The Daily Show: Ears Edition - Michael Kosta Covers Biden Talking Ceasefire Over Ice Cream & CPAC's Panels Sound Insane | Kwame Alexander
Episode Date: February 28, 2024Michael Kosta has the scoop on Biden’s ice cream shop press conference on Gaza, and why this year’s Conservative Political Action Conference felt like the worst rock concert ever. Plus, Ronny Chie...ng places his bets on Baconators after Wendy’s announces new surge pricing. Championing liberal ideas, conservative ideas, and every conspiracy theory known to man, Robert F. Kennedy is still somehow the strangest candidate running for president. But how did he get here? This is the DailyShowography of Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Also, bestselling author and Emmy-winning producer Kwame Alexander stops by to talk about his latest anthology of Black poets, called “This Is the Honey,” and how it is a way for any reader to explore the love and triumphs of a Black experience, not just tragedy. Alexander also gives Michael Kosta advice for raising daughters and reads a poem from his memoir, “Why Fathers Cry at Night.”See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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We're going to talk about why you'll be taking out a mortgage on your next baconator.
Biden tries to solve Israel and Palestine and one lick.
We're going to talk about why you'll be taking out a mortgage on your next baconator.
Biden tries to solve Israel and Palestine and one lick. And good news, there's finally
a Kennedy in politics. Let's get to the headlines. Let's skip things off with an
update on the war in the Middle East. With the situation increasingly
desperate, the world has been looking to the United States for a way forward.
And yesterday, President Joe Biden had some good news, although he delivered it in the most
Joe Biden way possible.
Can you give us a sense of when you think that's a thin fire will start?
Well, I hope by the beginning of the weekend, I mean the end of the weekend.
At least my national security advisor tells me that we're close, we're
close.
Not the most dignified way to deliver world-changing news. It does remind me of the photo of
Obama's team watching that bin Laden raid while making balloon animals. Now, in Joe
Biden's defense, he had the ice cream first.
It's not like they asked him about Gaza and he said, hold on, if we're going to talk
about war, I gotta get a mint chip.
No, he was in an ice cream store, about to eat ice cream and some reporter jumped
in and said, what about Gaza?
This is why I don't think we should have a free press. Personally, I don't think anyone should be asked about Israel Palestine while they're
eating ice cream.
I thought that was like an unwritten rule.
I'm holding a tiny cylinder topped with a giant misshapen dairy blob that immediately starts
melting on all sides.
I've got one tiny little napkin for some reason.
You think Israel Palestine is a crisis?
I'm dealing with something here. I'll tell you what, if I was a politician. I was a politician th th is a politician thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi thi. I'm thi. I'm that is like that is like that is like that is like that I'm that I'm that I'm that I'm that I'm that I'm that I'm that I'm that I'm that I'm that is like that is like that is like that is like th. I'm th. I'm th. I was a thi thi thi thi thi thi thi. I was a thi. I was a thi. I was a thi. I was a thi. I was a thi. I'm thi. I'm thi. I'm thi. I'm thi. I'm thi. I'm thi. I'm thi. I'm thi. I'm thi. I Palestine is a crisis? I'm dealing with something here.
I'll tell you what, if I was a politician, I would always have an ice cream with me.
Just to cram in my mouth in case I got asked about Israel Palestine.
It's not a good strategy for Mitch McConnell, though, that guy already has brain
freeze.
Kobe! Now, despite Biden's prediction, both Hamas and Israel say they're not actually close
to a ceasefire. But I'm not surprised that Biden was so optimistic. When you're holding a freshly scooped ice cream cone,
everything feels like it's going to be okay.
That's why it's the official food of telling your kid you're getting a divorce.
Ice cream.
It is your fault, kiddow.
Yeah.
So, I don't blame Biden for talking about that stuff while he was eating ice cream.
What I do blame him for is, why does he open his mouth so early in the process?
I don't know about you, but I typically open my mouth when the food gets there?
I don't need a lot of prep time.
And he did one other thing that I found pretty disturbing.
No better combo. That is. We've got Minsk.
Dude, the sneeze guard is there for a reason.
Republicans are right.
Biden doesn't really respect borders.
Impeach.
Impeach.
