The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart - Political Conventions: At This Point, What’s The Point?
Episode Date: August 22, 2024The Democratic National Convention is in full swing, but what influence does it have on the election? Once a hotbed of debate, drama, and actual decision-making, the DNC has transformed into a careful...ly choreographed media event where political insiders pretend to decide things they've already decided. So what are we doing here? This week, we dive into these questions with Zolan Kanno-Youngs, White House Correspondent with the New York Times and CNN political analyst, and Jill Lepore, Professor of History and Law at Harvard, staff writer at The New Yorker, and author of "The Deadline." Together, we discuss the happenings on the floor, explore how these political gatherings have evolved from smoke-filled rooms of party bosses to the spectacles of today, and examine how political messaging has adapted (or failed to adapt) to the ever-changing media landscape. Follow The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart on social media for more: > YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/weeklyshowpodcast > TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@weeklyshowpodcast > X: https://x.com/weeklyshowpod Host/Executive Producer – Jon Stewart Executive Producer – James Dixon Executive Producer – Chris McShane Executive Producer – Caity Gray Lead Producer – Lauren Walker Producer – Brittany Mehmedovic Video Editor & Engineer – Rob Vitolo Audio Editor & Engineer – Nicole Boyce Researcher/Associate Producer – Gillian Spear Music by Hansdle Hsu — This podcast is brought to you by: ZipRecruiter Try it for free at this exclusive web address: ziprecruiter.com/ZipWeekly Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Summer might be wrapping up, but Pluto TV's Summer of Cinema is still going strong with hundreds of free movies.
It's never too late to join an epic adventure with Indiana Jones and the Raiders of the Lost Ark.
Step up your movie game with Stomp the Yard, get in the ring with Nacho Libre, or set a course for the stars with Star Trek, every Star Trek.
Download the Pluto TV app now while the sun still shines
on Pluto TV Summer of Cinema.
Stream now, pay never.
["Pain Never"]
Hello, everybody.
Welcome once again to the weekly show.
My name is Jon Stewart.
I will be your host for the next,
it could be 40 minutes, could be 50 minutes.
We don't know the optimum amount of time for the listener to complete the next, it could be 40 minutes, could be 50 minutes.
We don't know the optimum amount of time for the listener to complete the episode, but
who the hell knows?
We are here as always with our tremendous producers, Brittany Mementovic, Lauren Walker,
and this is convention week.
We are dominated spiritually, intellectually, emotionally by the democratic convention
and the storylines coming back about it
and the storyline appears to be
Democrats are taking cocaine
and they are fired up.
Hell yeah.
Little John is there.
Little John is there making the roll call
actually interesting, which never happens.
It's fun.
Have you all been watching the coverage of it and the speeches and locked in?
I'm watching it.
Well, I'm balancing Emily in Paris and the DNC right now.
So I'm doing clips.
Clips of both?
Clips of Emily and Paris?
Or full episodes, Emily and Paris,
clips of the convention.
She spark noting Emily and Paris.
Yeah.
Now that is, I'm going to be completely honest here.
I don't know what that is.
I know, I mean, I know that it's a show,
but I don't actually know.
I assume it's about this woman, Emily,
and where she lives. It's Paris.
All right, fair enough.
OK, so I nailed it.
That's all you need to know.
You've got the whole gist, honestly.
Yeah.
Which one, at this point, Brittany, has had more drama?
Which one has had more intrigue?
Which one seems to be hitting its stride?
Is it Emily, or is it the Democratic convention?
It's the Democratic and National Convention, honestly. Although Emily is balancing two guys
right now, so there's like a scandal happening, but it's the DNC for sure.
That's also, if I may say so, that's Paris for you. I mean, is there anybody in Paris
who is not juggling some form of sexual liaisons between different people.
Now we are, this is, we're talking on Wednesday, obviously.
I thought Monday night was funereal to a certain extent.
There was a real, I mean, it was the expectation
of all the commentators who were like,
it's the sad goodbye.
Yeah, it was definitely a different vibe on Monday and I really couldn't stay up.
I'm really impressed that everyone else did, but Biden spoke pretty late.
Can I tell you the sad truth, Lauren?
Yeah.
I went to bed before Biden.
That's what I'm saying.
That upset me.
I went to bed before Biden.
Yeah.
That is how I judge my life now.
Do I think I'm going to bed before or after Biden?
All right.
We are gonna do, it's all,
we've got a great convention show for you
with history, journalism.
We're gonna get to it.
But before we do,
I need to take care of a small little bit of business.
This is our last show for the next couple of weeks.
It's our summer break.
We're gone for two weeks.
Vacay.
Vacay.
Brittany is going to be Brittany in Paris from what I understand.
She's going to go and she is going to juggle
three to four paramours.
Obviously.
Obviously.
And then we come back.
Friday the 13th.
Spooky scary.
That's not good.
But all right, let's do it that way anyway.
And as always, at the end of the program,
we will be taking your comments
and answering those to the best of our ability.
So please keep those coming.
But let's get to the convention coverage for God's sakes.
And I'll see you guys in a little bit.
Joining us for our mega convention discussion,
Zolan Cano Young, White House correspondent
with the New York Times and a CNN political analyst
and Jill Lepore, professor of history and law at Harvard.
The university, not the one you've heard about, not Harvard.
A staff writer at the New York've heard about, not Harvard.
A staff writer at the New Yorker. Yeah, the New Yorker.
Jill is crushing it.
An author of a bunch of books,
including most recently, The Deadline.
Zolan, I'm gonna start with you.
You are in Chicago right now.
Yes.
Zolan, obviously these are generally infomercial-ish, but the energy from the Democratic
Party seems to be vibrating off the screen.
I don't know what it's feel like in Chicago, but it has that feeling of a prisoner on death row who was dead man walking, who was heading down that green mile, whatever analogy,
and the governor calls at the last minute,
and there is a joy and a relief that seems palpable.
Zolan, is that what you're sensing on the ground there?
Yeah, I think that's right.
I mean, I've been covering the White House now
since President Biden came into office.
Okay.
And that required going to a lot of his events, right?
And when you compare crowd sizes and just sort of the energy,
this is the most energetic that I've seen the party
sort of in this Biden era.
Particularly, I mean, Monday, Monday was interesting, right?
