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Madison Cawthorn's Naked Video Scandal | Alex Burns & Jonathan Martin

Published May 6, 2022, 3:30 AM

NASA plans to send nude images of humans to space, Roy Wood Jr. highlights pioneering Black horse racing jockeys, and co-authors Alex Burns and Jonathan Martin discuss "This Will Not Pass."

You're listening to Comedy Central, coming to you from New York City, the only city in America. It's The Daily Shown. Why we're sending news to Speace, the history of Black Jockey and Alex Burns and Jonathan Mark This he's the Daily Show with Trevor. What's going on? Everybody? Welcome to the Duenny Show. I'm trying on. Thank you so much for tuning in. Thank you for hanging had to thank an open here. Thank you so much. Taken. See everybody taken. See, Let's get into it. Let's get into it. We have got a great show for you tonight. Roy Wood Jr. Is going to explore the secret black history of the Kentucky Derby. Madison Cawthorne is back in the news with another scandal, and our guests are the New York Times reporters who got the Kevin McCarthy tapes where he's trashing Trump about January six. So let's do this people, Let's jump straight into today's headline. All right, let's kick things off with inflation. As you know, all across the world, prices have been skyrocketing and it's all thanks to the pandemic, supply chain issues and a Russian man who clearly wasn't hugged enough as a child. And because of that, everything costs more groceries, gas, blackmail. It's terrible everything and every government around the world is trying to figure out how to bring inflation down, which is why now the Federal Reserve is stepping in with a major move that America hasn't seen in decades. On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve raised the interest rate by half a percentage point, the biggest hike in twenty two years. The increase makes borrowing money more expensive, from new mortgages to auto loans to credit card rates. It's designed to cool down consumer demand and curb inflation, now at a forty year high, and Fed Chairman Jerome pal saying the aggressive move. They're saying it can be done without risking a recession. So there's a path to that now. I would say, I think we have a good chance to to have a soft or softsh landing or outcome if if you will, Okay, I felt confident in him until he said a soft ish landing. Soft like softish anytime you have to add ish to something. I don't feel reassured anymore. Yeah, this roller coaster is safe ish. These clams are fresh ish. Yeah, baby, we're monoga mish. You know how this is going to end. But basically, basically, here's how it all works. Right. The head raises interest rates, which means the cost of borrowing money goes up, which means that people and businesses will spend less money, which then makes prices start to come down. And it works because higher interest rates affects so many things in your life. It makes a mortgage more expensive, it makes car loans more expensive, it makes paying off your credit card more expensive, even makes buying twits are more expensive. That's why Elon has to go harveseys with Saudi Arabia. Now, the trick, the trick, as Jerome Power was alluding to, is that you have to bring spending down, but not too much too fast. Yeah, you gotta do it just right or the economy could crash and you end up in the recession. So it's a delicate balance, you know. Think of it, um, you know what, think of it. Think of the economy like a house party. All right. Yeah, you you wanted to be banging, you know what I mean? You wanted to be banging, but you don't want it to get out of control, because then no one can get a drink. Everyone's punching on, fighting over what's left. It's chaos, basic, it's chaos. So raising the interest rates is like trying to calm the party down, right, But if you're too extreme and you call the cops, or if you just like turn on the lights and now everyone sees who they were dancing with, now the party ends. The whole thing shots down. That's a recession of a party. So what the Federal Reserve is trying to do is change the platelist just enough so people stay, but that also makes sure that nobody's dancing on the table. Does that make sense? You understand what we're doing it? Yeah, So it's tricky. It is tricky, but they have to try because if they don't do something, a dollar will get you less and less every day, which is gonna suck for everyone, especially for the dollar man. This sucks. Back in the day, people used to use me for everything. You could buy a horse with me, you could buy windmill. Hell, they bought Alaska with me and they got change. But look at me now, thanks to inflation, just a glorified bookmark covering and freckle matter. People don't even want to snow cocaine with me anymore. Now