Although I will say I am impressed by how flexible his shoulders are.
I don't think he could do that.
Based on what I've heard from John Stewart, you would think his arms would just fall right
off.
Well, let's move on to the other side of the aisle because over the weekend, Republicans
gathered for CPAC, the Conservative Political Action Conference.
It's like Woodstock for people who hate anybody who went to Woodstock.
And if you think the whole weekend was just them saying that Trump really won the 2020 election.
No, no, no, no.
They were also singing it.
Trump one in the night.
Trump won a night. Does anyone have any Molly, I want to know him.
Does anyone have any Molly? I want to overdose.
If the lyrics are too subtle for you, I like how her dress gets the point across.
What she's saying? Oh, I see, Trump won.
But look, CPAC isn't just the best rock concert of all time.
It's also an important way to find out what the current conservative priorities are.
And based on the titles of this weekend's panel discussions, it's going to be a fun year.
CPAC 2024.
Where globalism goes to die.
Ladies and gentlemen, does Congress even matter?
Would Moses go to Harvard?
What you talking about, Fannie Willis?
Shooting from the hip.
Going full Hungarian, stopping Georgie Soros.
The Bible uncancelled.
God loves justice.
God's children are not for sale.
Babies are us.
Putting our heads in the gas stove.
Seems like you guys might be inhaling some fumes already.
Now, it's always good to have panels
that sound like categories if Jeopardy had a mental breakdown.
Let's move on to some economic news.
Traditionally, Americans have eaten food at breakfast,, and dinner, but soon, that's
going to cost you.
Wendy's the country's second largest burger chain with 6,000 locations, announcing that
starting next year, menu prices will fluctuate during the busiest times of day, meaning
you could be paying as much as a dollar more for that baconator during
the lunch rush. Wendy's CEO announcing his company will spend 20 million
dollars on high-tech digital menu boards that can update prices in real-time.
Wendy's telling ABC News in a statement that the decision can allow them to
motivate customers to visit and provide them with the food they love at a great value.
Shut the fuck up. I mean, wow.
You're providing me with food I love at a great value.
Don't you hate when companies try to pretend they're not squeezing every dollar out
of us?
Just tell me you want all my money, dude.
Okay, don't take my wallet and be like, this is good for both of us. But yeah, it looks like Wendy's is going to charge more during the most popular times,
and they call this dynamic pricing or whatever, but really, this is just another tax on people
who hate themselves and don't know how to cook. Although, this will be good for guys looking to impress girls.
Hey, you want to go to Wendy's during the lunch rush?
Ooh, all right, Playa. But let's face facts. This is the wave of the future.
Airlines and hotels and Uber already do this. And if Wendy's pulls this off,
there's no reason why every restaurant, hell, every place of business won't be
using surge pricing soon. The emergency room will be like, look, it didn't come back at 2 a.m., fixing those stab
wounds will be a lot cheaper.
So if you agree with me that this has to stop, there's only one natural conclusion.
You need to burn down a Wendy's right now.
And you also need to say it was your idea.
That's important.
For more on the surge pricing, let's go live to a Wendy's with our very own, Ronnie Chang.
Ronnie, isn't this capitalism at its worst?
Isn't this capitalism as wors?
Maybe for whiny bitches like you Costa.
But for finance, geniuses like me,
this data-driven late-stage capitalism is the next gold rush.
Gold rush.
What are you talking about?
I'm talking about arbitrage, baby.
I buy a thousand burgers at 4 a.m. when the price is low,
and then I sell them high at lunchtime.
That's right.
I'm flipping burgers. but in a rich way.
You miss the boat cost, I hope you don't cry.
This is crypto and game stop all over again.
Moneyball, pik-a-ball, AI.
Stop yelling buzzwords.
Sounds like your genius financial plan is to sell burgers that have been sitting around for
eight hours.
Yeah, News Flash idiot.
All fast food burgers have been sitting around for eight hours? Yeah, news flash, idiot, all fast food burgers have been sitting around for eight hours.
Yeah, that's why it's a stable investment.
They're like if gold came with a slimy pickle on top.
Oh, wait, hang on, the market's moving. Yeah, yeah, buy.
I said buy. 4,000 bacon acres. Do it.
