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Beck Cheers on Stewart Rally, Dems Fret About Election Impact

092110jon.jpg Glenn Beck has taken the high road on Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert's political comedy event on the National Mall on October 30th, issuing a sorta classy statement that doubled as a nice pat on the back. "8/28 was a historic event for a lot of Americans," Beck says. "I hope that Ed Schultz, the AFL-CIO, Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert and whoever else wants to plan a march in DC have the same great success that we had with Restoring Honor." But Democrats and other critics are worried!

Stewart and Colbert's "dueling" rallies have scored more than 100,000 collective RSVPs on Facebook. (Beck's rally had between 87,000 and 300,000 in attendance, depending on whose numbers you believe.) But the Comedy Central what-have-you takes will occur just days before the crucial midterm elections, and some experts in field organizing worry it will siphon away activists who might otherwise have volunteered for Get Out the Vote efforts that weekend. "I find it very disturbing that people who say they really care about voting and making real change in D.C., will be taking thousands of people away for a comedy show, when they should be working in their respective communities to make sure that change comes in November," says not very fun-sounding Democratic consultant Kevin Wardally in an interview with Politico.

"It’s just like everything they do—it’s really for the joke," insists one "senior administration official" at the Daily Show. But the main thrust of Stewart's joke seems pretty sincere, and Comedy Central has even hired two former Clinton aides to help organize the event. One critic is dismissing the whole thing as a "false consensus march," and in a trenchant Tumblr post, writes:

This upcoming event in Washington just takes the formerly disruptive Daily Show model and marks its final transition to another element within the system of political media. Rather than critiquing the system from the outside, it’s now a participant fully enmeshed, and if employing two former Clinton aides isn’t a mark of political professionalization, I don’t know what is.

It’s impressive that a comedy talk show was able to make this transition, but I’m not sure if it’s actually good for the show’s audience. After all, we have lots of political media, but we only had one Daily Show, and its value stemmed in large part from its outsider position. Once it becomes an insider and falls prey to all the problems it used to gleefully skewer, it’s unclear what value it can have aside from being the funnier David Brooks.

Assuming you're not currently at a phone bank cold-calling voter rolls, read the whole thing here, slacker! [via The Awl]

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Comments [rss]

  • stnyc

    With Democrats like this who needs Republicans.

    Same manure different donkey.

  • John L

    I'm so glad Jon Stewart is doing this. Unfortunately, since intelligent, sane people don't go around screaming and ranting and raving, their voices don't get heard, so an event like this is necessary to balance things out a bit.

  • Guest

    Are you saying Mr. Stewart is not intelligent? I mean, he screams and rants and raves on every show.

  • robingee

    Also: i would lick all o' dat!

  • whitecastlerock

    slut

  • robingee

    He's our Most Important Jew!

  • robingee

    Well it's nice to see that men get railed on for their appearance as well. Equal rights!

    (I'm glad every man here is a rock-hard Adonis!)

  • JacqueMehoff

    I can't stop staring at stewart's gut crease.

  • sparemonk

    "...when they should be working in their respective communities to make sure that change comes in November." I think this person means to make sure change doesn't come in November, because change would mean Democrats lose the House and/or Senate. Just saying.

  • exnyer

    What do you expect the body of a bagel eater to look like, I`m sure he downs his share of bialys too.

  • Cannibal

    Great. I'm never going to be able to unsee Jon Stewarts quivering pale body. Thanks.

  • Rocknrope

    Thank god for that shirt.

  • Alamo L7

    I believe this might just motivate the liberal base to go out and vote the Tuesday after. I will be there, and it will be awesome. It is also Halloween weekend. I can't wait to see the costumes people come up with.

  • NlGGAZ

    Holy shit! Jon Stewart needs to work out and go on a balanced diet. I'm sure girls will say he's "sexy" on camera if asked, but it'll be like how they say Dennis Franz and Kevin James are "sexy". Meaning it will be a lie.

  • JacqueMehoff

    I think that's when they tried to make him the romantic comedian film star. didn't work out well. and then they tried that again with jack black.

  • the only difference between colbert/jon stewart doing this, and glenn beck doing this is that people will show up to the colbert/stewart rally.

  • I really wish we would stop referring to Glenn Beck as Beck. Very confusing.

  • exnyer

    Especially to Jeff Beck fans.

  • Bottomless Chips

    I watch TDS and Colbert oftern, due to my roommates. How they can mock "Republitards" for watching FOX, yet fawn over sarcastic comments about conservatives doesn't make them any better.

    There's actual thought behind conservatism that's rooted in personal liberty.

    TDS and Colbert play the same game FOX News plays.

  • Ryan

    "Personal liberty" = What I want, when I want it, how I want it, and the hell with everyone else. Me first. As in "utter selfishness." A fantastic conservative platform, to be sure -- conservation of what's "mine."

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