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MORE ON COLBERT, TAKE II

After our final exam today, one of my student's came up and asked if I had seen Colbert's takedown of the President and the media this weekend. "Sure thing, I said. "Isn't this what blogs were made for?"

There were still a few people taking the exam, so we had to whisper, but after he commented that Colbert just didn't seem that funny, I suggested that maybe that wasn't the right way to judge what he did. Satire is a different beast, and when those being skewered are the ones in the audience, all bets are off. The point of satire, after all, is criticism, and when done right it produces an "emperor has no clothes" moment. And in that light...

Anyway, if you're not yet tired of this subject, Troy Patterson over at Slate has a great review. My favorite bit:

Who did they think they were getting, Mark Russell? (Actually, they may not have known who they were getting; the emcee was clueless enough, when introducing the headliner, to pronounce the final T in The Colbert Report. Square.) You hire a good political satirist, you get good political satire, which is necessarily dangerous. So, when the Washington Post's "Reliable Source" column speaks of the "consensus" that the routine "fell flat" and New York Daily News gossip—and "Reliable Source" alumnus—Lloyd Grove writes that Colbert "bombed badly," they are offering meaningless reportage. Pop Dadaist that he is, Colbert wasn't bombing so much as freaking his audience out for his own enjoyment.

Colbert deserves to be judged on his own terms: He shouldn't haven't stolen one good joke from his own show ("Next time, look it up in your gut") and another from Jon Stewart's Oscar intro ("McClellan, of course, eager to retire. Really felt like he needed to spend more time with Andrew Card's children."). The "audition tape" segment was at least 90 seconds too long, although the Colbert rapport with Helen Thomas was good enough that the two ought to be considering a sitcom. In general, though, he was brilliant—perfectly daffy and gutsy, as in the line that earned what seemed to be the crowd's biggest laugh. Colbert spoke of interviewing Jesse Jackson: "You can ask him anything, but he's going to say what he wants, at the pace that he wants. It's like boxing a glacier. Enjoy that metaphor, by the way, because your grandchildren will have no idea what a glacier is."


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