Yeah, Daddy earned his commission today.
Ronnie, are you snorting salt packets?
Yeah, it's pure Himalayan, great A.
Ronnie, stop, stop, stop.
You're in over your head.
You can't sell 4,000 baconators in a parking lot.
People are gonna be weirded out.
Hey, these people are already buying chili
from a redhead with pigtails and Wendy's, okay?
You can't wear them out.
That's why this plan can't fail
unless they kick me out of the parking lot.
Oh, wait, what?
What? They? What? They kicked me out of the parking lot?
Yeah, I mean, fuck? I'm ruined. This is crypto in game stop all over again.
I'm back to flipping burgers, but in a poor way.
Who's gonna buy 4,000 baconators from me?
Ronnie, I can buy one baconator.
Yes, 1,000 baconators for my goal. I'm back on top.
All right. Just one. We'll talk about it.
Let's let it look lat.
Ronnie Chang, everybody.
I'm doing.
When we come back, we'll learn all about the 2024 candidate leading the race in for third
place. Don't go away. Ronnie Chang. 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 back to the Daily Show.
With the South Carolina primary, out of the way, in Michigan coming up this week,
we're getting closer and closer to having just one Republican and one Democrat in the presidential race.
But there's still another option. Take a look.
The Kennedys, an American dynasty, the Kardashians of the Capitol.
We choose to go to the moon. For over a century, the steady hand of the capital. We choose to go to the moon.
For over a century, the steady hand of the Kennedy family
has led America through its greatest challenges.
The hope still lives and the dreams shall never die.
They aren't just in politics.
They are politics.
I've been in Springfielden.
And in 2024, our abnormal times call for an abnormal Kennedy. I don't
like wearing shoes I never have. This is the daily showography of Robert F.
Kennedy Jr. Immune to normal. Bobby Kennedy Jr. was born in 1954 and to the
most prestigious clan of... wait is that Arnold Schwarzenegger and Chris Pratt?
How powerful is this family?
Anyway, there is no there no there?
There?
The third of Senator Robert Kennedy's 11 children and the one lucky enough to share his name.
Despite his proximity to power Bobby Jr. wasn't initially drawn to the family business
Have you committed yourself to a political future?
I don't think so. We can't all go.
It would turn out to be the first of many things he would be wrong about.
As a young man, Bobby's unique personal story landed him a spot at Harvard.
Such amazing luck.
After studying law at the University of Virginia,
he became an assistant district attorney in Manhattan before pausing to take part in a personal
research trial of a promising new drug called heroin. Rehab and court order
community service had him cleaning up both himself and pollution in
the Hudson River, which led him to a career an environmental law. A project
that I work on is river protection.
While most environmentalists are about as effective as a Trump gag order, RFK Jr.
was massively successful, winning huge cases with his team of young law students and earning
him the title Hero for the Planet.
And that's the end of this great man's story.
Wait, there's more?
Oh shit.
A year ago.
In 2005, a woman came to R.F.K. Jr. with an unbelievable story.
Her son had gotten autism from childhood vaccines.
And while normal people don't believe unbelievable stories, Kennedy was so bad.
After doing his own research, he published his findings
in the acclaimed medical journal Rolling Stone, where it was the second most
important article of the month. Despite having been completely wrong, Kennedy
doubled down. There's no vaccine that is, you know, safe and effective.
Indeed, he developed a natural immunity to all criticism.
You said previously that no vaccine is safe or effective, which is...
I never said that.
You did say that in a podcast interview in July.
As his ideas spread and spread and spread, RFK Jr. gained potency.
For him, this fight is personal. You can hear it in his voice.
We ought to be debating the science.
Which was damaged by a neurological condition called spasmodic dysponia. While doctors weren't sure how he contracted the disease,
Kennedy did his own research and, surprised, blamed his annual flu shot. It occurred to me
that this might be a vaccine injury, I don't know, but it's certainly a possibility.
Hey, he hasn't gone on WebMD and thought, oh shit, I definitely have that.
And then came his big moment, the COVID vaccine.
When RFK Jr. rolled up his sleeves, it was to fight.
It's the deadliest vaccine ever made.
As one of the most influential voices against vaccines,
he truly put the flu in an influencer.
