1.) Kramer is merely saying one thing in private and advocating a different approach to his broader audience. As Obama supporters I don't see why you can object.2.) Why can't it be both? Why can't it be both the risky borrowers AND the overly risky derivatives that are at fault here? (not that risk should be outlawed, that's stupid, rather risk should be accurately represented). This is why we should neither bail out the companies nor the people who over extended themselves.Whatever, RAWR wall street bad, poor people noble. WOOT.
3/13/2009 7:52:36 PM
my point precisely supercaloat first..stewart looks like he is just confronting cramer for being hypocriticalby the end, he is just coming off as a gigantic assbag.i usually like stewart, but this was too much douchebaggery for my tastes
3/13/2009 7:57:29 PM
while he never mentions any CNBC reporter or talking head by name during the interview (other than santelli), stewart made it abundantly clear that the week long "Brawl Street" wasn't and was never intended to be aimed at solely cramer but the institution of financial journalism as a whole.he used the cramer clips to demonstrate that cramer is an intelligent man and deeply knowledgeable about the shenanigans and inner workings of the "real market", the backdoor wheeling and dealing for short term profits with people's long term investments. he tied it all together, as other posters have already pointed out with:
3/13/2009 8:02:16 PM
3/13/2009 8:06:06 PM
3/13/2009 8:23:43 PM
Wow, this thread has gone two pages and somehow is devoid of LoneSnark showing up to make some kind of condescending and arrogant remark in some kind of language that he thinks the rest of us are too stupid to understand.
3/13/2009 8:34:55 PM
^^ just want to clarify you mean "on" instead of "by" on that last sentence of your post. Am I correct?[Edited on March 13, 2009 at 8:44 PM. Reason : you = your, guilty of grammer myself]
3/13/2009 8:42:28 PM
Stewart is mocking a station that takes itself seriously.Whats thread worthy or news worthy about this?
3/13/2009 8:48:56 PM
hey, terrific contribution!
3/13/2009 8:51:21 PM
^^^Are you fucking kidding me? Shut the fuck up.
3/13/2009 8:53:48 PM
[Edited on March 13, 2009 at 9:18 PM. Reason : .]
3/13/2009 9:05:40 PM
I watched the long interview. Not much fun. One lib tearing into another lib who just sits there and takes it. I got the feeling that Jon Stewart was putting the bulk of the blame for the mortage problem on the heads of the banks. Granted they share blame. But no mention that it was the gov't that filled the economy with too much credit, and it was many (not all) people who took out loans who know damn well they couldn't keep up the payments. And it does irk me when the people who are paying their mortages and using their brains have to suffer and bail out those irresponsible ones.Stewart's show should move over to MSNBC.
3/14/2009 1:34:36 AM
I don't think I could live my life if every thought I had was framed about what political leaning someone had and how what they were talking about related to the size of government.
3/14/2009 8:46:25 AM
3/14/2009 2:33:18 PM
3/14/2009 2:59:33 PM
Sorry, demonstrated. The two demonstrated that each other work on fake news programs whose content should not be taken seriously.
3/14/2009 3:09:17 PM
and therin lies the problem.Cramer is marketed as the guy to turn to in these tough timesStewart is marketed as the comedian that makes fun of the mediaStewart is more indicting CNBC as a financial news reporting agency and how they market Mad Money[Edited on March 14, 2009 at 3:13 PM. Reason : .]
3/14/2009 3:12:22 PM
Why would you take financial advice from someone who admires Lenin?
3/14/2009 4:21:00 PM
3/14/2009 4:34:46 PM
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aFQFB5YpDZE[Edited on March 14, 2009 at 4:39 PM. Reason : -]
3/14/2009 4:38:42 PM
Sorry to drag this back up, but I see this same talking point every time Stewart "steps out of the comedian box" and attempts to address a serious issue (like he did with Crossfire and Mad Money)...
3/14/2009 5:34:58 PM
3/14/2009 5:39:40 PM
3/14/2009 6:09:14 PM
3/14/2009 7:45:11 PM
Do you have a point to make, or are you simply trying to be clever again?
