as quick to accuse liberal hosts of similar tactics, I believe they are right. How informed are we when someone like Sean Hannity is constantly yelling over his guests to quit giving detailed answers and just say yes or no. The truth is that we are not interested in detail. We're only interested in making the other side look foolish. This does not serve the betterment of our society. This was what Jon Stewart was talking about. The hosts of Crossfire were hoping for a ratings boost by having a funnyman on their show, and instead got their asses handed to them. They deserved it, too. They wanted Stewart to act like a trained monkey and instead he shit in his hand and threw it at them.

How is this showing ingratitude for his rights and freedoms?

Sorry for being so long-winded with that response.

Now, if there is any opium left, truth and enlightenment are only an hallucination away. ;)

docbungle 10-16-2004 01:01 PM

Powerclown,
Bill Maher's previous show, "Politically Incorrect'" was not a political satire. It was almost exactly like his current show, only not as well-funded. He would have a panel of people with differing views on various political issues and discuss them. Jokes would be made but the discussions were serious. And he wasn't canned for his political views; everyone knows what his views are. He was canned for using his freedom of speech on a channel that wasn't HBO. HBO, of course, gives him a lot more freedom.

And as far as Letterman doing the same thing Stewart did...I don't see a problem with that. I would, in fact, find it very refreshing. I know a lot of people don't like to see famous "personalities" to ever break out of character, or to ever differ from how they protray themselves on their own show, but, as a guest on a political show such as Crossfire, I believe being open and honest and even critical is very brave...especially in this polarized political climate, where having opinion is fast becoming a person's downfall. Kudos to Stewart for trying to address this.

BigGov 10-16-2004 01:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by powerclown
Halx, I know about the guy. I think of him as Bill Mahrer Lite, a Howard Stern everything-I-don't-agree-with-is-repressive type; another of those strange tv mutants who call themselves politico-comedians. He tries to hide his liberal political agenda behind his comedy. Fine. He likes to criticize the US media, fine. Along with Michael Moore, I think he should be grateful he lives in country that so richly rewards him for his criticism. Send him to Mexico for a year, and as soon as someone steals his Porsche, and he can't get a Starbucks he'll want back into the bad old US-of-A. I think he has an overblown sense of self-importance, and I still think he made an ass of himself yesterday on CNN.

That statement couldn't be further from the truth. Bill Mahrer is an asshole compared to Jon Stewart, Howard Stern isn't even remotely like Jon. He doesn't call himself a politico-comedian, he doesn't have to, he was a fairly successful stand-up comic before getting on the Daily Show. He isn't full of himself, and he isn't Michael Moore. Just because he's voting for Kerry doesn't mean he's a bad person. Just because he knows political shows like Crossfire, the O'Reilly Factor, and almost every other show are completely worthless, and then goes on national television and says it doesn't make him a bad person, it just means he actually has the guts to stand up on national television and say what everyone knows.

It was obviously throughtout your posts in this entire topic you have no idea what you're talking about, because the Daily Show doesn't just have some of the funniest jokes of Bush on television, but the best (and sometimes it seems like the only) John Kerry jokes on television have been said by *GASP* Jon Stewart. And he hasn't said them reluctently, or act like he's forced to say them, he enjoys doing it.

He's one of the few voices of reason on television. You should try listening to him before you make such baseless judgements.

trickyy 10-16-2004 01:28 PM

[QUOTE=Halx]If you think name calling diminishes his point, then you need to lay off the estrogen pills. He made his point, we can all agree he had one, then he just made some quality television.[QUOTE]

well, name calling is not a staple of intelligent debate technique. it brings the discussion down a level. i thought this notion was generally accepted.

maybe it was an apt evaluation of those guys, but his presentation is slightly less effective as a result. i don't think i'm being effeminate here, i'm simply making an observation.

teflonian 10-16-2004 01:32 PM

Loved the clip and am loving the discussion that is going on here. I agree with many things you had to say in that last post JumpinJesus.