Mainstream meat. And that's when the censorship started.
And I've been silenced in many, many ways.
In the face of this silencing, there was only one thing Kennedy could do to get his message out.
I've come here today to announce my candidacy for the Democratic nomination for president of the United States.
Kennedy could deny his fate no longer. Like a microchip from the COVID vaccine,
politics was in his DNA.
And compared to his rivals,
Kennedy isn't just fit for office.
He's straight up jacked for it.
You've gone viral, not only with your message,
but just your sheer masculinity.
Take that big farmer.
This is a level of physical fitness you only
get from clean living, natural foods and... Don't take testosterone replacements. Okay
so he takes little steroids but it's organic farm-to-table steroids. I started
this campaign. Normally a Kennedy on the ballot would coast on his family name
but Bobby Jr. is not normal.
Partly because much of his family is actually opposing him,
especially after he dropped out of the Democratic primary to run as an independent,
but also because this Kennedy is a man of the people,
living simply in Hollywood with Larry David's wife.
And yes, he has name recognition.
But he also has broad appeal, championing liberal ideas, conservative ideas, and every conspiracy
theory known to man.
COVID-19 attacks certain races.
The people who are most immune are Askenazi Jews and Chinese.
All the greatest hits.
5,000 satellites alone.
We'll be able to look at every square inch of the planet 24 hours.
That's why 9 out of 10 alternative thinkers recommend RFK Jr. for president of the United
States.
A conspiracy theory is just something the government doesn't want to hear.
There's nothing normal about the 2024 election.
And in a contest between a professional courtroom sketch model and a grandpa who wandered away
from his family at the mall, Kennedy is still somehow the least normal candidate.
Somebody snapped him walking the aisles heading to the bathroom without any shoes or socks.
Well, that's one way to do your own research.
And that's why America needs to inject Robert F. Kennedy Jr. straight
into its bloodstream. Side effects of Arfke Jr. include nausea, measles, moms,
rubella, chicken pots, monkey pots, pale oil and COVID-19.
When we come back, author Kwame Alexander will be joining me 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 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 back to the Daily Show.
My guest tonight is a number one New York Times best-selling author and Emmy winning producer
whose latest book is an anthology of black poets called This Is The Honey.
Please welcome Kwame Alexander.
Please welcome Kwame Alexander. Wow. This is nice.
This is nice.
This is nice.
Yeah.
This is nice.
Uh, poetry.
Yes.
I mean, I have to admit.
I was like, poetry.
This is nice.
Yeah.
It's nice.
Uh.
Yes. I mean, I have to admit, I was like, poetry, this can be a little intimidating.
How do you advise people who are approaching poetry for the first time to digest it?
Yeah.
I typically don't advise.
Okay.
That's what I do in comedy, too.
I mean, it's like when you go up on stage to deliver some fascinating. Okay? That's what I do with comedy, too.
I mean, it's like when you go up on stage to deliver some fascinating stand-up, I just
share a poem.
There were these seventh graders in Dallas, Texas, these boys, and their teacher wanted them
to get excited about poetry.
And so I went in their library and just a quick shoulder shake, a slick eye fake.
Number 28 is way past late.
He's reading me like a book, but I turned the page and watch him look, which can only mean
I got him shook.
So I went through this whole poem and at the end, all the boys were like, oh, all the boys,
all the boys were like, oh, right.
All the boys, no. Your turn. But at the end, all the boys were like, oh!
So I think it's just, we got to hear poetry.
And it's how we learned how to read and write nursery rhymes as a kid, lullabies.
We don't remember that we love poetry, and I think I'm trying to, you know, remind us of that.
I love it. I love it. A lot of, you've written 40 books, a lot of what you write about involves sports.
Some people hear sports and they block it or they run away, but why are sports an important
metaphor for you?
Well, I mean, I think they remind us of things like teamwork, how important it is
to collaborate.
They remind us of resilience.
They remind us of grit, you know, and so I think sports is a great metaphor for our lives. If you miss enough of life's free throws, you will pay
in the end. Right. Never let, never let anyone lower your goals. Right. I love that.
You just want an Emmy for a show based off your award-winning book, The
Crossover. Is that kind of why you got into poetry so you could get an Emmy?