Because it wasn't, I would think, the usual sort of vibe of a convention.
It wasn't as celebratory or forward looking.
It was almost more of a swan song.
It was more of a bidding farewell to the president.
But then yesterday, right, you have the Obamas there.
And I was in the stadium when Michelle Obama
took the stage, the former first lady.
Boy, are they a talented couple of orators.
I thought President Obama got it right
when he said something along the lines of,
who goes after Michelle Obama?
I gotta tell you.
Who makes that decision? Most people? I got to tell you that decision.
Most people that I talked to, voters were saying she was the highlight sort of of the
night.
And I mean, it was hard to hear at times, you know, the speakers as well, because the
crowd was just they were they were bonkers going nuts, going nuts.
And it's actually one of the main questions I have now moving forward is, is this excitement sort of exclusively
tied to the candidate of Vice President Harris, or is it exclusively about the change? Is
it about something new? The switch on the ballot? Because look, the thing that I would
hear for the past three years was you would hear from voters sort of that lack of faith
in the system because the two candidates quite literally represented
something that just happened. It represented the past.
Oh, 78 years old and 82 years old. I mean, that's right. That's right. That's right.
81 turning 82. And now you're seeing a sense of optimism, not just around a candidate that
may represent something different, but also a candidate that they feel can effectively deliver
some lines against the former president
and actually have a chance to beat him.
Right, and we'll get to this with Jill.
Anytime you're watching a television program
and there's a plot twist, one that you didn't see coming,
this is, and certain plot twists, a little negative.
You talk about Red Wedding, you're watching Game of Thrones and all of a sudden everybody's killed there.
But then there's other plot twists where you're just like,
oh my God, they had a baby?
You know, there's that excitement.
And Jill, let's get to you
because I think you have a much broader overview of this.
You know, these are now television shows.
These are no longer, you know, political conventions. And I'd love for you
to give us a little bit of a sense of how this thing has evolved. Political conventions
were weeks long. They were more like, when you think of conventions in a political sense,
the constitutional convention, a gathering of the leaders and the elites, for however
negative or positive you wanna view that,
who are going to sit and they're going to grind
the philosophy of our governing principles
as we are going forward.
And now, over those years,
it's evolved into the kind of convention,
like a timeshare convention,
like a gathering of people who sell Lipitor,
and they're just there to celebrate the product that they have had developed
and they are going to shout and hold signs and wear funny hats and they're not actually going to do
anything other than that spectacle. And is that the transformation that we've seen?
Yes, I think the Lipitor convention might have better hats. Now I'm trying to picture that.
Sure.
Yeah, and I just want to add one thing about this week before kind of jumping
back in time. Cause one of the things I think maybe hasn't been talked about as
much with the excitement, is it the novelty? Is it the change? Is you're
asking John or, or, or is it the candidate herself? I think one of the
things that's important about this democratic convention is it really is a
party convention and not a dynastic activity.
Nice.
So if it was a dynasty, it would be Michelle who was the candidate, right?
That's an alternative democratic reality thinking about Hillary Clinton in 2016, right?
Like she comes on, she's Bill's wife, right?
A very important politician and accomplished person in many ways but that was a dynastic anointment in the way that the Jeb
Bush candidacy was meant to be a dynastic anointment that same year in
2016 and people were it was grim right I went to both those conventions in 2016
that's the only times I've ever been but it was just entirely grim from top to
bottom both conventions for different reasons.
Trump, because he toppled the dynasty.
Clinton, because the Sanders people were like, this is a dynasty.
This isn't a party anymore.
So what was so for me exciting to watch, you know, Michelle Obama last night.
I mean, also she's just, she's just badass.
Like she's so, she's so great.
But that she, it's not Joe Biden who selflessly like gave up the presidency.
It's Michelle Obama.
Like no one's pointed like,
she could have walked right into that nomination.
She could have, she still could.
No one gives her credit for that.
Like she, the dignity that she talked about,
and she kept talking about the presidency
has a certain amount of dignity to it.
That's her, right?
Like she's the one.
People in the party have been dying to get her.
And she's like, you know what?
Not everybody wants power.
Like that's not what I want.
I think she was also, you could tell though, she was wounded
by the treatment that the Obama family, not just the president,
but the entire family.
She was really wounded by the, if we're being honest,
disgusting treatment, which continues to this day, of the Obama family and just the vile attacks,
like not policy, not anything other than just vile, conspiratorial, personal, disturbing,
and then you have Trump yesterday, I've got a lot of respect for the Obamas. Bullshit. I, you know, and then you have Trump, you know, yesterday, I've got
a lot of respect for the Obamas.
Bullshit.
I don't know.
You know, that's the same with like, no abortion this.
I had nothing to do with this.
And it's a great thing.
Like it's him saying it doesn't make it true.
He was the leader of an absolute torrent and river of slime. And I imagine for her, she thought,
we've given our pound of flesh to this endeavor.
And I don't want any part of that anymore.
Right, true.
But I mean, Hillary Clinton had been through white water
and Monica Lewinsky, and she was like, you know what?
I want the power.
I want it.
I want it.
I deserve this. That's a great point.
I'm entitled to this nomination.
So I don't know. I just kind of want to take I want to, I deserve this. I'm entitled to this nomination. So I don't know. I just,
I just kind of want to take a moment to say, I just know that that just deserves kind of recognition.
And as you say, like it was a great television moment. She's, you know, she's an amazing speaker.
She's incredible just to watch, right? Just like the physical presence.
How about that line though? The affirmative action of an inherited wealth.
Boy, that might be the line of the convention.
Yeah, but so I didn't mean to skirt your question
because I'm an historian.
I'm supposed to be talking about history, but.
But that's fabulous context, Jill,
and I thank you for it because I think
that's a really interesting point
that I have not heard talked about,
which is, I mean,
honestly, if Michelle Obama had gone out there last night and said, hey, you know what, I
know we all settled on Kamala, but I think I'm going to do this.
I do think the crowd might have been like, okay, we're fine with that.
But I did, to address the idea of how this has developed over time from how we view a
convention, the Constitutional convention as kind of an intellectual
and philosophical exercise,
which is what the political conventions I think have been
to an infomercial convention of an industry celebrating
its own greatness.
How's that happened over time?
Yeah, so one thing to remember is conventions
are not constitutional.