3/14/2009 7:47:52 PM
DrSteveChaos, your adamant rebuttal, not to mention an impressive diversity of vocabulary, is impressive. The problem is you haven't said anything new.If you advertise your show as a "comedy show," then your objective is to entertain. If John Kerry comes onto the show (like he did), no one is assuming that Stewart is under any obligation to have a serious political discourse. The fact is that Kerry came on the show b/c he knew he wouldn't be grilled. See, The Daily Show covers political issues, but it's designed to poke fun at the absurdity of the system. And news media represent a source of that absurdity. Stewart is merely taking things a step further, in that he's gone so far as to call out networks and even individuals when he feels justified to do so. You seem to be saying that b/c Stewart is an entertainer, he's therefore being a hypocrite in calling out people like Carlson and Kramer. Right? Well, ask yourself this question - Is Stewart's show deliberately misleading people?
3/14/2009 9:33:39 PM
3/14/2009 11:01:51 PM
^ yeah, Stewart made it clear that he was turning against McCain not because he was the Republican nominee, but because McCain was contradicting many, many things he said and stood for in the past, and TDS showed video evidence of this.
3/14/2009 11:03:47 PM
3/14/2009 11:34:46 PM
3/14/2009 11:41:45 PM
this interview was needed. ALSO:"those irresponsible ones" were enough to make markets crash. it's not just 'lazy' people that the statement assumes.
3/15/2009 12:49:10 AM
I hate when Jon Stewart pulls this type of populist bullshit."We're a nation of workers!!""They walked off with our money!!!"What the fuck is he even talking about?What pisses me off is that Stewart plays into the whole conspiracy theory of the financial crisis.It can't be a series of systematic mistakes made by investors who didn't fully realize the risk associated with their investments. No it was "THEM" and "THEY" have walked off with "OUR MONEY!!" And you (Cramer & CNBC & Republicans) were helping "THEM!!!" Please. The old Stewart would have never went for such easy answers.I remember a few years agos when Stewart was talking truth and reason to power. Pointing out the absurd blunders and logical contradictions of a morally bankrupt administration. Now, without a clear personalized target, he spends his time taking on an assortment of small time windbags and cranks (Limbaugh, O'Reilly, Cramer, various House Republicans) with humorless moral self righteousness. A great show is dead. It's really fucking sad.
3/15/2009 3:23:55 AM
^ huh? Did you even watch the interview?
3/15/2009 3:30:45 AM
^ maybe you need to re-watch it friend. The entire reason Stewart was pissed at CNBC was that they were helping "them". This interview makes it clear that Stewart's entire conception of the financial crisis amounts to a crude conspiracy theory.
3/15/2009 3:35:16 AM
I wonder if Jon realizes just how grating his insertions of his own ideology are to the people outside his primarily-new-york-liberal studio audience. Sometimes I think he just gets jealous of how well Colbert can work an audience, and goes out of his way to pander for applause. He managed to keep it out of the Cramer interview more than he usually manages to in political debates (or even just the usual media-mocking commentary), but it really is starting to kill my interest in the show.Also, it seems like they've been using almost exclusively Fox News clips the past week or two, excluding the CNBC/Cramer-targeted stuff. Sure, Fox News is still a bunch of bigots who love to hear themselves talk and don't actually care about making anything remotely resembling an intellectual point or quality journalism, but we know this already and they're not the only news station that goes for sensationalist entertainment value.I'll keep watching of course, but mainly just for the occasional appearances of John Oliver and Lewis Black, and for the non-political interviews.[Edited on March 15, 2009 at 3:38 AM. Reason : .]
3/15/2009 3:35:29 AM
^ word.moronHere is a particularly good quote.