The elections have come down to a battle of marketing departments and many Americans are being turned off from the whole process. The platitudes, the gross oversimplifications, the deliberate spin on everything mentioned all have cheapened the substance behind the party's arguments. I think Stewart is in an excellent position to point out these flaws as he and his show make a living in pointing out these flaws on a day to day basis. He brought that viewpoint to a more "serious" show that primarily focuses on displaying the two major party's spins for a living. Understandably the hosts of Crossfire were upset by what Stewart was saying, but they could have done a much better job of debating the substance to Stewart’s argument. Their primary tact was to attempt to laugh it off and to criticize TDS for softballing their guests. Stewart does not normally ask the “pointed” questions that Crossfire believes he needs to, but I have always thought that he does do a good job of getting his guest’s to open up in ways that other shows don’t allow them to. Stewart was making the point that his show “The Fake News” has its place, but that he is disturbed by the fact that the “real” news shows are doing a poor job of staying real.

I don't think Stewart has the answers, but he is at least helping to point out many flaws in the system and in the media. I sure hope that doesn't mean he has to head to Mexico as some would suggest. I don't get that country's TV programming and would miss him dearly. Though I suppose some would suggest I should head there too.

powerclown 10-16-2004 01:36 PM

Halx, thats your opinion and you are entitled to it. At the same time, I couldn't disagree with you more. The Jon Stewarts of the world are nothing new in the theater of political satire. You've seen one, you've seen them all. There are only new generations with minds of clean slate. The question is whether the entertainer's style is one that appeals to you. His doesn't.

doc, I used to watch Politically Incorrect. I enjoyed it. I'm too much of a cheap lazy bastard to get a cable box and catch his new show on HBO. But I know his schtick. And I believe it comparable to Stewarts. Funny, but I like Bill Mahrer, but I don't like Stewart. It just boils down to the fact that I don't find Jon Stewart very funny. I probably would have thought his performance on CNN completely subversive, triumphant and hysterical if I thought the guy was funny. Be he just ain't funny to me.

BigGov, you wouldn't be the president of the Jon Stewart Fan Club by chance? Who said that him voting for Kerry makes him a bad person, heheheh! Who said that running his mouth on Crossfire makes him a bad person? Not me. I said he was a weasel, I didn't say he was an axe murderer. More power to him if he thinks he proved something by standing up to CNN. Its not my problem that you think I don't know what I'm talking about. I think I know what I'm talking about, I've been around a bit. It might be your problem though that you find his version of liberal left political commentary so illuminating and humorous. I would question your sense of humor, sir. But, on the other hand, I'm glad for you that his sensibilities mesh with yours. You will allow me my right to change the channel I trust.

SecretMethod70 10-16-2004 02:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by maximusveritas
The study SecretMethod referenced compared the Daily Show to Leno and Letterman, not to the news networks, so the result is not too surprising.

I agree that if you just watch the Daily Show, you're not going to become very informed. The show really acts as a comedic supplement to the normal, straight news that you might get on a CNN or NY Times. I doubt that many Daily Show viewers only get their news from that single source, because if they did that they probably wouldn't understand half the jokes.

If you read my whole post you'll see that that's not all they compared Daily Show viewers to:

Quote:

“In fact, Daily Show viewers have higher campaign knowledge than national news viewers and newspaper readers -- even when education, party identification, following politics, watching cable news, receiving campaign information online, age, and gender are taken into consideration.”
Anyways, part of the reason for this is that most of the time stations like CNN report on the campaigns and what they did each day as opposed to what they stand for. What they tested for was knowledge of issues - of what the candidates stood for - and that is where Daily Show viewers came out ahead. I have no doubt that if they tested on things regarding swift boat veterans and other non-issue things, that national news watchers would fare better.

powerclown, honestly, how many times have you watched the Daily Show? Comparing Jon Stewart to Bill Maher is really damaging the credibility of your argument. They're nothing alike.

