His best correspondents leaving really hurt the show.The Lamonster said:Agreed.
Also, let's keep the Stewart vs. Colbert stuff out of here.
neight said:His best correspondents leaving really hurt the show.
eznark said:Bring back Craig Kilborn.
Larry Wilmore is my favorite by far, but he's not on the show very often. Aasef Mandvi would be second place, though he hasn't been on all that much lately himself.Tamanon said:John Oliver is probably the best correspondent in years.
Firestorm said:I'm just curious but can people outside the US watch the links from thedailyshow.com? I know Canadians can't, but I'm not too sure about Europe, Australia, Asia, etc.
Since when did they allow that?!evlcookie said:As an Aussie i certainly can. I watch it every night via the daily shows website.
Quality post.Gruco said:The following are some of my favorites.
Paul Krugman (economics- nyt column and blog)
Ezra Klein (general policy with strong health care focus- washpo blog)
Nate Silver (poll tracking, nationwide trends, horse racing - fivethirtyeight.com)
Josh Marshal (tough to describe focus, mostly an off beat journalism that digs very deeply into a handful of stories- tpm)
Ross Douthat (token non-psychotic Republican- nyt column)
Fareed Zakaria (mostly foreign policy- newsweek)
Other good resources....
Frontline PBS has a million great shows all available online
My current mix of magazines is The New Republic, Atlantic, and Mother Jones, and I find they compliment each other very well.
McClatchy is a good daily that has an less cozy relationship with its subject matter and more off-beat sources, and they are often way ahead of the curve, particularly for Iraq intelligence and torture issues. I don't read it enough and should probably set as my homepage.
in europe, yeahFirestorm said:I'm just curious but can people outside the US watch the links from thedailyshow.com? I know Canadians can't, but I'm not too sure about Europe, Australia, Asia, etc.
speculawyer said:Great idea for a regular thread.
Yeah I found your thread when searching but it was a while ago so I thought it was time to try again.blame space said:
explodet said:My most recent favorite moment of the Daily Show is Jon choking on a pancake and sausage on a stick dipped in Baconnaise Lite.
"It's like my tongue just took a shit!"
Firestorm said:Single-handedly takes Crossfire off the air (okay maybe an exaggeration)
I'd like to add that they recently blocked a large part of Europe, which led to a rather large uprising on their forums. I don't know if they have unblocked some countries since then but you still can't watch it from Sweden. Of course, it's very easy to fool their blocking system so I still watch it the same way as before.Firestorm said:I'm just curious but can people outside the US watch the links from thedailyshow.com? I know Canadians can't, but I'm not too sure about Europe, Australia, Asia, etc.
Jeez, can you breathe in that bubble? Is this considered mixed. LOLGruco said:The following are some of my favorites.
Paul Krugman (economics- nyt column and blog)
Ezra Klein (general policy with strong health care focus- washpo blog)
Nate Silver (poll tracking, nationwide trends, horse racing - fivethirtyeight.com)
Josh Marshal (tough to describe focus, mostly an off beat journalism that digs very deeply into a handful of stories- tpm)
Ross Douthat (token non-psychotic Republican- nyt column)
Fareed Zakaria (mostly foreign policy- newsweek)
Other good resources....
Frontline PBS has a million great shows all available online
My current mix of magazines is The New Republic, Atlantic, and Mother Jones, and I find they compliment each other very well.
McClatchy is a good daily that has an less cozy relationship with its subject matter and more off-beat sources, and they are often way ahead of the curve, particularly for Iraq intelligence and torture issues. I don't read it enough and should probably set as my homepage.
I don't think Peggy Noonan, Frum, and Limbaugh will educate anyone.Gruco said:Note that at no point do I say that list is comprehensive. I only use the word "favorite." Would have no problem discussing further but not really interested in derailing the thead. If you think Oblivion is getting bad advice in his search for intelligent commentary you could have felt free to offer your own suggestions.
Firestorm said:I'm just curious but can people outside the US watch the links from thedailyshow.com? I know Canadians can't, but I'm not too sure about Europe, Australia, Asia, etc.
John Boehner has a twitter feed now. That's gotta be educational.Thunder Monkey said:I don't think Peggy Noonan, Frum, and Limbaugh will educate anyone.
Stewart used to be an awful interviewer, but he's gotten a lot better over the years, and now he's definitely the better of the two. When Colbert runs into a roadblock in his interviews you can see the gears churning and he falls back onto his persona to keep things moving, which is awkward because at the same time, he's dialing back that persona both in interviews and in general.God's Beard said:Colbert's funnier, but I usually like Stewart's interviews better. He's not playing a character, so he winds up asking better questions.
APF said:Stewart used to be an awful interviewer, but he's gotten a lot better over the years, and now he's definitely the better of the two. When Colbert runs into a roadblock in his interviews you can see the gears churning and he falls back onto his persona to keep things moving, which is awkward because at the same time, he's dialing back that persona both in interviews and in general.
APF said:It's hard for a guest to work with a mock interview, and also a little insulting, which is why I figure he's been dialing that back recently. But as I said, he still runs for his conserva-whatever persona when there's a lull in the interview, which comes out forced and awkward.
APF said:I think TDS has done a lot better transitioning from a Republican Administration to a Democrat one, in terms of finding their thematic footing.
BorkBork said:Thanks. Comedy Network's website is still trash for me.
Sure, over the course of its entire run, but it's absurd not to acknowledge the degree to which retaliation against the Bush Administration and Republican political dominance played into that transition, or to TDS' subsequent rise in status and popularity as the preeminent political satire of its time (and likely in this generation)--or, not to notice the stumbling both it and its sister show have gone through trying to find targets to lash out at with the same degree of venom they previously reserved for Bush & co.Stoney Mason said:I think TDS has done a gradual transition over the years from being a celebrity centric show to a politics lite centric show.
APF said:Sure, over the course of its entire run, but it's absurd not to acknowledge the degree to which retaliation against the Bush Administration and Republican political dominance played into that transition, or to TDS' subsequent rise in status and popularity as the preeminent political satire of its time (and likely in this generation)--or, not to notice the stumbling both it and its sister show have gone through trying to find targets to lash out at with the same degree of venom they previously reserved for Bush & co.
APF said:or, not to notice the stumbling both it and its sister show have gone through trying to find targets to lash out at with the same degree of venom they previously reserved for Bush & co.
The real idea here is that they have based the show on that level of venom for the last four years or so, and are trying to find their way into a format that's not based on it. The CNBC incident demonstrates the fallacy of your implicit assertion, that they have not tried searching for other targets in that vein.Stoney Mason said:The false idea implicit here imo is that the show requires them to dish out the same level of venom and pretend every circumstance is of the exact same level of importance.
No, I haven't.BrandNew said:You're trying and have BEEN trying to somehow "figure out" the Comedy Central hosts and what their methods truly reveal about their inner motives and goals
APF said:The real idea here is that they have based the show on that level of venom for the last four years or so, and are trying to find their way into a format that's not based on it. The CNBC incident demonstrates the fallacy of your implicit assertion, that they have not tried searching for other targets in that vein.
Honestly though, I'm tired of you jumping on everything I say, so whatever.
APF said:I didn't say you were attacking me, I said I was tired of you jumping on everything I say.
Firestorm said:I'm just curious but can people outside the US watch the links from thedailyshow.com? I know Canadians can't, but I'm not too sure about Europe, Australia, Asia, etc.