They're extra constitutional.
They're just an invention of the party system.
Also, the party system is not constitutional.
It's just an invention of people who thought it would be a useful way to organize themselves.
And the founders didn't want it.
They thought that the executive would battle, the judicial would battle, the congressional.
They didn't think there'd be parties in any of this.
Yeah.
And the party system actually screws up the balance of power in federalism, the way the
constitution has described it. So, the first convention is 1831. So, it is a very ancient
thing, but it was an attempt to kind of deal with the problem of the electoral college. You could
write all of American history as an attempt to deal with the problem of the electoral college, which was just admit it, a mistake.
Like it was a bad idea.
It was a bad compromise.
It's a crazy way to elect a president.
And all basically done for slavery.
All really done for, yeah, for slavery.
Because the slave states didn't have people
that counted as people.
They'd have no power.
And in a direct national vote, right.
They would have lost to New England, right. So they're like, oh, we have this idea. Let's have it be proportion And in a direct national vote, right. They would have lost to New England.
Right, so they're like, oh, we have this idea.
Let's have it be proportionate to our representation
of Congress where we get the two senators
and that's what that makes it.
And then also we get the three fifths clause.
And so then all the presidents are gonna be from Virginia.
Oh, this is great.
So people in the North are like, this is bad.
They tried to abolish the electoral college.
Requires a constitutional amendment,
still hasn't been done. So they decided, okay, well, we'll nominate
our candidates once they kind of formed parties. We'll have the party caucus in Congress nominate
the candidates. So this was the legislative caucus. They would get together in this like
secret meeting, like a secret cabal. Yes, the smoke-filled room.
And members of Congress would be like,
oh, you know who we were, you know, we're going to nominate John Stewart this year. He's going to be.
Wait, what? And then the people wouldn't even vote for the candidate. The people are voting,
people aren't even voting for the delegates at the time. Right. The Electoral College delegates
were elected by the state legislatures. So the only reason this even worked was because people weren't used to voting.
Like they were used to having a king.
So anything seemed better.
Like, OK, I guess everything seemed like a privilege.
We do vote for state legislators, and then they vote for these delegates
and the delegates choose a nominee that was chosen by members of Congress.
But that's OK.
But then then that wasn't OK, right? As the country became
democratized. That had to go to a vote as well.
Yeah. So then there's this kind of big campaign to get rid of what its enemies call King Caucus,
because basically it's a vestige of monarchy. So how are the parties going to decide who the
nominee is? They're like, oh, we'll use it with a convention, because a convention. So they were
convinced in the 19th century, people had conventions for
everything. You were interested in women's rights, you're
interested in temperance, you're interested in anti slavery,
you're, you know, you're interested in a new religion,
you're interested in, you know, new speculation in the West,
like you just have a convention, because people, you're not
going to call someone on the phone, you're not going to like Instagram people, you're not going to call someone on the phone.
You're not going to like Instagram them.
Like you're going to have to go somewhere, get together, sit in a room, get to know one
another, share your views.
And cut out some time for it.
And these conventions were weeks.
Weeks, weeks.
So for everything, like in a political convention came to be how people understood the sovereignty of the people.
Like, it was the visual embodiment of like, this is not voting. So, I'm like voting,
voting was a whole other crazy story behind voting. But conventions were like,
we do actually decide how we govern. So, like there were like 200 state constitutional conventions
in the first couple of hundred years of the country
because the states were like, you know what we should do?
We should have a convention,
rewrite our state constitution.
Also, cause it's fun.
It seems very fun.
There's musicians there.
Little John was there last night.
Little John was there.
Little John.
Yeah.
He was at the, yeah.
I think they had some banjos.
Yes.
Yeah.
Okay.
We will be right back.
["The New York Times"] Yes. Yeah. Okay. We will be right back. This show is supported by Zip Recruiter.
If you're hiring for new roles,
have you wondered how to find top talent
before the competition gets to them?
Zip Recruiter.
And it's summertime, man.
That's seasonal work.
You're looking for your lifeguards,
your ice cream parlor, your mosquito swatters, your,
I don't know if that's an actual job, but if it was,
maybe only ZipRecruiter could find those types of people.
You can try ZipRecruiter for free
at ziprecruiter.com slash zipweekly.
Visit ziprecruiter.com slash zipweekly.
Set up your profile for free.
You're gonna have instant access to ZipRecruiter's
powerful matching technology,
which identifies the top talent.
Check out ZipRecruiter's high-speed hiring tools.
See why four out of five employers who post on ZipRecruiter
get a quality candidate within the first day.
Just go to this exclusive web address right now,
ziprecruiter.com slash zipweekly.
Again, that's ziprecruiter.com slash zipweekly.
Build your business with ZipRecruiter,com slash ZipWeekly. Again, that's ZipRecruiter.com slash ZipWeekly. Build your business with ZipRecruiter,
the smartest way to hire.
All right, we're back.
This gets to kind of the idea
that the conventions have in themselves.
There's not a lot that isn't scripted that goes on there,
but what really seems salient here is the symbiosis between
the media machine and the political machine coming together for this, you know, for your,
it's the Olympics for the media, political, industrial complex. And it seems like this is all thrown for you guys.
It's the correspondence dinner writ large in this in a four-year orgy
of celebration of this symbiotic relationship.
I get what you're saying there.
Yeah, there's a certain sort of mutual benefit, right?
By the outlets that are going to be covering, you know,
this constantly and, you know,
obviously the political machine that wants to have a made
for TV spectacle, right?
I mean, look, when it comes to journalism
and sort of the news value,
the story sort of of this convention,
I think we were reporting on, the real reporting was
going on sort of the past two months, right?
Or really the past, you know, you could go even beyond that.
And that's talking to voters and seeing if they were frustrated with who was on the top
of the ballot.
That's trying to dig into President Biden's low poll numbers.