loganmule 10-16-2004 02:38 PM

I just watched the Crossfire segment, from the Fark link, and have enjoyed reading the spirited debate about Stewart's appearance in particular, and his idealogy in general. I think the guy is funny myself, though others here obviously do not. As for the point he was trying to make on Crossfire, I think it was pretty simple. Shows like that simply reiterate the talking points of the respective sides, as opposed to debating the MERITS of each of the various issues taken on either side, and Stewart's point was that this isn't only disingenuous, it's a waste of time. Take Iraq, for example. After 9-11, Bush or any other person in his position (Kerry admittedly included) could not have risked ignoring multiple intelligence sources unanimously indicating that Saddam had WMD's. Better to attack that threat abroad rather than to defend it here. As for a coalition, the U.N., France, Germany and Russia were too invested in Saddam and the food for oil scam, among other things, to join with the U.S., whether it had been Bush, Kerry, or even John Stewart doing the asking. Perhaps Bush could have somehow communicated to Saddam that he really would take the U.S. to war against him, but I doubt it, since there had been nothing but empty threats over the preceding decade. It isn't fair to attack Bush based on the benefit of hindsight...he had every right to rely on the intelligence and his advisors. On the other hand, there wasn't a workable plan "to win the peace", to use Kerry's words. I fault Bush for that but not a lot, because any plan for peace would be problematic...I certainly haven't heard anything from Kerry that truly suggests he'd have done any better. Kerry has a plan for everything, but these "plans" are painted in very large strokes. The simple fact is that after removing Saddam, there would have been no workable way of instituting a democratic regime sufficiently strong to avoid a power vacuum and civil war, while at the same time getting out of the country quickly enough to be seen as liberators and not occupiers.

I think Stewart's point (or mine anyway) is that we need for each side to be examined on the underlying assumptions and the accuracy of them. It would be beating a dead horse now, but I'd still like to hear Kerry try to explain, in specific terms, how he could have "won the peace" under the specific circumstances which we were presented with. Any debater worth his or her salt could take Bush or Kerry to task on the issue, and make it clear (whether either of them would admit it or not) that the decision to go to war instead of ignoring the WMD threat was justifiable and that the war could be "won", in the sense that Saddam would be removed, but that the aftermath would inevitably result some variation of the cluster fuck we're currently to try to resolve. I would like to see similar examination and debate on the primary issues, including jobs, immigration, homeland security, equal rights, etc.

powerclown 10-16-2004 03:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SecretMethod70
powerclown, honestly, how many times have you watched the Daily Show? Comparing Jon Stewart to Bill Maher is really damaging the credibility of your argument. They're nothing alike.

Peas in a pod as far as I'm concerned. 2 stand-up comedians-turned-talkshow-political-pundits/satirists/what-have-you's wailing against The Machine all the way to the bank is all. If I'm wrong, it's my loss. I'm willing to risk it. I will risk the fall.

Jon Stewart is an unfunny man. Just like Adam Sandler is an unfunny man. Just like Ashton Kutcher is a non-entity actor. Just like Jessica Simpson has the most beautiful pair of full, golden breasts on planet Earth. I find Chris Rock's political observations funnier than Jon Stewart's. Jon Stewart does not speak for me. He is not representative of me. I do not laugh smugly along with Jon Stewart when Jon Stewart rails against The Machine. I do not guffaw when Jon Stewart caricatures cynical political processes. I do not nod my head in solemn agreement when Jon Stewart points out banal hypocrisies. I do not worship at the Altar of Jon Stewart. There are others I look to for my infotainment. That is all. Now carry on. THE END

JumpinJesus 10-16-2004 03:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by powerclown

Jon Stewart is an unfunny man. Just like Adam Sandler is an unfunny man. Just like Ashton Kutcher is a non-entity actor. Just like Jessica Simpson has the most beautiful pair of full, golden breasts on planet Earth.