they only talk about Benjamin. That loser wasn't even present dead. The only things I have left in my life now are dollar stars and strip clubs, and I swear to God and strip It is time taking bitcoin. I'm gonna cure myself, Donna, very longly. Alright, alright, let's move on. Let's move on to a politician who will presumably never be on money. Madison Cawthorne, North Carolina congressman and villain on Every c W show. Five weeks ago, Madison Cawthorne claimed that his Republican colleagues were doing cocaine and having giant orgies, which he was deeply disgusted by. Yeah, because you see, he's a true Christian who stands for traditional conservative values. And so that's what he said about his colleagues. And clearly he pissed somebody off because since he made that accusation, week after week, people have been leaking things that seemed to be exposing him as a fraud. Yeah. The scandals have included everything from pictures in lingerie to allegations of insider trading and a campaign aid with their hand on his crutch and now, in the words of the Esteems political analyst dj kdded another one a completely shocking video appearing to show the congressman completely naked. In this video and reportedly so sam acting crass. I guess you could say, with a friend in a bedroom while not wearing any clothing at all. Now, notably, this is put out by an opposition group. This is a group that's working actively to try to defeat the congressman in the upcoming Republican primary. But the congressman, he admitted that it is indeed him in the video. Yeah, someone released a video of Madison Cawthorne from a few years ago before he was in Congress, naked, basically pretending to hump his friend's face. And believe me, I wish there was another way to say that, but there is not. That's the story. And you've got to admit, man, these people are coming from Madison Cawthorne. You know, in fact, the way they're coming from Madison Cawthorne, I'm starting something. Maybe those cocaine orgies were real. You know, it's said too much so for the fiftieth time Congressman Madison Caurthorn was forced to release a statement explaining why this isn't as bad as it seems. You were witnessing one of the first examples of a politician who grew up with a cell phone in their hand, with the ability to take photos, videos, and have others use that content as a way to hurt you. Most of my colleagues in Congress right now would not be serving in Washington, and they grew up within a single mile of a cell phone growing up. Okay, before we addressed a statement, can anyone explain to me why the American flag is in that video? That flag wasn't humping anybody while you're dragging the flag into this bullshit? Madison? How you can even see the flag behind him? Like? Ahh, I love from there. Now. As for the point the young congressman was making, as much as I do not like him, I have to agree, since the beginning of time, people have had the ability to insulate what they do in private from what they do in public. But now we have a whole generation who's growing up documenting every single dumb thing they do or say or hump and and honestly, unless they're breaking the law, we're gonna have to figure out how to deal with this in society, right, because thanks to phones, everyone's friends have dirts on them. Yeah, honestly everyone every In fact, if your friends don't have any dirts on you that could someday ruin your career, then I'm sorry. You don't friends, You just acquaintances. Okay, I understand that now, and so I agree, I honestly agree. You know, this is just part of the product of the times. Yeah, what he was doing was extreme, but this is part of the times. Like if previous generations of politicians have the same technology as we do now, we might have seen really embarrassing selfies of Abe Lincoln, you know. Yeah, and can you imagine young Mitch McConnell with an iPhone. I mean, even if there was nothing scandalous, we still have to see him trying to look cool every single day on TikTok. See him there trying to Yeah, he's looked like that since he was fourteen. That's just his face. That would have gone viral. By the way, All right, let's move on to a story about space. Jeff Bezos is vacation home. For decades, humans have been trying to not only find other planets for us to destroy, but also intelligent life for us to colonize. And we've tried everything, you know. We sent out deep space probes, we sent out radio waves. In the fifties, we sent like a bunch of dogs and monkeys for some reason. But now, after decades of no luck, NASA has decided to take things up a notch. Now the scientists plan to send pictures of naked humans into space, hoping to catch the attention of aliens. Nudes will come with an invitation to respond. Pictures aren't graphic, just a drawing