Back in April, when the debate over torture was roaring, Jon Stewart invited Cliff May, a national-security hawk and former spokesman for the Republican Party, to come on The Daily Show and defend waterboarding. May was hesitant. He thought Stewart would paint him as a crazy extremist. The audience would jeer. It would be a disaster. “I was apprehensive about going on, even though I’ve been on TV for a dozen years,” says May. “A lot of my friends told me: ‘Don’t do it. You’re meat going into the sausage factory.’” But May had a change of heart after soliciting advice from his friend Bill Kristol, editor of the Weekly Standard. “Kristol told me: ‘You’ll be pleasantly surprised. He doesn’t take cheap shots. Jon is smart. You’ll do just fine.’” Kristol proved to be right. Stewart’s interview of May — a crackling, lengthy debate about where to draw the line between freedom and security — produced one of the most clarifying discussions about torture on television. “Literally, this is the best conversation I’ve had on this subject anywhere,” May told Stewart. “There is genuine intellectual curiosity,” May told New York. “He’s a staunch liberal, but he’s a thoughtful liberal, and I respect that.” May isn’t the only conservative gushing about Stewart. While the movement professes a disdain for the “liberal media elite,” it has made an exception for the true-blue 46-year-old comedian. “He always gives you a chance to answer, which some people don’t do,” says John Bolton, President Bush’s ambassador to the United Nations and a Fox News contributor, who went on the show last month. “He’s got his perspective, but he’s been fair.” Says Bolton: “In general, a lot of the media, especially on the left, has lost interest in debate and analysis. It has been much more ad hominem. Stewart fundamentally wants to talk about the issues. That’s what I want to do.” (via Why Neoconservative Pundits Love Jon Stewart — Daily Intel
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“Read this book if you want to understand how the collapse of the global financial system was at its core a failure of modern financial theory and its most ardent disciples. Patterson is able to gracefully explain the complex ideas underpinning our financial system through an extraordinarily engaging and insightful story.” —Mark Zandi, Chief Economist of Moody’s Economy.com and author of Financial Shock (via Amazon.com: The Quants: How a New Breed of Math Whizzes Conquered Wall Street and Nearly Destroyed It (9780307453372): Scott Patterson: Books
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Stephen: Hey, Jon, great to see you, pal! How was your Easter?
Jon: Uhhh…not happened. Non-existent.
Stephen: Oh, that’s right, I forgot. You people celebrate that festival of crackers.
- The Toss, 4/8/10
“I hope they can resolve the situation in Kyrgyzstan - they are our nation’s top supplier of consonants.”
Ken Melman, longtime GOP operative who was campaign manager for George W. Bush in 2004 and RNC Chairman between 2005 and 2007, has come out as gay.