I quote only a snippet of your response to say this:

I may disagree with you politically, but you're posting some of the funniest things I've read in this thread.*




*Not as funny as Jon Stewart, but still funny. ;)

hannukah harry 10-16-2004 03:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by powerclown
Peas in a pod as far as I'm concerned. 2 stand-up comedians-turned-talkshow-political-pundits/satirists/what-have-you's wailing against The Machine all the way to the bank is all. If I'm wrong, it's my loss. I'm willing to risk it. I will risk the fall.

you're not willing to risk it. right now you are falling. the ground is rushing towards you, but you refuse to look down. good thing this is just a metaphor, eh?

Church 10-16-2004 04:43 PM

Ok, I'm going to talk like Jon here.

I'll be honest here. I didn't read the rest of the thread because I don't care. But I must say, I'm glad Jon finally owned that show. For a while now, I've felt similar to the way he does (not exactly, but similar), and I'm glad he came out and put the foor down on those two fools. I'm glad he called them Partisan hacks, and I'm glad he basically called them morons. I think Jon Stewart is one of the best things to happen to politics in a while, and I think HE actually asks the questions that need to be ask. For those of you that deny me, just watch his shows, he asks these questions secretly; in a way that gets the guest to answer them more freely. Anyways, that's my .2 cents.

Willravel 10-16-2004 04:53 PM

This is about Jon Stweart on Crossfire, not whether you think he's funny or not. Your opinion of his comedical prowess is MOOT, at least in this discussion.

Church 10-16-2004 05:02 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
This is about Jon Stweart on Crossfire, not whether you think he's funny or not. Your opinion of his comedical prowess is MOOT, at least in this discussion.

I think you'd better read the initial post again. That is that shows the direction of the thread.

Willravel 10-16-2004 05:07 PM

If you're going to correct someone...be sure your right. Of course I read the original post. It was about Crossfire where Jon Stewart was the guest. It had nothing to do with how powerclown thinks that Jon Stewart is not funny on the Daily Show. Mkay?

Church 10-16-2004 05:10 PM

No, not "Mkay". My post basically had the same feel and content as the first thread. Yes, I added some of my thoughts on Jon's comedy, but I also stayed with the topic.

Thanks.

Willravel 10-16-2004 05:14 PM

Hahaha, I wasn't refering to your post. I was refering to powerclown (as was mentioned in the 6:07 post). I was never refering to you. I just now read your post, and it seems fine. Sheesh.

Church 10-16-2004 05:16 PM

Ok, I apologize then, lol. It REALLY seemed like you were talking to me and I honestly couldn't see why. Sorry again.

bermuDa 10-16-2004 06:07 PM

I'm watching it again after reading the transcript, and it's confirmed my long held suspiscions that his humor is all about tone and timing. Seeing and hearing him conveys a lot more than just reading a transcript.

that aside, it doesn't matter who he is or what channel his show is on. if david letterman were to appear on crossfire I would expect him to be prepared to be serious. Crossfire is supposedly a debate show, not a variety show. If you invite a comic onto a debate show expecting him to just tell a few jokes and plug his book you deserve to get reamed... scratch that, if you're so proud of how serious your debate show is, you shouldn't be bringing comedians onto it at all.

Crossfire thought stewart would be a good guest to sit between the left and the right and interject funny ribs about both as he let the "grown ups" hash it out. did he surprise you when he called these guys out for their bipartisan hackery? did you expect him to make some silly entendres about cheney's daughter and bill o'reilly's vibrator? Is he hiding behind his network to excuse himself from asking pointed questions, or is it actually unfair to try and hold a show on comedy central to the same standards as CNN. Part of the reason so many young people fashion their political views after what they hear on the daily show is because the show puts to words the absurdity of the way things are. it's painful to see so many adults act so childish.

shame on you for looking to a debate show for comedy, and a comedy show for seriousness.

boatin 10-17-2004 01:16 AM

The crying shame here is that this thread is just like that show. We've spent 2 pages talking about the daily show, and jon stewart.