He was trying to figure out was there in-fighting in the Democratic Party. You know, that being said, I also think there's something to this because
walking in there yesterday, walking past protesters, you know, that are protesting what's
happening in Gaza and being able to sort of talk to those folks and sort of remind the public,
hey, this party is still going to have some issues moving forward in the campaign. Walking inside and getting on record
sort of the values that this party is saying that it's going to stand for. There's not
too much policy discussion in this thing, but hearing what they are emphasizing, the
economy, sort of investing in the middle class, not a lot of talk of foreign policy, not too
much talk of immigration. That's stuff that I'm going to keep in my mind. And I think
we should put out there for readers and viewers. Sure. And then there's that old adage, and you
know, maybe this is a cliche, but like, of sort of documenting the first draft of history. I mean,
we keep going back to the first lady's speech, but you know, I was talking with some voters after who
were saying, look, we can recall the Obamas always going high rather than going low. And for them to
be there, you know, in their seats as a black woman who many find to be a hero was almost sounding the
alarm for what's to come potentially for the vice president, for someone trying to be
the first black woman to be president,
almost defending her in that way,
I think that deserves coverage.
Oh, it absolutely deserves coverage.
I guess my question would be,
is this the first draft of history,
or does the relationship between the media
and these political parties
create a skewed first draft of history?
One is, obviously the convention is a strategic placement
on what their values are
and what they think they're gonna emphasize
and what they're not going to.
And then as you watch, there is more coverage
with less news than I think I've ever seen.
And that's been the progression my whole life.
You've watched the coverage increase, the news decrease.
And how much of this is the media creating a first draft of history off of a play that was written by a political party and feeling
the need to comment in real time.
You know, I can't tell you, you know, the conventional wisdom that comes out of here
is not a lot of policy.
Well, who does a lot of policy?
They do a pro forma platform.
You saw the Republican convention.
They basically took whatever platform they have and Trump just took words out of it.
Right.
A, because he's a pamphlet guy and B, he doesn't want to be on record with anything real because
he thinks that will open them up to criticism.
So I guess that my point is, is this the first draft of history or is this a mask that the
media is helping to build?
No, I think it's a good question.
I don't think you can look at this convention sort of in isolation, right?
If we in our coverage were sort of covering this as the entirety of the campaign and sort
of everything that these two candidates represent, then yeah, I mean, that would not be giving
our readers
the full story here.
But you know, if we also had report,
sometimes I like when I'm facing these questions
and like say we go to a speech
and it's a political stump speech
and you have people saying,
hey, are you just following the rat race?
Or are you actually following the issues that matter?
I like to like say, look, you know,
I may be here covering this, talking to people,
talking to voters, talking to different elected officials.
But that doesn't mean that I wasn't in Chicago, you know, a year ago covering lead
pipe removal, President Biden's policy and trying to dig into the impact of that policy.
That doesn't mean we don't have colleagues in DC right now that are leading investigations
into these parties to actually assess impact.
In some ways, the difference between print and television, you know, print is a really
different animal and it allows you a context and a perspective that you can't have.
But I do want to ask, Jill, you know, is this then Schrödinger's convention, sort of this
idea that television has fundamentally formed and
changed the way these things take place because they didn't want to be exposed.
That television originally, it goes back to Nixon and Kennedy, the first televised debate
where Nixon's like, makeup, I don't need makeup. I'll look great. You know, the medium originally exposed politics.
Now, politics has found a way to expose media.
And is that the kind of arc that has happened
over these years that television
has been the dominant media form?
Yeah, I think that's fair to say.
I think it is kind of hydraulic
in the way that you describe it, right?
It's like an engine that's moving,
there are parts that are moving together.
Right.
And I think it does predate television though,
and it has to do with larger changes in,
maybe I would go to the age of radio, the 1920s,
because first of all, you have broadcasting.
Second of all, it's the age of the birth of mass advertising,
modern commercial advertising, where
you begin to see political candidates marketed,
hawked directly to voters as political products.
The first campaign consulting company
is founded in 1933 in California Campaigns Inc.
Really?
Yeah, and it's a former ad company,
right? They're like the madmen of the 1930s. Wow. But you see then that, so it's 1932,
FDR becomes the first nominee to actually go to the convention. Before that, it would be considered
completely inappropriate for a candidate to go. Wait, so the candidates wouldn't, when they got nominated, they wouldn't come on and say,
I accept your nomination to...
No, also, because John, it was a decision. It was actually a deliberative convention
where people were making a decision. And the idea...
So they wouldn't even know?
No. So you wouldn't go and stump for votes.
You would have, there'd be various people there making deals, swindling.
There's a whole lot of shenanigans and political skullduggery, but it was actually a lot going
on.
And even the platform deliberations were real deliberations.
So there was no, were they reported on? No,
because it was actually a working convention. People were getting together who hadn't seen one
another. They're not on the phone all the time. They don't share the same national news culture.
I'm from Mississippi. Here's how I think the party needs to be moving. You're from Connecticut. You
want to do this. How are we going to make a deal here? Was there an honesty there that disappeared
as soon as people started listening?
I don't think so.
No, I think there was a lot of dishonesty, right?
But-
All right, good.
So fundamentally, politics hasn't changed.
Yeah, it's just like the people that gotta go do that
are gonna, you know those people
that wanna sit in that room and be like,
hey man, I've got- The room where it it happens I got a tariff you know on your cotton
if you whatever like yeah those people right so they'd be there but they would do their thing
and the candidates like some of them had never even been mentioned before the convention right
this is the dark horse really is a dark horse people really no one's even heard of these people
and there would be these schemes like oh they're they're just great scenes. I think in 1860 when Lincoln became the nominee,
I think Lincoln wasn't voted maybe till the sixth ballot. I can't remember. But what Lincoln
supporters did, they printed up fake tickets for admission to the convention and they gave them out
to people who are Lincoln supporters and they sent them in
like an hour early before the hall was supposed to even open. So they filled to the rafters the
place with Lincoln supporters. So when they got to that ballot, when they were going to finally
nominate Lincoln, because you have to hold back your dark horse. You don't bring them in. You let
everybody like waste all their votes and get all worked up about this person, the other person that's doomed, doomed, doomed. Then you bring in your guy and people like, Lincoln, Lincoln.
I guess he has a lot of support, this Lincoln guy.
But he's honest Abe. How could honest Abe do something like that?
See, that's why you can't go. That's why you can't go. Because there's so much like sneaky
Machiavellian stuff going on behind scenes. You don't go.
You're told the next day you've been nominated. The cynicism, Jill.
