The Daily Show: Ears Edition - Fox News Reacts to FBI Informant Arrest | Maite Alberdi
Episode Date: February 22, 2024Desi Lydic dives into Trump’s Laura Ingraham Town Hall and how Biden’s impeachment case is falling apart after informant, Alexander Smirnov, was revealed to be lying to the FBI. Plus, Jordan Klepp...er weighs in with some political analysis on Biden’s ability to be both a doddering old man and a criminal mastermind simultaneously. If climate change soon renders parts of the U.S. uninhabitable, then where are all the coastal elites supposed to go? Michael Kosta takes a trip to Duluth, Minnesota, the city of the future, to investigate how Californian climate refugees and displaced New Yorkers might fare in this snowy sanctuary city. And Maite Alberdi, director of the Academy Award-Nominated documentary film “The Eternal Memory,” talks to Desi about the five-year-long process of making this intimate film about a husband and wife living with the husband’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis, why she chose to tell this as a non-linear love story rather than a story about deterioration, and how this journey taught her first-hand about the importance of integrating people with dementia-related illnesses and their caregivers into society.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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John Stewart here, unbelievably exciting news.
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This is the Daily Show.
We've got a great show for you tonight.
We watch Trump's Town Hall so you don't have to.
Biden's impeachment just got impeached and we made Michael Costa go to Duluth.
So let's jump right into it with our ongoing coverage of Indecision 2024.
Let's kick things off with poor Donald Trump.
This week alone, he was fined for $355 million.
Historians voted him the worst president of all time.
And Madam Webb turned out to be too bad to even jerk off to.
Real setback for him.
So last night, Trump took his ego to the day spa, also known
as Fox News, where he sat down with Laura Ingram, who came cosplaying as a purse. She asked
Trump one of the big questions on everyone's mind. What qualities are you looking for in
your vice presidential pick? Well, always the first quality has to be somebody that you think will be a good precedent.
A lot of people are talking about that gentleman right over there.
Tim Scott, he has been much better for me than he was for himself.
I watched his campaign and he doesn't like talking about himself, but boy does he talk about Trump? I'm sure he talks about him too as therapist.
God, that was so humiliating.
Trump basically said you're only useful when you talk about how wonderful I am.
And Tim just had to sit there and smile.
I mean, who knew Trump also like to grab him by the balls?
So okay Donald Trump, tell us why he'd be a good vice president and you'd make it even more
humiliating. The one thing that always surprises me is that the VP choice has absolutely no impact.
It's whoever the president is, it just seems...
Yes.
Always remember, Tim, no one cannot matter quite like you can't.
Now get out there and show the world nothing.
Now one thing Trump did have going for him was that it seemed like Joe Biden would be
going into the general election, facing an impeachment over his son's business dealings.
And if you've been watching Fox News, you would know that the case against Biden was a slam
dunk thanks to one of their GOP's star witnesses.
Just listen to Fox News anchor and human polo shirt, Jesse Waters.
The highly credible FBI informant says that the Beresman executive, who allegedly bribed
Joe Biden, has audio recordings of Joe and of Hunter.
One of the FBI's top informants, a guy with impeccable credentials, a great track record,
the highly credible, multilingual, extremely trustworthy, long-time confidential FBI informant.
Wow.
Highly credible, extremely trustworthy,
multilingual, proficient at excel,
a good tiper.
A generous lover always puts the seat down.
This guy is rock solid, bulletproof, impeachment case closed.
In a new court filing, federal prosecutors allege one of the FBI's owned,
long- longtime informants
spun bogus tales about President Biden and his son Hunter after meeting with Russian intelligence
officials.
Alexander Smirnov was arrested Wednesday charged with lying about financial ties between
the president, his son Hunter and the Ukrainian energy company, Barisma, allegations
that have been central to the
Republican's impeachment push.
Yeah.
Not only was this guy lying about Joe Biden getting bribes, the FBI says that he was also
working with Russian intelligence.
Yeah, Russia again.
Can we please just get a new storyline?
Just once, I want to hear that like Bhutan is meddling in our elections.
Just to mix things up.
I mean, didn't we just find out that aliens are real?
Maybe they want to get in on this, you know?