of a naked man and a woman next to a picture of d n A. NASA revealed this as part of a project called Beacon in the Galaxy to send a message to any alien civilizations. Okay, first things first, they're gonna hire more women of that NASA because only dudes would think the best way to introduce yourself is with unsolicited nudes. Hey, aliens, you up there? What are we doing? Those aliens are gonna be really upset that they turned on the air dropped for everyone in the galaxy. But also, but also, but also, if you are going to send nudes, why would you send these nudes? Can we tell you something that if I was an alien, No way in how I'm mean to this planet. Like if someone sent me these Newds and they said, hey you, I'll be like, I am so far from up, I'm in a coma. I will never be up again. I mean, look at this thing, because like us sex thing with a natari What is that? Huh? The woman doesn't even have a nose. Look at that ship. Think about what we say, either this planet has zero technology because this is how they draw themselves. Oh, this is how they actually look. Either way, I'm not coming. I'm not coming. That's a terrible thing to say. Like maybe if I was like a thirteen year old alien, I could make that work. Yeah, you know what I mean. But but how are these the news that we're sending to aliens? Everyone aliens to get interested, Don't send them an etch a sketch drawings, send them coupons for only fans. Come on, man, get them in the game. And you know, honestly, even if the aliens are interested, I think we've got to be careful. This is sending the wrong idea about us into the galaxy. Just imagine for a second, the very first thing we send to aliens is naked photos. What are we only trying to make contact with the horny is aliens in the universe? Yeah? No, one day, every time they have duc someone, they proke their butts. We're sending up the round vibe. You understand how scary this is. You know what's gonna happen here. The aliens are gonna get here and they're just gonna expect to smash immediately. Yeah, and then they're gonna be disappointed. Yeah. Imagine if someone you've never even met before texted you nudes and then you go there and they're like, cool, now that you're here, I wanted to introduce you to Joe Biden. That is the worst catfishing ever. They'll blow up our planet just for that. Come your horny horny and be like, check us to your later. We're here to smash. Now we're in trouble. Yeah. The only way that would work out is if the aliens come and Trump is presidents. Yeah, no, no, no, because if there's one thing I'll tell you about Trump, he'd ship out of those aliens. They'd be like, I don't know what they have down there, but I'm grabbing it. I'm grabbing it. Cavia aliens. We should actually prope We actually should hope that this only reaches the whole horny aliens, because you realize how offensive this is gonna be. If it just ends up in front of a normal alien, they are gonna be so piste off. Sheila, Sheila, those aren't perfects. Left pornography on the law. Yes, I'm sure it's not my pornography. You know, I wouldn't be yanking my floor flax to a drawing of two hellless monkeys. Yeah, I mean one doesn't even have a no, Sheila, come on, you know what I'm mentoring. It's not desk crap. Plus, I don't need pornography. I only need you. You know. I love your baby. I love you, Sila. I'm up. That's comfort. All right. That's so for the headlines. But before we go to a break, that's checking on the stock market without very own finance expert Michael Cost to everybody my phone. Yeah yeah, I'm gonna tell what is happening in the market today. Man. Well, I'm an expert at this, you know, and and I am crushing the market, so you absolutely crushing it. And as an expert, I do have a hot tip for you. Wait, I gotta have tip for you as well, so we'll get into that. But but but before we do, before we do the FED, raising the interest rates. Yes, this is a great thing, okay, because during the pandemic, you know, you know, we lost interest, right, I lost interest personally? I lost interest in Netflix. I lost interest in my family. You know, I lost interest in work. To be honest with you, I wasn't trying that hard before, but now I am really phoned it in. Okay, so but but but look, raising the interest rates it affects everyone, and especially regular middle class homeowners like myself. Okay. Now I have a ski castle in courshoo Ball. It's the French Alps, twelve thousand square feet. It's on a nice, pristine glacial lake, and and and and if I hadn't locked in my rate before this, I wouldn't be able to redo the kitchen on the main property. So it's Tuscan marble. Okay, so um, But you know one thing I've learned is whenever you complain about renovating the kitchen in your fifth home, nobody has any sympathy. But can you