Quantcast GW Hatchet
College Media Network

Demockracy

New book by John Stewart and Daily Show writers strikes pure comedy gold

by Adam Conner
  • Print
  • Email
You would think after the events of the last few years there would be a lot less to laugh about today. After all, we live in fairly serious times. But Jon Stewart would tell you that we don't just live in serious times; we live in "absurdly serious times."

Night after night, with a critical eye, he goes out of his way to reveal the absurdities accepted by the mainstream media and, in so doing, earns unprecedented credibility, popularity and influence.

Bill O'Reilly interviewed Jon Stewart a few weeks ago and declared, "Come on, you do the research, you know the research on your program ... Eighty-seven percent are intoxicated when they watch it. You didn't see that?" O'Reilly then went on to refer to viewers of "The Daily Show" as "stoned slackers" six times in the short interview.

All of which we might be inclined to believe, except that the Annenberg Public Policy Center recently released a study that found viewers of "The Daily Show" scored higher on a political knowledge quiz than those who watched the nightly news or read newspapers regularly. The implications for democracy are truly frightening.

And onto this partisan election-year battlefield strolls the newest shot from The Daily Show's sarcastic cannon, as Stewart and his Daily Show crew have moved their trade to a new format - a book.

The Daily Show's "America (The Book): A Citizens Guide to Democracy Inaction" is simply the most revealing and humorous look at America to appear in recent memory. What else would you expect from them? Quite simply, it doesn't disappoint.

The first thing that strikes you when you pick up a copy of "America: Democracy Inaction" is how it's constructed identically to your old grade school textbooks, down to the smallest detail. You immediately have the urge to fashion a book cover out of an old brown paper bag. The inside cover even has the stamp straight from elementary school - the one where you write your name and the book's condition when you receive it on the first day of school. A small note at the bottom reads, "We are fully aware that Dick Hertz, I.P. Freely and Heywood Jablome are not real people, so please exclude them."
Page 1 of 2 next >

Article Tools