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boxman151515
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The Daily Show did that for all of Craig Kilborn's run and for Jon Stewart's first few years. They also used to do a recap of the show at the end and a preview of tomorrow's show. Stewart ditched all of those within a few years, though.

There's something about Seth Meyers' delivery that just bugs me. I'm not sure what it is, but I don't find myself laughing much watching his show, even though I really, really want to.

Also, a suggestion for Colbert (as if he's reading): Drop the monologue. It gets the show off to a very slow start and likely turns some viewers off. I like that it's not the traditional "Hey, did you hear about this?" series of one-liners, but it's rarely funny. Just head straight to the desk bits and do an extended

I'm less worried about Colbert taking this advice and more worried about Les Moonves taking it and forcing Colbert to become Jimmy Colbert.

I enjoy Colbert and Conan and am really warming up to Trevor Noah, despite some issues. The rest either bug me (Fallon, Corden, Daly) or just aren't my cup of tea (Wilmore, although I watch him occasionally, Kimmel, Meyers, etc.)

I agree with the president. I love this song, from the lyrics to Kendrick's delivery to the Pyramid Song-esque beat. Perfect.

A few of my friends who are really into harder rock and metal prefer Plastic Ono Band to any Beatles album because it sounds borderline metal at a couple points, but that's as close to that as I've heard.

I'd probably agree with you on Plastic Ono Band, too, but All Things Must Pass comes close for me.

This is an atrocious song. And the fact remains that the majority of the solo music the Beatles churned out after their breakup falls somewhere between mediocre and awful. Lennon was brilliant on Plastic Ono Band and Imagine but spotty at best for the rest of his career, McCartney's first couple solo albums are great

A big "Fuck You" to the assholes in Congress who don't think this is a pressing issue.

They likely get better ratings. Noah has held up about as well as Comedy Central could've hoped, but there has been a sizable dip in ratings, as expected. Wilmore is also bringing in substantially fewer viewers than Colbert did in the time slot.

I like Trevor Noah. I think he's done a good job as host of the Daily Show so far, overall. But this interview would've been a disaster. There are much better ways to talk about domestic abuse than to talk to someone who appears to be remorseless about his crime and, indeed, might have even profited off of it in terms

I've found the Hungry for Power Games segment funny, though I have a feeling I'll quickly get sick of it after half the candidates drop out after Iowa/New Hampshire.

It's been pretty decent. On the down side, Noah is, charitably, a terrible interviewer. He tends to laugh at his own jokes a bit too much to the point where it stops being charming and becomes annoying, And the show is not nearly as cathartic as Jon Stewart's because it lacks the rage and Jon's relatively in-depth

Those couple innings where the Fox broadcast gave out and they had to show the international broadcast were glorious.

To be fair, Jon wasn't the hard-nosed, somewhat angry host he became until sometime between the Iraq War's start and the 2004 elections. Give Noah time to find his edge.

Very good, especially for being so new. The show lacks some of the bite and edge that Stewart's had, but it's been pretty consistently funny. All the correspondents are back, and the new ones they brought in are very funny (especially Roy Wood Jr.) Noah, in addition to being funny, has been very charming and seems

Problem is that would mean the production staff wouldn't get any breaks, unless they sort out some sort of rotating off-week schedule that would keep LWT on the air most weeks. In which case, I'd love the idea.

Will this impact Fallon's signature fake laugh-clap?

As someone who works in downtown Detroit and is from the area, Detroit really is coming back, or at least its core is. Downtown, while not yet thriving, is in the best shape it's been in decades and is coming back at a fast rate (sure, it's the work of essentially one or two big-time investors, but better than