So the impeachment case against Biden just took a big hit, although it wasn't that strong
to begin with.
I mean, it's like saying when Jimmy Carter entered hospice he blew his chances of making the NBA. So now the prosecutors say this guy is
a liar working with Russian intelligence. Surely Jesse, a responsible journalist,
is taking it upon himself to apologize and make the necessary corrections.
Everyone who blows the whistle on the Biden syndicate or is connected to it has been
arrested.
What does that tell you?
Joe Biden's a smooth operator.
Informants, business partners, whistleblowers.
They're all paying a price, but the Biden family has never paid a price.
You gotta hand it to the big guy, he's getting away with it.
That was an interesting way to say I'm sorry.
I made a mistake.
I personally would not have responded to this by accusing Biden of arresting his enemies.
But hey, every news outlet has different standards.
Some issue corrections, Jesse issues an all-caps Facebook comment.
That's a beauty of free speech.
You can say whatever you want out of your big, dumb mouth.
For some political analysis of these accusations, we turn to believe that Joe Biden is a criminal mastermind?
Absolutely, Desi. If you watch Fox News, they make a simple, compelling argument.
Joe Biden has a diabolical ski machine with the tyrannical heart of a 50-foot Joseph Stalin.
He's a master conductor, playing America's Justice Department
like he's Bradley, Cooper, and Maestro,
but without the problematic nose.
I'm sorry, but isn't Fox News also constantly painting the picture of Joe Biden as a
dautoring old man?
Well, yes, because he's also that too.
If you watch Fox News, you understand that Joe Biden is unable to form a complete sentence
or stay up past 3 p.m.
He spends his days shuffling around the White House in an open bathrobe, mumbling half-thoughts
to his own shrivel genitalia.
Sorry, but he's a mastermind?
Oh, a mastermind, Desi, with a strong, smooth penis.
A mastermind the likes of which the world has never seen, rest assured.
He is the author of all the miseries of the world.
Ukraine, Gaza, the border, inflation, that thing where you bite your cheek
and then keep biting
that same spot.
It's just, ah, the goddamn Biden crime family got me again!
Jordan, please help me put these two narratives together.
What does a day in the life of Joe Biden look like?
Oh, well, you'd be lucky if you got sleepy Joe out of bed before 10 a.m.
Then it's straight to the
masterminding. He spends the morning shaking down Ukrainian energy companies
and cooking crack for his son until lunch a small portion of jello and cottage
cheese if he's good. That poor bastard can barely get it at his mouth. Then in
comes the head of the FBI and George Soros, eager to decide which innocent Americans
they'll audit, execute and harvest for adrenochrome.
Then, Jeopardy, always Jeopardy.
Never misses it.
Then back to evil until early bedtime at 7, where he returns to the coffin and his underground lair surrounded by the bats he's using to start the next COVID. Wow okay this is on Fox. This is all on Fox. I don't know if
I can believe all of that at once. The good news is you don't have to just believe
whatever parts keep you scared enough to watch through the commercial break. Then
Fox News will be happy.
And don't get too afraid, though.
Joe Biden can smell fear from over a mile away.
It's how he hunts.
Wow, truly terrifying.
Thank you for that, Jordan Clepper, everyone.
When we come back, we'll find out why Duluth is ready for to be coming out every Thursday.
So exciting, you'll be saying to yourself, TGID, thank God it's Thursday.
We're going to be talking about all the things that hopefully obsess you in the same
way that they obsess me.
The election, economics, earnings calls.
What are they talking about on these earnings calls?
We're going to be talking about ingredient to bread ratio on sandwiches. And I
know that I listed that fourth, but in importance it's probably second. I know you have a lot of options as far as
podcast go, but how many of them come out
on Thursday?
I mean, talk about innovative.
Listen to the Daily Show.
It's only a matter of time before rising sea levels swallow America's coastline.
But where will all the coastal elites go?
Michael Costa went to find out.
Super hurricanes, drought, wildfires turning New York City the color of Sunny D.
Across America, climate change is wreaking havoc in driving York City the color of sunny D. Across America, climate
change is wreaking havoc in driving people from their homes and experts say
this is only the beginning. This is in the order of millions of people. So where
might they go? Climate researchers say the answer is in and up. Think Duluth.