I'm so honored. FDR though, FDR was an awesome radio guy. He's like the Michelle Obama of the
radio. So he, as governor of New York, he had been great on the radio. And he knew he was great on the radio. And he knew the power of radio. He had
a sense of that as a medium that would transform politics because it was said that Reagan would
always just skip over Congress and directly appeal to the people. This was his big maneuver. Well,
that was FDR's maneuver. FDR was like, you know what? I had a problem with the Supreme Court. I'm going to have this difficult Congress.
I got all these like Southern conservatives. I'm going to have a big problem. I'm going to
go to the people. I'm going to get my mandate from the people. In some ways, that's Trump's trick.
That's the magic that keeps him. That was Trump Twitter, 2015 Twitter. Yeah. It kind of went from
radio to Reagan was the master of television and Trump is the master
of that new media of social media and podcasts and all those things.
And it's interesting how different politicians have found a way to exploit this new way of
communicating.
In terms of new media and how that has changed sort of how politicians and probably both parties value or sort of feel the need to help out kind of traditional media.
I mean, there's a whole lounge for content creators and influencers at the Democratic National Convention right now.
This White House in particular, I know, feels that they can sort of get their narrative and their story out through TikTok, you know,
influencers and Instagram influencers.
State of the Union speech, Biden's State of the Union speech.
You know, he had many influencers
at the White House as well
to basically get his message out at that time.
I'm seeing that at this DNC as well.
This is almost a next level, no longer just, you know,
the White House and sort of the political teams
using social media, but actually bringing
in young influencers who, quite frankly, maybe are not going to be asking the same tough
questions or looking for accountability, but are getting their message out.
Two questions.
Sure, sure.
One is, are they paid by the campaigns to do this thing? And the second question is,
have you seen, you know,
anytime you introduce a new and powerful medium,
we, as we talked about like that Nixon Kennedy moment
on the debates,
there is also always the potential for,
holy shit, you don't know how this works, do you?
Like in that sense of, I don't know if you remember,
right after the Super Bowl,
President Biden had an opportunity to do an interview
before the Super Bowl.
That would be seen by tens of millions of people.
It's an incredible opportunity,
especially in an election year,
and chose instead to jump on and release a TikTok.
Where he was like Grandpa Joe behind the scenes
talking about chocolate chip cookies.
And quite frankly, I thought it was disastrous. I think many people agreed with you in the
party as well. Well, let me answer the first one in terms of getting paid. I do not believe
that the influencers that are working for the campaign, I believe that's on a volunteer
basis, but I don't know in the totality. Although at a minimum, they indirectly profit.
No question. Oh, I mean, you're getting more followers, you're getting more clout.
You're at the White House.
It's branding.
It's branding.
Some of these, I mean, some of these, you know, TikTokers, I mean, good for them, have
been, you know, in spaces of the White House that many of us haven't been in, you know,
in the press corps.
Absolutely.
And do have millions of followers on both sides.
And by the way, like for the White House, like for their political
strategy, they're thinking, hey, we're struggling with young voters. You know, we're struggling to
reach, you know, a constituency base that maybe frankly, maybe don't read the New York Times
every day. Right. So I get where they're coming from in terms of PR and getting their message out.
I guess I would hope that there's still folks
in the White House that also realize
it's not just a matter of sort of getting your message out,
but also having it, some stress tests happening.
Yeah, and some tough questioning, yeah.
Yes, and also what do they care about politically
and what can you do?
Yeah.
All right, we gotta hold it right there.
We'll be right back.
John Stewart and the Daily Show news team are finding the humor in all things election
on The Daily Show, year's edition podcast.
It's been a week or a decade.
Keep up with the latest interviews with political experts and best of moments from the campaign
trail.
For most politicians or anyone else on earth, that would have been a low point of the interview,
but because it's Donald Trump, it somehow got worse.
The Daily Show, year's edition is available
wherever you get your podcast.
["The Daily Show Theme"]
All right, we're back.
You know, it reminds me of when, you know,
when these television debates also started
to get more sophisticated with the 24 hours.
And, you know, CNN would do the CNN MTV debate
as opposed to the CNN Wall Street Journal debate
or the CNN New York Times debate.
And all the candidates would have to show up in turtlenecks.
Because you know, man, if you're talking to the kids,
they don't want to see a neck tie
because you're the man and he's that.
But if you wear a turtleneck to be like, I like the cut of this guy's jib.
This is this is a direct shot.
I feel like at me who wears turtlenecks every like TV appearance during the winter.
That is never.
And my mom and like aunt are always texting me saying, wear a tie, but it's all good.
Not at all.
We'll see more high tops in turtlenecks in the future with political coverage.
That's what I'm talking about.
That's like when JFK didn't wear a hat
at the inauguration.
People were like, man, you have to wear the top hat.
He was like, no, it's a new day.
The torch has been passed to a new generation
that allow heat to escape through their scalp.
But look, I do think you're right, too,
that going back to the Super Bowl interview,
I was talking to allies of the president at the time that were like, hey, if you just
simplify this, we have the president passed a lot, a lot domestically.
You know, he did a lot in terms of legislative achievements, semiconductor investments, the
inflation reduction act, investments in climate, But people were not registering it, right?
And I think that's partly because some of these projects take a while,
but it's also the message and it's the messenger, right?
And that Super Bowl interview, you have the chance to reach millions of people.
I mean, how many people are watching the Super Bowl at that time?
And you could introduce them into some of these things that you've done.
In a thoughtful forum, where you can
expound on certain things and analyze it, not a 30-second.
I don't know if TikTok is the best platform
to talk about semiconductor investment
and how investing in semiconductors
will allow you to compete against China moving forward
and establish independence for a future pandemic when we have supply chain issues.
It's the opposite of a convention.
It lacks context.
That's right.
And not everything should be in a bite sized form.
That goes for the coverage we do.
That goes for social media influencers as well.
So there was just to underscore your question about TV,
there really was a kind of TikTok moment in 1952,
which was also the last time any convention vote
went to the second ballot.
Like it was the last time there was a decision made
at a convention.
Was this at the Republican at the Eisenhower convention
or is this at the Democratic convention?
No, this was at the Democratic convention.
But the reason 52 is important is it's the first
televised election, right?
It's the first television campaign ads,
and it's the first election night that is on television.
48, they did it on television,
but they just did like a visual radio broadcast.
What was the penetration at that point
with television in 1952?