imagine a sixteenth century ski castle with a bad kitchen? I love to cook. Let's get let's get the NASA sending the nudes and we'll get to this in a second. But um, that's a risky move, okay, because NASA doesn't know who's gonna get those nudes. I mean, what what if it's alien children? Right now? Now, Earth is exposing itself to children? You know, do you think about that? Next thing? You know, Earth is on the intergalactic sex offender list, you know, And we gotta go around from galaxy, the galaxy knocking on the atmosphere saying hello, I'm Earth. I'm your neighbor for three billion years. I'm legally required to tell you I'm a sex offender. Can I get to Can I get to the market? Yeah? Okay, okay, cool. So look, yesterday, on the news that the interest rates were going up, the market shot up. Okay, Today, on the news that the interest rates were going up, the market shot down. All right, So I'm an expert here, don't forget. In summary, when the news of the interest rates are going up, the market will either go up or it's gonna go down. Thank you. Well, I'm well, hold on, hold on, my but Michael, that that doesn't make any sense to me. That's because you're not an expert like like me. And and that's my hot tip. Okay, leave it are the experts. Thank you, I thank Michael cost All right, don't go away. So when we come back, what would Junior is going to take us through the secret world of black horse racing. Welcome back to the Daily Show. This weekend is the Kentucky Derby, the biggest day in horse racing and mint julips. But what does horse racing have to do with black people? Well, let's find out in another edition of CP Time. M huh, hello, Welcome to see Piz Time, the only show it's for the culture. Today we'll be discussing blacks in horse racing. Usually, when you think of horse racing, the only black thing that comes to mind is the horse itself. Turns out many of the people riding them have been black too. Not to take anything away from those black horses, though, stay strong, my horse brothers. For many years, in the early days of organized horse racing, black jockeys were extremely common in the sport, partly because black people had a lot of experience taking care of horses during slavery, and partly because riding horses was the best way to prevent the police from stopping you for a broken tail light. Take the Kentucky Derby, the biggest event in the sport. It's so popular you've probably heard of it, even if you're not a gambling at it. That blew his kids college money and lost the house on weekend races. Sorry, Baby Whispering Willow was supposed to be a sure thing. In the first Kentucky every in, thirteen out of fifteen jockeys were black, and the winner of that race was Oliver Lewis. Oliver Road to victory on his horse Aristides. Strange name, but it was the eighteen hundreds. If you got a black jockey, you got to at least give the horse an extra white name to balance things out. Despite his success, Lewis retired from racing the very same year he won the Derby, which is understandable. With the prize of money he won, he could finally achieve the dream of every black man in eighteen seventy five Kentucky moving out of Kentucky. And not only were black people the first to do it, but they were some of the best, like Isaac Burns Murphy seeing here thinking about racism, probably Isaac was considered one of the greatest jockeys in history. He was the first person to win the Kentucky Derby three times, and his win record is still unmatched to this day at forty four percent. Murphy was the first rider ever to be inducted into the Horse Racing Hall of Fame, which is the highest honor jockey can receive other than being told you're actually taller than I expected. But despite their success in the sport, black riders soon all but disappeared from horse racing, making it yet another thing that started out very black but became very white, much like Rock and Roll or Brooklyn. And that's because of the early nineteen hundreds, there was a concerted effort to push black jockeys out of the sport. White races engaged in harsh tactics both on and off the track. They would hit black riders with riding crops or run them into the rails. Two times Derby winner Jimmy Winkfield was even threatened by the Ku Klux Klan. The irony he in the KKK both love riding horses. If equestrianism can't trump hate, then I don't know what can. The harassment got so bad that. In nineteen o four, Winkfield left the country to become a racing superstar in Russia. Do you know how bad it's got to get for a black man to move to Russia. They didn't even have black people over there back then, although maybe that's the secret. Gotta get in early before they learn how to do racism. But soon enough, practically the only black jockeys you could find were those creepy