Rather than respond to the charge that they were political hacks, the bow tied one flipped it back to Jon's questions. And it works. It's clear it's not a debate - the other person's point can't be acknowledged and built upon - there's a schedule to keep, dammit. And prebuilt pictures of Stewart's questions to Kerry to show.

It seems clear that many people (in this thread) hear the points Jon was making on the show. And some great comments. But somehow the bulk of the conversation (of the show, and of the thread) is not on those points. It becomes who interrupts the best, who talks loudest, and who can tangent the best.

Sad.

ARTelevision 10-17-2004 04:43 AM

Nothing sad about it.
Threads move in ways unpredictable and that's as it should be.
People have their own thoughts and make decisions on what they choose to emphasize. We decide what is important to us in a thread and then respond to it. It's not as if the points made here were far off the topic. They were not.

Locobot 10-17-2004 06:38 AM

like kryptonite taking hold...respect.....for...tucker carlson.......withering...

saut 10-17-2004 09:59 AM

You can see it here (for those of you without a torrent client)

http://www.ifilm.com/filmdetail?ifilmid=2652831

Arroe 10-17-2004 11:58 AM

Quote:

As I mentioned in a later post, it actually IS. There was a study done on it - a study done by such a reputable source, in fact, that I spent an entire political science class discussing this. Taking into account education, and various other demographics, the Daily Show viewers were more informed about the presidential election than viewers of any other show.

And you're right - it's a horrible source of info - which is what makes this so sad.
Ah, the reason you came to this conclusion is because viewers of the Daily Show are ussually more interested in political events and happenings anyways so there is a lurking variable there. Since TDS is focussed around politics, the viewers probably already know some about what's going on. Viewers of CNN might be looking to see how the market is doing or what the weather is like, and might be less interested in politics. Taking this into consideration, we can see how these statistics are slightly unfair.

I normally like Jon Stewarts show, I must admit I like his sidekick guys more than him though, especially Steven Colbert, but Jon Stewart acted like an ass on Crossfire. I don't think he even really made a point. After watching that I just thought less of Jon Stewart.

SecretMethod70 10-17-2004 03:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arroe
Ah, the reason you came to this conclusion is because viewers of the Daily Show are ussually more interested in political events and happenings anyways so there is a lurking variable there. Since TDS is focussed around politics, the viewers probably already know some about what's going on. Viewers of CNN might be looking to see how the market is doing or what the weather is like, and might be less interested in politics. Taking this into consideration, we can see how these statistics are slightly unfair.

nope......

Quote:

“In fact, Daily Show viewers have higher campaign knowledge than national news viewers and newspaper readers -- even when education, party identification, following politics, watching cable news, receiving campaign information online, age, and gender are taken into consideration.”

tricks 10-17-2004 04:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ARTelevision
I'd watch his show if I thought he was funny.
I used to watch it until I decided it wasn't.

I feel the same way about Rush Limbaugh. I thought he was a comedian in the begining.



Stewart was seriously biting his tongue after the final commercial. Find someone in the audience who can shed some light.

fordluvr 10-17-2004 04:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rodney
Are they rerunning this? Because I have to see it!

You can find it on iFILM. (www.ifilm.com)

boatin 10-17-2004 07:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ARTelevision
Nothing sad about it.
Threads move in ways unpredictable and that's as it should be.
People have their own thoughts and make decisions on what they choose to emphasize. We decide what is important to us in a thread and then respond to it. It's not as if the points made here were far off the topic. They were not.


Well, i'm sorry I wasn't more articulate. I have no problem with threads going where threads go. I usually find it fascinating.

I didn't say the comments in this thread were far off topic - but they aren't on his topic either. Nothing says they have to be. It's just... interesting.

What I find sad, however, is that the main thrust of Stewarts argument was ignored on the show. I found what I thought (and still think) is an apt parallel happening on this thread also. His point (or what I saw as his point) about that show not being a debate is a good one.

We don't have debate anywhere that I can see. Certainly the 4 official debates weren't. Everyone is responsible, including me. There is this comedian trying to point that out, and no one seems to hear him because he's a comedian.