By 1952, it's like 80% of Americans have TVs.
It's like really overnight.
And Eisenhower agrees,
this like ad company convinces the Eisenhower campaign
to make, to appear in television ads. And he makes this series of ads. You've probably seen them.
They're called Eisenhower Answers America. And so he went to like the studio in Times Square
and he just read off cue cards, these answers to questions. And then they brought in people
who are wandering around Times Square and had them read cue cards and ask questions.
And there'd be like, General Eisenhower, I'm a veteran of the second world war and
my taxes are too high.
And then it would say, Eisenhower, answer.
So these 30 second spots.
And they were-
If they did that today, it would be the guy dressed as Elmo and he would wander in on
the street in Times Square.
Yeah, it would be like Elmo would come in and say the cooking monster gets all the best snacks.
President Eisenhower.
But it was incredibly effective.
But Adlai Stevenson, who was running against him,
he was the egghead intellectual.
Yeah, he calls him the corn flakes candidate.
He tries to say, like, you're the TikTok candidate.
Like, what have you done to America?
You have reduced political discourse to 30 second
ad spots made by Madison Avenue charlatans this is no so this is when Stevenson starts saying what
we need to do is have a debate and it's actually Stevenson who makes possible presidential debating
which doesn't then happen until 1960 but it's Stevenson's rejection of the tv ad spot which
but it's Stevenson's rejection of the TV ad spot. Huh.
He totally loses.
And if you've ever seen-
Not only loses, loses twice.
Loses twice, but you have to-
Doesn't pick it up in 56 either.
You have to watch Stevenson's ad.
He makes this ad called The Man From Libertyville.
He decides finally, his campaign's like,
dude, governor, you gotta make a TV ad.
So he makes this ad called The Man from Libertyville.
It's unbelievable.
I try to like imagine like the worst thing you could do on TikTok that would, you would
try to explain, you know, carbon tax, whatever.
So he has the cameras come into his study in his house in Illinois, lined with books
and he's talking about books and the importance of books. And then the camera pans back to see the boom and the cameras and all the cables.
And he says, see, it looks like I'm in your room in your living room talking to you because
I'm on this screen.
But in fact, this is all fake because there are cameras here and I'm just performing telling
you something.
He tries to like lift, you know, whatever, crash through the whatever.
He went meta.
The people didn't even know what television was.
And he went meta.
People were like, where's that little Eisenhower answers America guy?
I like that guy.
Like it just doesn't, you can't.
I don't like the guy who's like, you're all living in a Potemkin village.
This is a facade.
You're all being lied to.
You're Truman on the Truman Show.
Oh my God.
But it's actually very, I found it very moving.
It's very moving that he's like.
In retrospect.
Okay, that's fair.
Not in the moment, for God's sakes.
Not moving the political needle, as we say.
Right, right.
I find this all fascinating.
Zolan, maybe you can talk to this.
You know, the touchdown is 1968
for what these modern conventions were gonna look like
and how they could go awry.
Nixon does the law and order, you know, convention,
and we're gonna get this country back on the right track,
the hippies and the love movement, all that's nonsense.
The Democrats go to Chicago and it's a shit show
and it's being televised.
And that becomes the touchstone for what not to do.
I can't tell you how many people,
when they heard the Democrats were gonna be in Chicago
this year were like, oh, that's a great idea.
They're gonna be, you know, how much of that
is an overriding principle of how they've put this
thing together on the ground zone. I would say it was actually more sort of a news story kind of
leading up to this of, oh, what might happen? And also, it actually leads to a question that we've
been asking too of, it seemed like there was more concern there when it was still a convention that
was going to celebrate a president that has overseen the policy that many of the protesters here, you know,
are here for, right? That is there have been protests outside, but I'll be honest with you.
I mean, maybe it's sort of the police response. There is some distance from the arena,
but it has not been, I had heard comparisons to 1968 and sort of concern around chaos and different,
you know, was this going to break out into sort of any sort of violent acts or rioting?
It just really hasn't been the case thus far.
Let me tell you something.
I believe much more damaging to the Democrats than the 68 convention with the riots was the 96 convention
Where the Clintons did the Macarena on stage for the entire convention that video has been making the rounds around here
How's it really well? Yes, it has that maybe that may be the most damning piece of tape
Yeah
What an arc from Macarena and some of the lack of rhythm being displayed there to, you
know, yesterday.
Lil' John doing that.
When you had not like us playing, when the California delegation, you know, was introduced.
But no, that video, particularly on Monday when Hillary Clinton came out to speak, some
people around me were wondering and they were like, you know, they would be so brave
if they just put the song on right now.
They just jumped in, did the Macarena,
and got the hell out of town.
Jill, do you think the convention now,
in terms of kind of the next iteration,
it's gone from two weeks of real policy grinding
to this four-day spectacle where the networks have kind of abdicated,
they'll do an hour a night.
It really is kind of a celebration of influencers and cable news and their relationship to it.
Where do you see the evolution of it going?
Does this become a vestigial tale of our political process?
I think it really is just a rally, right? Even the roll call this year was, I mean, it's always a determined roll call, but this
year is entirely pro forma.
And so it's fine.
I'm sure for the parties, look, it's great to get free television for a week long political
rally.
That's really all that it is.
And I'm sure it really energizes people who are there.
I think, I do think reporters learn a lot
about the state of the party
and there's a lot that's good about it.
But what is bad about it is the lack of a willingness
to trust people to deliberate
about their own political fates in groups together anymore.
So that conventioning is something that is completely died
out of American political practice
and it's a really important democratic behavior.
For instance, we have not had a state constitutional convention since 1986 because people just...
There are a lot of states that have regular...
Every 10 years or sometimes it's 15, the state has to...
People have to vote on a referendum, do you want to have a constitutional convention?
People just keep voting no,
because they don't trust one another.
So the reason that we don't have deliberation
at the conventions anymore
is because the party doesn't trust the delegates to decide.
The primaries can be informed by funding and polling
and the modern political corruption, honestly.
And the conventions can't be controlled.
It's an uncontrollable situation. That's what 68 sort of revealed, right?
So like, all right, so we can't control it.
Let's just make it like a media spectacle.
And in a way, that's fine for what the party maybe wants.
What it's bad for is democracy.