Wow, so millions of coastal elites like myself will one day be flocking to Minnesota?
Is this the city of the future?
Let's find out.
Am I moving?
I can't feel my legs.
I'm not moving.
Why was there not a jacket in my suitcase?
To learn more, I met with chief sustainability officer, Mindy Granley.
So tell me about Duluth is a great city?
We're on a great lake. We have lots of fresh water.
Do you mind if we finish this inside? Because if I don't go inside in seven seconds, my heart's going to explore.
Of course. Oh my gosh. Let's go, let's go. Let's go. Let's go. Let's go. So what we saying about Duluth? Dulth? What were you saying about Duluth? Well, experts have called Dullu-Duuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuuu the the the the the the the the th. th. th. to to to th. to th. th. to th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th th. to th. th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th. th th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. th. to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to theeeeea the the the refuge because we're a place that's fairly safe from the worst effects of climate change. You're
talking about in 50 years when this climate change thing like really gets bad,
right? A few people are moving here now from California because of climate change.
So you're telling me people are moving here from the good states? Yes.
Mindy claims Duluth has big advantages like 10% of the world's drinking water in Lake
Superior and room for up to 10,000 new residents, because it's basically that barren ice planet
from Star Wars.
Some people can handle 80 inches of snow every winter.
80 inches of snow?
Over 80.
Jesus Christ.
Do you think those big UN climate change summits would be more effective if people knew
that the alternative was having to move to Duluth?
Well, there's really no bad weather.
There's just bad clothing.
Bad clothing.
So people are still wearing Balenciaga here.
We don't know without it. Despite this vast cultural divide, coastal refugees are getting ready to flood Duluth.
But are the locals prepared?
There's a migrant caravan of Californians coming.
They're bringing their spin instructors, their kumbucha makers, their oatmeal.
You ready for that?
I don't mind having a few more friends.
Any advice for refugees that are coming here?
Oh, sure. You need to dress really warm.
They can't dress warmly because then they would lose their job as Instagram models.
Well, it's going to be hard to be a bikini model here.
I mean, you're laughing, but this is important to my culture.
Your culture.
It felt like you were speaking two different languages, but how deep was this diolo? Polo or rugby? Ooh, rugby for sure. Why?
Because I like sports that.
No, no, I don't mean the sport.
I'm talking about names for children.
Oh, God.
Or rugby?
Neither?
Are there any members-only, exclusive clubs here?
Well, there's Sam's Club on Costco.
So I can do cocaine in the bathroom there?
I even got some words of wisdom from former Duluth Mayor Emily Larson,
seen here in a press conference last July.
Duluth is gritty and resilient and real.
We work hard. We really care about each other.
That's going to be tough for some of these people in LA because they don't work hard and they don't care about each other.
But the first wave of Californians are already here.
So how are they surviving?
It does feel like another planet sometimes.
Meet ex-Californian, an environmentalist Jamie Alexander.
We packed into a camper van thinking we were going to drive out here and spend the summer
and then wildfire season of 2020 happened and I decided to move my family here because
of climate change.
Let's be honest, okay, there's no Duluthans here.
Is it Duluthans?
Duluthians?
Duluthians.
All right, let's be honest.
All right, let's be honest.
There's no Duluthians here, okay?
This place sucks, right?
It doesn't.
I love it here. I want to live in a place where it feels real.
People say that Duluthans, Dulags are more real. A New Yorker spits in my face, it feels pretty real.
Yeah, I mean, I think what is meant by that is here. You're connected to your neighbors.
Everywhere is going to experience climate impacts. If a climate related, you know,
weather event happened, would you be able to lean on your
neighbors. I've lived in New York for seven years I don't know my neighbor
and I don't want to know my neighbor. Next question do you have a winter
jacket for me? I didn't, this is not cutting it. And my BMI is like under
2% you know what I'm saying? Jamie told me to really understand Duluthians, I would have to walk a mile in their shoes,
even if mine were nicer.
These boots are Louie.
I'm not going to get snow on, no way.
You probably will.
You're ready to do it?
I'm ready.
Let's go.
Go.
Ah. They're kind of hard to walk in at first. Okay, there goes my suit.