That truth can't be recognized, regardless of source, and discussed is what I find specifically sad. Just my opinion and observation. Not asking anyone to agree. Just frustrated enough that I had to write it down.

exploreyourself 10-17-2004 08:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by boatin
What I find sad, however, is that the main thrust of Stewarts argument was ignored on the show. I found what I thought (and still think) is an apt parallel happening on this thread also. His point (or what I saw as his point) about that show not being a debate is a good one.

We don't have debate anywhere that I can see. Certainly the 4 official debates weren't.

Right. To put a finer point on it: Stewart isn't upset that Crossfire isn't a debate per se, but that it claims to be one when it is not. He's upset that some people will watch shows like this and feel that they have been informed when in reality a lot of words were used to say almost nothing at all. This is why he is very forthright about admitting that his show is not a news show and that people who rely on it as such are making a mistake.

Somewhere in the clip he says something along the lines of 'I don't doubt that people on each side of the aisle believe what they do, but the arguements that they use to try to convince the rest of us aren't honest'.

That's the heart of it, IMO. This is why Pres. Bush can state at the last debate something like 'I never said that I don't worry about Osama' when he said exactly that at a news conference earlier this year. The arguement is not honest. If the arguement is not honest then the position that it is purporting to advance is suspect. If you can't follow somebody's line of reasoning, then it is reasonable to think that their position is merely an expediency.

I too found it sad that the hosts tried to avoid the questioning of their responsibility that Stewart was trying to raise and wanted to talk about almost anything else: the O'riely sexual allegations and Stewart's book, for example. One host even devolved to calling Stewart Kerry's "Butt boy". This is what passes for debate in this country now: deflection, obfuscation and ad-hominem attacks.

The fact of the matter is that news is big business these days. I don't have anything against big business per se but a quality news show like Lehrer's News Hour gets terrible ratings. There's a reason it's on PBS and not a major network - there's no money to be made in it.

This leads into the broader cultural trend that people (at least in the US - I don't know about other places) only want to hear what they already believe. They want external validation of their pre-existing beliefs - not a balanced and nuanced look at complex issues that are much more grey than either black or white. Thus the existance of Fox news and now, in response, Air America.

I commend Stewart for forgoing the opportunity to pimp his book and tackle an important issue. I suspect that, ultimately, very little will come of it - but I hope I'm wrong. As Stewart said: the media isn't holding politicians' feet to the fire to be accountable for what they say and do. But who would be the first to start? There's no incentive for them to do so.

And therein lies the real tragedy: that our media needs an incentive to protect the interests of the public. A strong and vigilant fourth estate is essential for a flourishing democracy. But until we, as citizens (not as voters, or consumers, etc) demand a change we will continue to get exactly what we are asking for.

HeadyIncognito 10-17-2004 11:58 PM

http://www.jerkcity.com/jerkcity2178.gif

Kadath 10-18-2004 05:05 AM

Wow. That was the most incoherent cartoon ever. What was its point, exactly?

I like that Stewart called the guys to carpet for feeding into the media distortion of politics that has lead to our current state. I think it's a shame nothing will change.

HeadyIncognito 10-18-2004 07:46 AM

I used to think that Jerkcity was completley incoherent as well, although still occasionally funny.

Now I realize that it's probably all (that is, other than the stuff about oral sex and being gay) just a bunch of obscure references that I didn't get! I guess this comic shows the magnitude of the whole Jon Stewart thing.

Ustwo 10-18-2004 08:09 AM

I liked the daily show until it became a left wing show, which was about the time of the 2000 election.

He uses the same stuff that other pundits like Al Franken use when they are called out on a lie or distortion, and claim its just entertainment.

Typical, but any show that has Hilary Clinton on it, is anything but non-political. She only goes where she knows she has a positive audience. Maybe he has become more balanced lately, I haven't watched the daily show in a couple of years, but I doubt it. If anything he seems to be working on being Franken Jr. based on his appearances.