Let's be honest.
No, but this, this, the Crossovers made a enormous journey.
Sure. Tell me about that. Sure. I mean, it was a book that was rejected 22 times by publishers because
publishers didn't think boys would read poetry or girls or read a book about basketball. And I always had the vision.
I mean, I knew from a very early age,
because my mother had introduced me to Dr. Seuss.
Fox, Sox, Knox, Box, Fox in Sox, Sox,
Sox, Sox in Box.
Like, I've loved poetry for so long,
so I know the impact that it had on my life, and so I knew that it would have an impact
on young people's lives.
I listened somewhere, you said, you might have been joking that you wrote the crossover
at a Panera bread.
Right.
Is that true?
It is very true.
I wrote it.
Because I see people at their laptops open and I go, there's no way that person's writing anything worthwhile right now. But it's inspiring if that's true.
Many people who write at coffee shops and Panera Breads
are going to see this and go, holy shit.
Yeah. I have an opportunity here.
I sat in a chair next to a fireplace at Panera Bread
in Herndon, Virginia.
And I wrote every day for five hours a day.
And when I won the Newberry Medal for the crossover, the manager whose name was Skip, may he rest in peace,
he put a sign up that said Kwame Alexander
wrote the crossover here.
I love that.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's me.
Yeah.
Hey, could be worse.
Could be like, don't serve Michael Costa at this bar or something like that.
This is the honey. This is an anthology of contemporary black.. thee. th. th. th. the th. the th. th. the th. th. th. the the th. th. the th. the the th. th. the th. the the the th. the the the the the the to the the the the the the the honey. This is an anthology of contemporary black poets.
Yeah. I am very white.
Mm-hmm.
Are you?
Can I tackle this? Can everybody tackle this?
Here's the thing.
Yeah.
Poetry is a way to open a door to possibility.
Regardless of who's writing, whether it's Mary Oliver or Nikki Giovanni
Whether it's Pablo Naruda or Kwame Alexander.
Poetry is a way to allow us to connect with each other to feel more empathetic and ultimately
to become better human beings.
So yeah, this book is for you.
This is for me, this is for us.
Tell me about the title.
This is the honey.
We often think about, you know, Black History Month in terms of the woe and not the wonder.
Right. We think about the tragedy and not the triumph.
Right.
That's all valuable, but I wanted to create a book that reminded us of all the beautiful things, of the regular normal things. And remind not only black people, but Americans in general, that black people live, love, hope, dream, dance, smile, eat, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th, and th. And, and th. And, and thi. And, and the the the the the the the the the the woe. And, and the woe. And, and the woe. And, and the woe. And, and the woe. And, and the woe. And, and the woe. And, and the the the the their, and their, and their, and th. And, and th. And, and th. And, and th. And, and th. And, and th. And, and thi. And, and thi. And, and th only black people, but Americans in general, that black people live, love, hope, dream, dance, smile, eat,
just like everybody else.
So that is, this is the honey.
Are you, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So many stories, so many stories about black suffering.
Are you seeing a change in media covering different types of stories in the black community? Well I
don't spend a whole lot of time looking at what the media is doing except
watching you. I mean duh. I spend a lot more time trying to change the narrative
trying to make sure I'm doing it. So, that's right.
This book is organized in a particular way.
Share with us how this book is organized.
When you wake up in the morning and the sun is out,
it's a new day of promise.
And so the first part of this book is the language of joy of hope.
After you've awakened, you see the people you love and the people you care about.
And so the second section is love and caring.
And then you go out into the world
and you're sort of faced with the challenges of what's happening.
And so the third section in the book is dealing with that,
those challenges, those obstacles. And of course, by the time we're grateful and we're around family and we
and we offer praise and so the last piece of the book is dealing with that
kind of praise. That's a wonderful synopsis of a good day.
Grateful and praise at the end of the day. I'm not always getting praise
and graciousness at the end of my day but maybe that's something I can strive for.
Well you're you're grateful for your family.
Sure.
You're grateful for your mother, you're grateful for your wife, for your kids.
That's true.
And so at the end of the day, you hear that?
And so no matter what is happening in our world,
no matter what is happening in our world, no matter what chaos is going on, The poetry is sort of a way for us to be uplifted, to be reminded of the things that matter,
family, love, community, hope, possibility.