Hey, those look like huge, almost rats.
They're dear.
Do they ever take the pizza out of your hand when you're in the subway or anything?
No. No. You're lucky.
Duluth was starting to grow on me, but there was just one problem.
The idea that there's like a climate-proof city is, A, it's not true at all, and B, it's
dangerous because every place on earth is already experiencing climate impacts and climate
changes happening now and people are making huge life-changing decisions because of it.
Then what the f-fix am I doing here? I left my wife and family for a week to come here
and it's not even a real climate refuge?
No.
Damn, I knew the only thing that could cheer up this coastal elite
was hitting the spa.
But unfortunately for me in Duluth, even the spa is terrifying.
We had to remove 30 inches of ice so that you can go jump in it. Oh my God. Oh my God. And your body is going to tell you you're going to die.
Yeah.
But you're retraining some of those neuropathways in your head to say, hey, I can handle
a whole hard stuff.
Yeah, I can handle this.
Going in.
Maybe once I get used to it, thick. Well, at least I can go back to New York.
Oh, God damn it, that's my car.
Thank you, Michael.
When we come back, Maité Alberti will be joining us on the show, so don't go away. Hey everybody, John Stewart here.
I am here to tell you about my new podcast, The Weekly Show, coming out every Thursday.
We're going to be talking about the election, earnings calls.
What are they talking about on these earnings calls?
We're going to be talking about ingredient to bread ratio on sandwiches. I know you have a lot of options as
far as podcasts go, but how many of them come out on Thursday? Listen to the
weekly show with John Stewart wherever you get your podcast. Welcome to the Daily Show.
My guest tonight is a producer and director who's filmed the Eternal Memory is currently
nominated for an Academy Award for Best Documentary Feature.
Please welcome Myte Alberti! Oh, my take thank you so much for being here.
This film is so much for being here.
This film is so beautiful.
I loved it so much.
And congratulations on your Oscar nomination.
Thank you. here this film is so beautiful I loved it so much and congratulations on your
Oscar nomination. Thank you. This isn't your first. This is your second Oscar
nomination. First you were nominated for the Mole Agent which was also an
incredible film if you haven't seen it go watch it but this particular
film the Eternal Memory, is,
it's such a beautiful story. It's centered around a man who is living with
Alzheimer's and his wife who's caring for him. And it completely took me by
surprise at how joyful and inspiring this film is. And truly, it's a powerful love story.
Did you know that going into it when you went to make it,
or was it something that unfolded as you went on?
Thank you.
You make the perfect description of the film, I think,
because I really felt it for the first time as a love story.
And I always say that it's a big love story in the context of the recimer.. th, th, when, when, when, when, when, when, the, the the the, the the the, the thememememor, the, their, their, their, thi, their, thi, their, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, did, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, th, th, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, thi, their, their, their, their, their, their, the first time as a love story. And I always say that it's a big love story in the context
of the Alzheimer's when the Alzheimer's it's not a tragedy, it's only a talent. And yes, since
I met them personally, I was so surprised that they can have a relationship and being love
and trying to be in the world, like not leaving the asimer as a drama,
and being a couple.
And that was very special for me from the beginning.
How did you, how did you meet the two of them
and ask them to participate in the documentary?
Well, they are very important figures in Chile.
I admire them for all my life.
He's a very important journalist
and she's a very important actress, but I didn't know them personally. And I met them
in a work context. She was teaching in a university where I was teaching too. And I realized
that she bring him to her work, after that he got Alzheimer and all the people
that worked with her help her to take care of him and they were in the world into society.
They were not isolated.
They speak openly about the topic in their day by day and in media, and that was like very special.
And since I saw that, I invite them to make a film.
I love that so much about the film that she was bringing him out into the world. He was doing
everything with her. They were going on long walks and having these lovely scenes in the cafe,
enjoying a lunch together and laughing and just really being so loving with one another.
You, you chose to tell the and just really being so loving with one another.
You chose to tell the story in a nonlinear way.
We sort of travel through time, through footage, home video footage that they took from years
ago as a young family, to modern day, to a period of time through the pandemic.
What inspires you to tell the story that way?
