This country's citizens face a very hard decision in the coming months: We need to decide which talk show host to vote for.
This
election has quickly wasted away into nothing more than a high school
popularity contest. Hillary Clinton is the over-achieving,
has-to-have-it valedictorian. Barack Obama is the cool guy who makes it
seem like he cares about everyone. John McCain is the cerebral guy who
the teachers just love. Mike Huckabee, well, he's an anomaly in the
high school metaphor.
Either way, these kiddos are taking up the television channel's airtime with shameless ferocity.
The
candidates are not showing their mugs on political forums, though; they
are appearing on talk shows, from Ellen to The Daily Show and The
Colbert Report. Clinton made a cameo on Saturday Night Live recently.
For those who saw her clip, I'm sure you'll agree: She made a
struggling comedy show even less funny.
Huckabee probably
whores himself out to airtime the most - and to the most success. In
fact, comedians Jon Stewart, Stephen Colbert and Conan O'Brien have
started a "vicious" feud over who "made" Huckabee.
Recently,
Huckabee appeared on Tyra, one of the lower-ranking talk shows. The
same day, he went on The Colbert Report to play air hockey with states
as pucks.
Obama also did a little ditty for Ellen on her show.
It wasn't really a ditty, more of a
Tony-Shaloub-as-Adrian-Monk-so-uptight-my-eyes-are-bleeding dance. His
biggest accomplishment, though, has been Oprah. While Jon Stewart,
Stephen Colbert and Conan O'Brien jokingly argue over who made
Huckabee, Oprah actually did make Obama the frontrunner of the
Democratic party.
This ploy of pervading the shows that I watch
religiously wouldn't bother me so much if they did funny stuff.
However, they are politicians. That job title automatically comes with
an immovable stick up the rear.
Actually, these candidates have led me to believe that they are so uptight that the sticks up their rears have snapped in half.
These
little half-hearted appearances are really insulting. These candidates
assume that by showing up on young people's programs we will think they
are one of us or that they are at least thinking of us.
But
when they can't loosen up and deliver one good joke, it looks like they
think they are better than us. They are saying that they can't loosen
up because older voters would think less of them, and those votes
matter more.
So here is a message to the candidates: If I find
you on one of my shows again, you'd best make my sides bursting with
laughter. You cannot have Amy Pohler save you either, Hillary.
And if I don't laugh, I'm voting for Nader.
Hey Candidates, Stay Off My TV
This year's media campaign for President has expanded beyond the cable news channels, and that's starting to get really annoying. From The Hullabaloo.