So it sees that King George and his Court were upset at Stephen Colbert's brilliant comedic performance at the White House Correspondents' Dinner.
Well, Boo-hoo-hoo. Cry me a damn river.
What part of "satirist" do these people not understand? If the Boy King and his lackeys are such thin-skinned little girly-men that they can't take getting their noses tweaked a little at a dinner where the idea is to poke fun at people, then maybe next year they should just hire a clown who makes balloon animals or something.
Remember when Bush 39 invited Dana Carvey to do his George Bush impressions? Dubya inherited his father's oil connections, but not his sense of humor.
ReplyDeleteIf you get a chance to watch it, Frank Caliendo on Fox Sports does the world's best Dubya.
He does a hell of a John Madden, too.
ReplyDeleteWow. How could they be upset? His jokes, while funny, were already gelded a bit.
ReplyDeleteDitto on the Caliendo. You can probably find him on youtube or something. He's incredible.
Huh. I just took a look at Caliendo's blog, and it turns out he performed at the correspondents' dinner. He says his Bush impression cracked up Cheney.
ReplyDeleteWhat really got me admiring Colbert was how he did what he did.
ReplyDeleteNothing he said was a direct insult. All he did was stretch the standard Bushie line just far enough to make people realize just how stupid it looks... and how stupid it should look.
No, I grant you, it wasn't roll on the floor, gasp for breath, pray you don't piss yourself laughing, funny. It was "laugh a bit between the 'Ouch!' and 'Oh my god!' and 'ZING!' funny."
But it was damn good comedy, and high art, all at the same time.
Cleon had Aristophanes. Bush has Colbert (and others). Neither one could take a joke.
ReplyDelete