Yeah, I think that was very important for me
to don't make the chronic of a deterioration,
that I think that we are very used to see films
of Alzheimer's in fiction films
that are drama of deterioration.
And in this case, I wanted to build the story of a memory,
and how a memory of a relationship and how you see that
relationship through years. It's from it's a film about 25 Years of Relationship
not only the moment that I I was a viewer of that was the last five years so it was
the idea of construct what was meaningful for them today of that past and how you can
understand what he's still remembering today of that previous years.
It was interesting.
I found like the scene that we just showed, the clip that we showed, those were the most
delightful scenes in the movie and they were well into his diagnosis. You know
the the previous footage of them as a young family was beautiful and it gave
contacts but but seeing those scenes were just it really is true
unconditional love the way that they were so present with one another
enjoying one another in this moment in time. Is that something that's
sort of embedded in the Chilean culture or it was this specific to the two of them as a couple? th family family family family family. th. th. th. th. th. the the th. the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their family. they. they. they. they. they. the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the they.a. Iea. Iuuu. theymeau. theymeau. their their their their their their their their their their the moment in time. Is that something that's sort of embedded in the Chilean culture or was this specific
to the two of them as a couple?
No, I think it's very specific of them.
Like they really decided to leave the assignment
in that way, like, in a funny mode,
like, enjoying the present, and understanding that that yeah it was a challenge but it
was very special from them and I feel too that you see the pain in the film
but you see good days and bad days and it's a mix and I think that that it's the
good thing of documentaries and and in this case you can feel it that
there are not genres as in fiction that it's like a comedy or a drama or a tril here you can feel it that they are not genres as in
fiction that it's like a comedy or a drama or a triler. Here you have all
the emotions coexist and you see a bad day and then a bad day and then very good
days and at the end the balance its likeness and I always said that it's a very
feeling good film because they are leaving that in a very good mood. Yeah the... I, I want the, a comedy, a comedy, a comedy, a comedy, a comedy, a comedy, a comedy, a comedy, a comedy, a comedy, a comedy, a comedy, a comedy, I the, I the, the, the, the, the the the the the the the the the comedy, the comedy, the comedy, the comedy, the comedy, the comedy, the comedy, the comedy, the comedy, the comedy, the comedy, the comedy, the comedy, or the comedy, the comedy, or comedy, or comedy, the comedy, the comedy, or comedy, the comedy, or the comedy, or the comedy, or the comedy, or the the the the comedy, or the the the comedy, or the the the the comedy, or the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the the, the, the, the, the, or the, the the the tra, comedy, comedy, or the comedy, comedy, comedy, comedy, comedy, the the the comedy, comedy, comedy, comedy, the the a very feeling good film because they are leaving that in
a very good mood.
Yeah.
I want to ask you about the process.
So many of the scenes were really, were very intimate and very vulnerable for him and for
the two of them as a couple.
How did you manage to navigate telling this story and holding their story so tenderly in the way
that you did without crossing a boundary or being intrusive in any way?
Well I think that there are many reasons for that. The first one was that he decided to
make the film. It was very difficult to convince her. I will probably say the same reason that she gave me like to be very aware of the way that you did it, uh, that that that that that you did that that that that that you did that that that that that that that that that that that that you did that that that that that that that that that that that that that you did that you did that you did that you did that you did that that that you did that that that you did that that you did that that that that that that that that that that that that that you that that you did that that that that that that that you did that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that that will probably say the same reason that she gave me to be very aware of show the fragility
and he was the one that said to her and to me, like, I showed so many people in my life,
during dictatorship, so many people open the doors to my camera to show their pain, so why,
I'm not going to show my own fragility. And in that moment, that was so clear. So, so to, so to, so to, so to to to to to to to to to their, so their, so their, so their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their, their their, their, their, like their, like their, like their, like their me their me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me me their, their, the same the same the same the same the same the same the same the doors to my camera to show their pain so why I'm not going to show my
own fragility and in that moment that was so clear so they were completely
on the project when he decided and they opened the doors in a very generous way
and it's taken me to five years to make the films and probably the first
years were to construct this relationship but then they were very used to make the films and probably the first years were to construct this relationship
but then they were very used to the camera and and they were people that are work with
the camera all their life so it was like a comfortable environment to them too.