Also sex.
I mean, your poems, there's some sex in there.
I mean, that's where we are now.
Is that the hope part? You don't have to answer that if you don't want to.
So last year you released your memoir, Why Fathers Cry at Night and it's dedicated
to your two daughters.
What did you, two-part question, what did you want them to get from this and I'm a father
of two daughters? What should I get from this?
Here's the deal. I mean, as. What should I get from this? Here's a deal.
I mean, as men, we don't often talk about matters of our heart.
We don't talk about it with ourselves.
And I came to a point in my life where I realize that it wasn't serving me any longer.
You know?
And my nephew, his name is Jordan,
we were in Target with my daughter was shopping,
she's a teenager, and we were in Target,
and my nephew and I, who's nine,
we were dancing in the aisles,
and we had a good time, and when we got home,
you know, later his mother, my sister,
she called and she said,
Jordan said he wants, he can't wait to grow up to be an uncle like you. Right? Right. And so, thank you. That's the kind
of man I want to be who has those type of relationships with the people he
loves and who love him. And so I wanted to write about that as an exploration.
What can I mean, you know, man, there's some beautiful stuff in here and it's poetry,
yep, advice, then there's a recipe for fruit punch.
You know, and I'd like every page I'm like, what's next?
Right. As someone who's parenting two daughters, what do I need to do, whether even in the book
or just in life, tell me.
Listen.
Feeh!
Listen.
Hey, it's no secret.
It's no way around it.
We got to listen to our daughters.
When I was a kid and got in troub my mom, their woman.
to the room, I hated being alone. And I would be in my room. I hate that woman. I hate that woman.
And she'd come in and she'd recite a poem or sing a song
to make me laugh.
I did the same thing with my 15-year-old.
I tried to make her laugh when she was upset.
And she said, Dad, you know, it we got to listen to our kids man. Yeah, I love that.
Poets are always asked to read poems and interviews and I just you know I
love that comics don't have to do that. Right. You know I think it's like you're
here to hang and promote your book why are we gonna put you to work?
But I really love ten reasons why fathers cry at night from this,
from your memoir.
Would you mind reading it for us?
Sure, sure.
And this really resonated with me very much.
So shout out to my two daughters,
Nandi and Samaya, when Nandi was a teenager,
she came home and said those words, no father ever wants to hear.
She said, Dad, I want to go on a date. And I said, maybe when you're 30.
So you got little ones, enjoy that moment.
Yeah. Because when they become 15 and 16, it's another life, man.
Well, that's why I read this and put it down, and I had to take some deep breaths,
and then I took a picture of it and texted to my wife, and she's like, don't this is too sad. And, you know, but it's just, it's capturing this human feeling.
So please, if you don't mind, thank you very much.
Ten reasons why father's cried at night.
Two, because holding her hands is forbidden and kisses are lethal. One, because teenagers don't like park swings or long walks anymore unless you're in the mall. Two, because holding her hands is forbidden and kisses are lethal.
Three, because school was fine, her day was fine, and yes, she's fine, so why is she weeping?
Four, because you want to help but you can't read minds.
Five, because she's in love and that's cute until you find his note asking her to prove it.
Six because she didn't prove it. Seven
because next week she's in love again and this time it's real she says her
heart is heavy. Eight because she yearns to take long walks in the park with
him. Nine because you remember the myriad woes and wonders of spring
desire and ten because with trepidation and thrill you watch your teenage daughter
who suddenly wants to swing all by herself.
Oh, it crushes me.
This is the honey and why fathers cry at night are both available now.
Kwame Alexander.
Thank you so much.
I'm really appreciated it.
We'll get a quick break. We'll be Thank you. Thank you. Thank you.
Thank you.
John Stewart here.
Unbelievably exciting news.
My new podcast, The Weekly Show.
We're going 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.
That's our show for tonight.
Now here it is, your moment of day.
President Biden is about as popular as scurvy.
The president is about as popular as cholera.
He's about as popular as a colonoscopy.
About as popular as robo-calls as herpes fever blister. The president
is polling right up there with with with comedy.
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This has been a Comedy Central podcast.
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 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.