Because if we can't gather as citizens to together decide,
you know, you watch like, remember in the pandemic,
there are all those YouTube videos of like Zoom meetings we can't gather as citizens to together decide, you know, you watch like, remember in the pandemic,
there are all those YouTube videos of like,
Zoom meetings of like school committees
where people are just like crap to one another.
And you're like, these people are monsters
and people get up there and you hear about
the book banning school board meetings
and like the PTA meetings or the town council
and people can't actually get together
and like even just decide, are we going to add a new track field to our high school?
Which by the way, again, getting back to Schrodinger's school board meeting, I think that's also
a function of virality.
That's a function of an algorithmic system that incentivizes shitty behavior.
And so they know those are gonna be. And we'll end here,
because I wanna ask you guys sort of a final question.
Power abhors a vacuum, is that the phrase?
What fills that space?
In the same way that as legislators get more involved
in fundraising and all these other things,
lobbyists fill the law writing space.
They go in there and do that.
In the absence of deliberative, democratic, populist processes, isn't that space then
naturally filled by think tanks?
These Project 2025 from the heritage, whatever the progressive or democratic analog
to that would be, don't those constitutional conventions
get abdicated to these much more political funded
organizations that have a real desire to push society
in one way or the other that are much more opaque,
but are laying out really detailed blueprints
for how our government will operate and change.
As you can see, it's that kind of thing
that got that most recent Chevron decision
that made it almost impossible for government agencies
to regulate anything.
And you've seen the effect of that in Texas,
where the FTC is now not allowed to say,
you can't put non-compete clauses in people's work contract.
So my point is, we're going to get those scaffoldings
of American democracy.
We're just not gonna know where it's coming from anymore.
Would you say that's the future of all this?
I mean, look, I think that's any time that whether it's a convention or anything else
you're talking to that you're taking sort of power away from the people and reducing
sort of what this democracy is supposed to be about, then it's going to make the electorate
feel as if they don't have a voice and that they actually don't have a say in democracy.
And I have no doubt that there are people that are watching events like this, seeing that it's
already been built up and it's already been scripted by folks that they will never meet,
that they feel that they maybe have no idea how they are living and are saying, well, wait a
minute, is actually
this political system working for me?
Right.
If this whole thing is constructed by the Washington insiders, do I actually have a
voice in this, in this space?
And I think that is a growing concern for voters, you know, across the country.
At the same time, I have to go kind of devil's advocate here.
And I, again, this is my first convention that I've covered,
but I've encountered, you know, the, the, the woman that was, that was in the civil
rights movement and have watched each of these cycles and is still hitting, you know, the,
the floor of the convention because she believes in this system. And she believes that, Hey,
if I show up and I talk to as many members of Congress here,
my voice will be heard.
I'm not saying that that's the majority.
I'm not trying to put an overly positive spin on this
in any means.
But I do think that events like this also still lend themselves
to that uncommitted voter from Michigan,
or uncommitted delegate who is talking
to every member of Congress, you know, to that
woman I just described who's been protesting for years.
There is still, I think, a belief here that this represents a semblance of having your
voice heard.
The unfortunate thing is I do think that that's might be becoming the minority here.
Well, it's sort of this idea that, you know, yes, this is a cynical, scripted infomercial
and infinitely better than the alternative, this is a cynical, scripted infomercial and infinitely better than the
alternative, which is on there. Jill, what do you think?
Well, I think you're right in that. I mean, sure, there have always been people that have
policy ideas and push them out there. The technology they can use to push them out there
anonymizes them and maximizes contempt for their political opponents. So unless we have some kind of regulation around
how we communicate through social media,
that is only gonna get worse.
But I do, to try to have an optimistic view here,
I would say that one of the things that strikes me
about the Democratic ticket is that both Timberlake
and Kamala Harris are public servants.
And especially thinking about, I mean,
what is the one place where people still
gather together, talk about ideas, disagree with one another, is actually the K to 12 classroom.
And if walls could usher in an era of young people committed to public school teaching,
which is the most important job in this country or any other,
this would really change how people are trained up in the art of being a democratic citizen.
And I think Harris has some of that credibility too,
has devoted her life to being, working for the government.
I think until people can really see
that you actually have to be willing to get out,
go sit in a room with other people,
hang out with them, listen to them, learn from them,
share your views, then we them, learn from them, share your views.
Then we can kind of claw back, control over
what are those policy ideas that go up to people
who actually control the levels of power.
You know, I wonder, this is an incredibly dopey idea,
which is why I'm gonna end with it.
But there is a certain idea that you have to perform that
for people, for them to understand it. Because
the truth is, classrooms are now the latest in terms of the culture war casualties. And
so any idea of teaching citizenship will to one side be considered indoctrination and
to the other side be considered. But I wonder sort of in the way that you get those model UN's. I wonder if there is a value in performing
citizenship conventionally to demonstrate what that looks like for people because I'm, look,
I'm 61. I can barely remember the idea of political conventions as exercises in any kind of intellectual policymaking
or those things.
But I wonder if just as a project,
why not recreate the idea of what we wanna see civically
and at least put it on as a fucking show
to demonstrate what that even looks like?
Because like, Jill, when you tell me those examples
of history, they're revelatory,
but they are completely foreign to my understanding.
And so I, you know, thank you for it.
And Zolan, thank you very much for giving us
sort of that on the floor perspective,
which also coming through the television
isn't necessarily correct.
But I very much appreciate you guys taking the time.
Zolan Cano Young, White House correspondent, New York Times
and CNN political analyst.
Jill Lepore, professor of history and law at Harvard,
which, by the way, after this conversation,
I consider myself now a graduate of that institution
from having talked to her.
Staff writer at The New Yorker, author of most recently
The Deadline.
Guys, thank you so much.
What a fabulous conversation on this.
And I really appreciate both your time.
Thanks so much, John.
Thank you.
Appreciate it.
Thanks, Alon.
Thank you.
Thank you, guys.
All right, guys, here's the thing.
I want a historian for every conversation I ever have.
The amount of knowledge, first of all, is all is great.
But Jill, when she dropped an Adlai Stevenson television studio anecdote,
that might be my favorite story I've heard in the entirety of doing this podcast
is Adlai Stevenson breaking the fourth wall when people don't even know
what fucking television is yet.
Yeah.
Just breaking the fourth wall and going,
this is all alive.
