March 24, 2009

COLBERT'S THE FUNNY ONE:

How Jon Stewart Went Bad: There is a virtual ban on criticism of him in the press. Uncritical praise corrupts absolutely. (Tucker Carlson, 3/24/09, Daily Beast)

Cynics might assume that the fury was a pose. Humor requires ironic detachment, and nobody as funny and sophisticated as Jon Stewart could possibly be getting that mad on TV over something so abstract. A fair assumption, but wrong. Stewart really was enraged. It was all entirely, strangely real.

I know this from my own run-in with Stewart, on CNN’s Crossfire a few weeks before the 2004 election. Stewart spent a couple of segments lecturing Paul Begala and me about how we were somehow “helping the politicians and the corporations,” a charge that baffled me then (I’ve never particularly liked either one), as it does now.

Unlike most guests after an uncomfortable show, Stewart didn’t flee once it was over, but lingered backstage to press his point. With the cameras off, he dropped the sarcasm and the nastiness, but not the intensity. I can still picture him standing outside the makeup room, gesticulating as the rest of us tried to figure out what he was talking about. It was one of the weirdest things I have ever seen.

Finally, I had to leave to make a dinner. Stewart shook my hand with what seemed like friendly sincerity and continued to lecture our staff. An hour later, one of my producers called me, sounding desperate. Stewart was still there, and still talking.


The mysterious bit here is the notion that anything has changed.

Posted by Orrin Judd at March 24, 2009 9:04 PM
blog comments powered by Disqus
« PITY THE POOR VOTER WHO WANTED TO PUNISH THE GOP...: | Main | HANDS OFF MY THRIFT STORE: »