So we really go into a deep intimacy and during COVID she takes a
camera and she shot part of the film that it's very amazing how deep and
profound are her scenes. Yeah I sent the camera she never learned how to use it as
you can see like she was completely out of focus. She's like I had a few notes I gave her a few notes. No I try. No I try I to try. I to try I to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to the camera the camera the camera to to to to the camera the camera the camera the camera to the camera the camera the camera to the camera to the camera the camera the camera to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to to try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She try. She to try. She to to to try you can see like she was completely out of focus I tried
I gave her a few notes I gave her a few notes yeah no I try I try to teach her
but she never never learned but it's so cool I'm not an Academy Award winning
director okay yeah exactly and I were when I received the material was like I can never use
what I learned TV.
But it was a big lesson for me about cinema because it's like at the end you don't care
that her scenes are out of focus because it's so intimate to see a couple in the middle
of the night at 2 a.m. alone that I never saw something like that and that it's very, very
special.
And I think that the limits we
build it together and at the end was very clear the last day for me that was a
day that he said that he said I'm not anymore and she said yes you are and it was
the first time in five years that I felt me uncomfortable there
because he was uncomfortable with himself in five years that I felt me uncomfortable there because he was
uncomfortable with himself after five years. So yeah it was very clear the
limit I think. He got to a certain point where he said I'm not feeling
quite like myself. Yes. And that was... Yes. So you don't need to see more like
like you can understand how that move forward. Yeah. Well something like
over 55 million people in this world suffer from dementia related diseases so
this clearly has a huge impact on a lot of people in this world. What do you
hope that for people who are dealing with it you know personally or within
their families what do you hope that they take away from the film? Yeah I think it's that number plus the caregivers that are with this person thus th thi th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th th thi people people people people people people people thi the people the people the people the people thi the people the people their their people their people the people the people their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their their thi. thi. te. te. te. teat. tea. tea. tea. teoo. te. te. te. te. their their. What do you hope that they take away from the film?
Yeah, I think it's that number,
plus the caregivers that are with this person
that it's always a situation of isolation.
And for me, this is the perfect example of how we can deal with the disease,
at least the first years, like trying to be on the world,
trying to be on society, trying to to enjoy to enjoy to enjoy to enjoy to enjoy the present the present to enjoy the present... and the present. And the present. And the present. And the the the the the their their their their their their their their their their, and the first years, like trying to be on the world, trying to be on society, trying to enjoy the present.
And here in the film we see something that is very special,
because when he got isolated, was in the COVID period,
and he deteriorated so fast,
and their doctors told us, like, he got very fast
because he didn't have the sociability
that he had before.
So for me, it's a very good example
of how we have to integrate people with dementia
into society and caregivers, too.
That's right.
That's so right.
Well, I just want to thank you for making this film.
It's something that has effect in my family as well
and it is so inspiring to see this story being told in such an honest way and
in a way that doesn't grieve what has been lost but really celebrates all the
love and enjoy that remains. The good love and the good life. Thank you. Thank you. The Eternal Memory is streaming now exclusively on Paramount Plus.
My Taze Alberti, everyone.
We're going to take a quick break, so we'll be right back after this. John Stewart here.
Unbelievably exciting news.
My new podcast, The Weekly Show, the Weekly Show, the Weekly Show, the Weekly Show, the
to Bread Ratio on sandwiches.
Listen to the Weekly Show with John Stewart, wherever you get your podcast. That's our show for tonight.
Now here it is, your moment of Zen.
Lawyers for his son Hunter just had to explain in court a filing that this photo, look at that photo
from his phone that the government prosecutors claim show lines of cocaine.
That's what the government prosecutors are saying.
They're saying that's sawdust. Take a good look at the sawdust.
They're lined up in perfect little lines.
Take a close look.
Does that look like sawdust you?
We'll let you decide that.
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This has been a comedy central podcast. John Stewart here. Unbelievably exciting
news. My new podcast, the weekly show. We're going to be talking about the election,
economics, ingredient to be talking about the election, economics, ingredient
to bread ratio on sandwiches. Listen to the weekly show with John Stewart, wherever you
get your podcast.