That was so interesting.
I really wish I had her as a professor.
Right?
So good.
I would have had her as a professor
if I had been smart enough to go to Harvard,
but I was not.
What do we got from the viewers, the listeners? What are we dealing with this week?
The listeners have provided us some questions
that we'd like to ask you.
I will start with, please, can we have our political figures
wear the same fire retardant suits with sponsors on them
like NASCAR racers?
That's a fucking fabulous idea.
Yeah.
To have them suited up with all the lobbyist money?
Correct. How good?
Imagine how that would look visually though with them all standing next to each other.
It would look like television noise.
Everything would moray.
But what a fabulous way to humiliate all of them.
a fabulous way to humiliate all of them. Like even the most pristine and populist
and independent of all of our,
to just see, you know, Pfizer and Airbus and Raytheon
and all of it and however much money they give,
be the larger-
It's the size of the patch.
Be like a word cloud.
You'd have to do it like a Twitter word cloud where like NRA would be in giant letters on
there and AstraZeneca.
You know, you get you get a few of them that are just too big and they run on.
Hyphenated.
They'd have to wear extra.
Some of them would have to wear extra clothing just to be able
to contain.
You'd see people with giant top hats that would just have to have more names on there.
You have a train.
It's like a Pfizer train.
Can I tell you something?
I don't know where this came from.
Who said this?
Sold.
That idea is sold and should be instituted. Every single politician should have to wear that race suit
with all their lobby money on it.
Or what else we got?
All right, next step.
This is actually something we've talked about before
and hoping to talk about on the pod at some point,
but is it inflation or is it corporate greed
that's being allowed by using inflation as an excuse?
Yeah, and this is big right now,
both Trump and Harris have been putting out their plans
for inflation.
Well, first of all, let's just say how the news media
fumbles the bag in any conversation on inflation.
Kamala Harris is instituting price controls.
She said gouging, anti-gouging.
Almost every state, including by the way, fucking Texas, the leader of free men everywhere,
the Liberty State where you go to be your own American, has a fucking anti-gouging law.
Everybody does because there is an idea that in a crisis, when corporations jack up
prices, that should be illegal. And everybody has that. So the idea that they don't understand
this idea of creating or enforcing in the same way that you would want to enforce anti-monopolist
laws, anti-gouging laws is somehow communist, well then Texas is communist.
Texas is a communist state if they don't allow
oil and water producers to jack up energy
and water prices in a crisis.
That's not the American way.
So fuck all of those news organizations
for being so ignorant of what's actually being talked about.
It's so unbelievably annoying.
Nobody thinks inflation is in anything
other than a very complex interplay between supply
and demand and all kinds of other things.
But there should be no question
that corporations take advantage of opportunities
to reset pricing in difficult times
and are much faster to set the price here than they are to
bring it back down when those pressures ease. And I'm so tired of the nonsense that somehow
there's nothing we can do about that because that's capitalism. Capitalism is a wonderful
system for generating wealth,
but it has destructive collateral damage
that everybody knows and yet we act like
doing anything about it in any way is somehow communism.
Fuck this place.
Mic drop.
I'm sorry, I got upset about that and I should know.
I guess along that note, what brings you joy, John?
Nothing!
I mean, honestly, like, okay, you've got,
oh, the price of certain commodities has gone up 10%,
but somehow the price of it when it gets to you
has gone up 200%.
Well, how does that happen?
And yet the profit margin of that company hasn't taken a hit in the slightest of it when it gets to you has gone up 200%. Well, how does that happen?
And yet the profit margin of that company hasn't taken a hit in the slightest or has
even increased during a time of crisis to the point where you're on your earnings calls
bragging about how you're killing it.
I get the idea of supply, demand, doing the different things. But if you're telling me that consolidation of industries and corporate pushing of profit margin doesn't have something
to do with the inflationary moment that we're living in, blow me. That's my, you know what?
That's my new, what brings, wait, what was the other question? What brings me joy?
Yeah.
Dog, dog, doggy kisses.
No, a lot of things bring me joy.
I think don't, what brings you guys joy?
I would like to hear this.
I like my plants.
Okay.
It's a replacement for having a pet.
I can't have a pet.
So I get plants and whenever there's a hole in my heart, I get another plant and now I'm
overrun with them.
But I will say I really like watching them grow and it is a bit like meditative to repot
and to.
Right.
So you enjoy, there's a certain Zen to the whole process. Forgetting about the fact that visually the final product is lovely and calming.
I could see that. I could see gardening being a very meditative and wonderful.
I don't know that I'd have the patience for it.
Right.
Brittany, what about you?
What brings me joy?
Yeah. Joy, Brittany.
I mean, most recently eating chicken fingers
and screaming Taylor Swift lyrics at the Aris tour. Oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, oh, boy, are you in luck. Because chicken fingers may be one of the most
easily obtained items.
And you can get those in almost every drive-through
you go through, I think almost anywhere.
Very exciting.
Oh, and by the way, our next podcast app,
just to remind everybody, Friday, September 13th,
no podcast next two weeks, Summer Break, people,
where Brittany will be off,
filling to her heart's content the chicken fingers of joy
while plants bloom in Lauren's heart.
I wanna thank everybody.
As always, lead producer, Lauren Walker,
producer, Brittany Mametovic, video editor and engineer,
Rob Vitola, audio editor and engineer,
Nicole Boyce, researcher, associate producer,
Gillian Spear, and our executive producers,
Chris McShane, Miss Katie Gray.
Thanks a lot guys, and we will see you in a couple of weeks.
Bye bye.
Socials?
Oh, socials, sorry Brittany, hit it.
Twitter, Weekly Show Pod, Instagram threads, and TikTok.
We are Weekly Show Podcast,
and we are Weekly Show with Jon Stewart on YouTube.
Boom, we'd like to switch it up for you people
so you don't get comfortable.
All right, see you guys next time.
The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart is a Comedy Central podcast
is produced by Paramount Audio and Busboy Productions.
productions. A mountain of jump scares with thrillers like Scream 6 and A Quiet Place Part 2. Run! And a mountain of smiles with family favorites like Sonic the Hedgehog 2 and IF.
What if I told you imaginary friends are real?
Discover something new every week.
A mountain of movies awaits on Paramount Plus, now streaming.