3/15/2009 3:59:00 AM
^^^ I don't think that's what stewart was getting at at all. He specifically said several times his issue here isn't with any one particular person or CNBC even in general.his point had nothing to do with a conspiracy theory. His point was that the media in general treat finances like a game or entertainment like football, when it clearly has a bigger reach than that, and they need to be more responsible.honestly, I can't see how you remotely think Stewart was talking about some conspiracy theory.^ You have to consider that against the backdrop of the tape of Cramer for 2006 where he talks about manipulating the markets. You don't think that kind of thing goes on in EVERY large investment firm? You don't see how the mentality of pushing the limits of the law, maybe exceeding it, to make a quick buck, if pervasive enough (and it reached that point) encourages the kind of meltdown that happened? The sides stewart was referring to aren't explicit sides, but implicit between the crooked/corrupt and the honest.Just in case you didn't realize it, the "finance types" aren't gentile kittens, they are very aggressive, and it's clear that they did lose a grasp of the seriousness of their actions. People in general will take a mile if you give them an inch, but especially with wallstreet, and the media with good actual journalism can do a good job of keeping this in check, in place of the government even (but in our system, obviously this is done along with the government).[Edited on March 15, 2009 at 4:09 AM. Reason : ]
3/15/2009 4:00:38 AM
3/15/2009 4:06:23 AM
3/15/2009 7:59:25 AM
3/15/2009 10:48:04 AM
I think Stewart is just stating what has needed to be said about media issues for a LONG time--that the main problems with the media aren't conservative/liberal bias its the fact the media can no longer effectively do it's job. He showed true nuts and has done what most of them have been too afraid to do. The basis for both this interview and the Crossfire interviews highlights how hard it is for the media to do their job when they are accountable to the advertisers they are sometimes reporting on or using as guests. They frequently don't bite the hands that feed them, and only report press releases written by companies and rarely take the opportunity to dig for true dirt to find hidden facts to try and call them out.
3/15/2009 11:50:11 AM
moronApparently I'm not the only one that read the interview that way. Kainen and Woodfoot both apparently buy into that conspiracy theory bullshit ("it couldn't have been a systematic misunderstanding of the risk associated with new types of assets...no THEY TOOK OUR MONEY...I JUST KNOOWW IT!!"). Whatever. This crisis was not brought about by some mysterious gang of greedy traders out trying to fleece the public (a conspiracy) and no one has brought any evidence to show that it was (and no woodfoot, the short selling Cramer was talking about and building artifical buzz was not the problem).I will leave you all with a pretty nice recent article in Wired that will help you feel what i'm saying. You'll never read it but here it is:http://www.wired.com/techbiz/it/magazine/17-03/wp_quantPeace out.[Edited on March 15, 2009 at 1:57 PM. Reason : ``]
3/15/2009 1:38:08 PM
goddamn, you really didn't get it, huh?as has been mentioned NUMEROUS times in this thread, stewart was't blaming cramer, or CNBC, or "some mysterious gang of greedy traders" for causing the mess. that was never the goal.the media has ALWAYS been stewart's and TDS's main target. the clips of cramer talking about creating artificial buzz were used to illustrate cramer's knowledge and understanding of what REALLY happens behind the scenes at these financial institutions. combining that with the clips of CNBC anchors cheerleading, asking softball questions, and taking bullshit answers from CEOs at face value with no further investigation and i can't fathom how you don't understand stewart's week long smack down and criticism were aimed at the failure of CNBC and financial journalists to DO THEIR JOBS.your ire for jon stewart, for whatever reason, most likely highly unfounded, is almost as pathetic as tucker carlson's and it is surely affecting your ability to objectively watch the interview.[Edited on March 15, 2009 at 2:13 PM. Reason : .]
3/15/2009 2:10:00 PM
3/15/2009 3:55:33 PM
3/15/2009 4:06:09 PM
god fucking god man, CONTEXT.what's the fucking thread about?[Edited on March 15, 2009 at 4:13 PM. Reason : .]
3/15/2009 4:11:19 PM
^^ they were the main target, because they were the biggest target. But they weren't the only target.
3/15/2009 7:57:45 PM
3/15/2009 8:29:40 PM
the context is the week long BRAWL STREET. it wasn't spelled out word for word, but whatever.even so, the media has always, in the context of everything, been a major target of TDS. it just so happens that 8 of the 10 years stewart has been at the daily show, bush was president. so yes, bush and co. were a major target, but it is a current events show after all. and the last administration surely provided ample material.anywho...
3/15/2009 8:36:00 PM
3/15/2009 9:20:25 PM