Interest: Shows / The daily show Chat

This page shows everyone interested in The daily show Chat. At WireClub you can find other people with similar interests, sharing interests is a fun way to meet new people, not just about The daily show but anything else!

People Interested in The daily show

TheHuns from Quebec - Canada

TheHunsHey!

,   MontrealQuebec - Canada Canadian Chat

Free spirited person looking to share some good times! I m adventurous, open minded and handsome guy....


HotEvie from New York - United States

HotEvieHey i'm Evie =]

,   New YorkNew York - United States US Chat

I'm evie and i wanna make new friends and possibly find a new mate *winks winks* I'm kinda new to this so forgive me if something is wrong. Im have blonde hair and green eyes, i am tall and my best feature is my breasts =]


martinaz from British Columbia - Canada

martinazheart you

,   VictoriaBritish Columbia - Canada Canadian Chat

I'm 20, I live in British Columbia Canada, while i work on my art/modeling portfolio. I am planning on studying art at a local college.


prior from Ontario - Canada

priorI Have Absolutely No Sense Of Humour *Stares*

,   LondonOntario - Canada Canadian Chat

Hey! Drop me a line, or don't, whatevs really! Cheers!


justtesting from British Columbia - Canada

justtestingRecently moved here, looking for friends

,   VancouverBritish Columbia - Canada Canadian Chat

Having lived in a few different places before I find Vancouver particularely challenging when it comes to meeting interesting people. My demanding job doesn't make things easy either. Nonetheless I'm here to meet new people so feel free to drop me a line if you would like to grab a coffee, play some squash, go on a hike or simply have a chat!


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The Daily Show with Jon Stewart is so laugh-out-loud funny that Indecision 2004--which could have been a dated recap of a time many would rather forget--is instead a hilarious time capsule of the follies and foibles of the 2004 presidential election. What also helps is that many of the issues being lampooned, such as the Iraq war, are still in the news in 2005. The 10 episodes included in the three-disc set are the four reporting on the Democratic National Convention, the four from the Republican National Convention, the episode following the first Bush-Kerry debate, and the hourlong election-night episode, subtitled "Prelude to a Recount." The Daily Show mimics the format of a news program, with Stewart as the anchor and his troupe of "senior correspondents/analysts"--Stephen Colbert, Rob Corddry, Samantha Bee, and Ed Helms--filing their "reports" from the field. Stewart is always quick to dismiss his show as "fake news," but an increasing number of people have taken to the Comedy Central staple as the way to get their news. Political news is mostly sound bites anyway, so Stewart piles the video clips together at their most incongruous or contradictory, then follows up with a wisecrack or a marvelously deadpan look of disbelief. As further proof of its impact, The Daily Show won a 2005 Peabody Award for electronic media excellence for its "satire that deflates pomposity on an equal opportunity basis." (Stewart admitted during the campaign that he himself was voting for Kerry, and his audience is very anti-Bush, but he takes the opportunity to skewer anyone who deserves it.) He also attracts a number of "legitimate" guests. Appearing on these episodes are Ted Koppell, Joe Biden, Chris Matthews (shortly after he'd been challenged to a duel by Zell Miller), Al Sharpton on election night, and a wry John McCain not looking like the combative party zealot that had appeared at the convention podium the night before.

In addition to the 10 episodes, the three-DVD set has more reports by Colbert (whose survey of Democratic minority groups has something to offend anyone), Corddry, Bee, and Helms. There's also John Edwards's 2003 announcement of his presidential candidacy on The Daily Show, the Schoolhouse Rock! spoof about midterm elections, a surprisingly musical four-correspondent rendition of the national anthem, and other lunacy. --David Horiuchi



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