Kadath 10-18-2004 08:40 AM

I don't mean to harp on the comic, but I still don't get it. The author took a couple of lines from the show, put them in word balloons over oddly drawn characters, and...what? What does it show? What "magnitude?"

Willravel 10-18-2004 08:44 AM

Ustwo, I agree in theory, but not in practice. How many promenant political figures have appeared on the Ali G show? How about Conan O'Brian, Jay Leno, or David Letterman? All of these shows tell jokes about politics that can sometimes be funny because they are true. That does not make them responsible for delivering non-partisan news. Their main goal is to make people watch because tthey can laugh. Crossfire draws in viewers because it makes people think. While this is a generalization, it is still basically true.

gibingus 10-18-2004 09:12 AM

to get the humor of the daily show, the viewer needs to have a more than basic awareness of the events lampooned, which explains why the viewership is better informed than of latenight talk shows. if you don't follow current events and watch the news, the show isn't that funny.

the show's purpose is not expressly to lampoon politics, it is to lampoon the media. since it is an election year, and candidates use the media so effectively, the content is naturally slanted.

what made politically incorrect interesting as a current events opinion talk show, was that the pannel would include politicos and pundits and also pop culture icons... some of whom surprised the professional talking heads with their grasp of situations and insights. anyone who watched the original show or watches real time knows that bill has his own opinions and isn't afraid to mention them, but he has added something to the political satire and comedy arena that he was in as a standup. that tradition follows mark twain, will rogers, mark russell and his wacky piano shtick... and so on.

but when the humor hits too close to home, people get rankled, right? ask tucker carlson or ask the 24 hour news nets... msnbc is now regularly losing to the daily show in the 11-11:30 time slot, it's neck and neck with cnn, and rapidly gaining on fox.

the inside the industry buzz is that the daily show writers include many alums of the onion. which makes a lot of sense, if you follow both products. they came over to rework the show when craig kilborne left and jon stewart came in. even if you like or don't like what they have to say, they are doing a damn good job.

cthulu23 10-18-2004 09:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ustwo
I liked the daily show until it became a left wing show, which was about the time of the 2000 election.

This may have something to do with Bush coming into power....comedians lampoon whoever is in power. Before Bush they crucified Clinton (and the Repubs) nightly. Their takes on politics that I happen to care about can piss me off but I always realize that getting angry is not the appropriate reaction to a comedian. If it's making me angry then it's probably pretty effective humor.

ARTelevision 10-18-2004 09:30 AM

gingibus, just a personal response to this.

"if you don't follow current events and watch the news, the show isn't that funny."

I follow current events and I watch the news very closely. I do not find Stewart or his show funny.

OpieCunningham 10-18-2004 09:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ARTelevision
gingibus, just a personal response to this.

"if you don't follow current events and watch the news, the show isn't that funny."

I follow current events and I watch the news very closely. I do not find Stewart or his show funny.

OK. Doesn't change the reality that if you don't follow current events and watch the news, the show is not going to be funny.

boatin 10-18-2004 10:34 AM

When the shows were lampooning Clinton, I saw the humor and thought they were funny. A little painful sometimes, but funny none the less. I can laugh at 'my' guys.

Amusing how the reverse isn't much true. Humor poked at Bush rarely seems funny to supporters. Is this just my biased take? What do people think?

Ustwo 10-18-2004 11:52 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by willravel
Ustwo, I agree in theory, but not in practice. How many promenant political figures have appeared on the Ali G show? How about Conan O'Brian, Jay Leno, or David Letterman? All of these shows tell jokes about politics that can sometimes be funny because they are true. That does not make them responsible for delivering non-partisan news. Their main goal is to make people watch because tthey can laugh. Crossfire draws in viewers because it makes people think. While this is a generalization, it is still basically true.

I'm not saying he has to be non-partisan, but I am saying he is political and hiding behind the 'entertainment' label doesn't make him unccountable or not lampoonable.


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