Re: Jon Stewarts touching words....


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Posted by babka at pool-63.53.125.228.mhub.grid.net on September 21, 2001 at 08:59:01:

In Reply to: Jon Stewarts touching words.... posted by SilntBob_and_Jay on September 21, 2001 at 04:10:24:

with tears, thanks.

: Tonight the Daily Show returned for the first time since last Tuesday.
They opened the show like most shows have been. With a word from the host.
Jon Stewart gave the most touching speach I have read in the midst of this
tragedy. I transcribed it for all of you. Here it is in all its wonderful
glory. Please pass this one to all you know:

:
: Good evening and welcome to the Daily Show. We are back. This is our
first show since the tragedy in New York city and there is really no other
way to start the show then to ask you at home the question that we asked
the audience here tonight and that we’ve asked everybody we know here in
New York since September 11 and that is “Are you OK?” And we pray that you
are and that your family is.

: Im sorry to do this to you. Its another entertainment show beginning
with an over-rout speech of a shaken host and television is nothing if not
redundant. So I apologize for that. Its something that, unfortunately, we
do for ourselves so that we can drain whatever abscess is in our hearts and
move on to the business of making you laugh which we haven’t been able to
do very effectively lately. Everyone has checked in already. I know we
are late. I’m sure we are getting in just under the wire before the cast
of Survivor” offers their insight into what to do in these situations.
They said to get back to work. There were no jobs open for a man in the
fetal position under his desk crying which I gladly would have taken. So I
come back here and tonight’s show is not obviously a regular show. We
looked through the vault and found some clips that we think will make you
smile which is really what’s necessary, I think, right about now.

: A lot of folks have asked me, “What are you going to do when you get
back? What are you going to say? I mean, geez what a terrible thing to
have to do.” And you know, I don’t see it as a burden at all. I see it as
a privilege. I see it as a privilege and everyone here does. The show in
general we feel like is a privilege. Even the idea that we can sit in the
back of the country and make wise cracks. Which is really what we do. We
sit in the back and throw spitballs. But never forgetting that it is a
luxury in this country that allows us to do that. That is a country that
allows for open satire, and I know that sounds basic and it sounds like it
goes without saying. But that’s really what this whole situation is about.
It’s the difference between closed and open. The difference between free
and burdened. And we don’t take that for granted here by any stretch of
the imagination. And our show has changed. I don’t doubt that. And what
it has become I don’t know. “Subibadable” is not a punch-line anymore.
Someday it will become that again and Lord willing it will become that
again because it means that we have ridden out the storm.

: The main reason that I wanted to speak tonight is not to tell you what
the shows going to be, not to tell you about all the incredibly brave
people that are here in New York and in Washington and around the country,
but we’ve had an un enduring pain, an unendurable pain and I just…..I just
wanted to tell you why I grieve……but why I don’t despair. (crying) I’m
sorry……(laughing through his tears) Luckily we can edit this…..(collecting
himself).

: One of my first memories was of Martin Luther King being shot. I was
five and if you wonder if this feeling will pass….uh….(crying again)….When
I was five and he was shot, this is what I remember about it. I was in a
school in Trenton and they turned the lights off and we got to sit under
our desks….and that was really cool….and they gave us cottage cheese, which
was a cold lunch because there were riots but we didn’t know that. We just
thought “My God! We get to sit under our desks and eat cottage cheese!”
And that’s what I remember about it. And that was a tremendous test of
this countries fabric and this country has had many tests before that and
after that.

: The reason I don’t despair is that….this attack happened. Its not a
dream. But the aftermath of it, the recovery, is a dream realized. And
that is Martin Luther Kings dream.

: Whatever barriers we put up, are gone. Even if its just momentary. We
are judging people by not the color of their skin, but the content of their
character. You know all this talk about “These guys are criminal
masterminds. They got together and their extraordinary guile and their wit
and their skill.” Its all a lie. Any fool can blow something up. Any
fool can destroy. But to see these guys, these firefighters and these
policemen and people from all over the country, literally with
buckets….rebuilding. That’s extraordinary. And that why we have already
won! They cant…Its light. Its democracy. They cant shut that down……

: They live in chaos. And chaos, it cant sustain itself…it never could.
Its too easy and its too unsatisfying. The view….from my
apartment…..(crying) was the World Trade Center..........

: Now its gone. They attacked it. This symbol of…..of American ingenuity
and strength…..and labor and imagination and commerce and its gone. But
you know what the view is now…….? The Statue of Liberty……The view from the
south of M


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