little statues on rich white folks lawns. Between nine and the year two thousand, not a single black jockey even raced in the Derby. Do you understand how long that is? It took all the way until the Baja men released who let the dogs out for a black person to compete Again, I'm not saying that the tour are related, unless now that you're being crazy right now. One black rider who did make waves during those years was Cheryl White, the first licensed black email jockey in America. Cheryl started her career racing straight out of high school, which means she was the most influential black teenager on a horse until Little nos X came around, and she didn't need the help of Molly Cyrus's daddy, just seventeen years old, White was already winning racist and gracing the cover of Jet magazine, which is incredibly impressive. Nowadays, most seventeen year olds I know could only make the cover of Dumbass Up to No Good magazine. I see you boys doing the vapor before school. I will snitch on you, watch man. So the next time you think of horse racing, think about the black jockeys that blazed the trail back in those early days. We'll just think of Sea Biscuit or the guy who rode Sea Biscuit, or how much money you lost by not betting on Sea Biscuit. Maybe I'm not coming home for a little while. I'm so sorry. Well that's all the time we have for today, roy Wood Jr. And this has been CP time. And remember with other culture, uh, because somebody help you put on this fick mustache. There is a gentleman named Knuckles swinging body to get some money and I don't have it for him. And I gotta get the hell out of here. Come over there, okay, right, this location has been compromise. Come on, Jennifer Lewis, what with Junia? Everybody all right? When we come back. Jonathan Martson and Alex Burns are joining me on the show, so don't go a right Welcome back to the Day Show. My guests tonight are political reporters who are here to talk about their explosive new book, This Will Not Pass Trump, Biden, and the Battle for America's future. Please welcome Jonathan Martin and Alex Burns. Welcome. Oh about it. I'm not even gonna waste any time. I trust that you're good. Let's drums jump straight into this um. This is the best way to describe this book for me is it's basically like the Real Housewives of Washington, d C. It makes it look like the most scandalous place. You realize there's so many inner feuds and and things that we don't even know about. When I'm reading this book, I'm going we shouldn't the American people see that? Then, Like, why do they get the sanitized like this is how we are when in fact this is this seems like it seems like this is what's deciding the country. This is what the people are seeing the news, but the people are voting on what they see in the news. No, and I think that that's that's spot on, and it's one of the things that we believe so passionately about political journalism. It's one of the things that we tried to do in this book is that there's not some clean separation between the personalities of politics and the fuge that you're talking about and the Real Housewives style drama and the pole see it right, it's the personality and those feuds and all the sort of high school level pettiness that actually drives what happens. And if people in Washington were more upfront about that, I think, first of all, they would confirm a whole lot of what the American people sort of suspect about their politicians. But secondly, you know, I think it would be possible maybe for the country to have more honest conversation about what's wrong here if we weren't all putting on a different face. When the cameras are running on Washington, Trevor, you see two very different kinds of politicians than what you see behind the scenes in private. But they don't know that, say, the audio is running. So this book exposes a lot. Let's talk about that. The audio, you know, I mean, one of the biggest bombshells from the book is the audio that that you released, which was the audio of Kevin McCarthy off the January six basically saying, yet we've got to make Trump pay for this, he's responsible, etcetera. Mitch McConnell essentially being like, oh, I hope he does get impeached. You you you you're hearing things from politicians who said the complete opposite when they were on camera. So how did you hear about it? Well? Uh, now, a lot, a lot of work, a lot of hours, a lot of talking to people at all levels of government and even people outside of government. I mean there's this perception among um folks who read political journalism that it's this Hollywood idea where like somebody in sunglasses comes and like drops you a bag outside uh your house, are like, and you get the story of a lifetime. It ain't that. It's like a lot of work. It's a lot of shoe leather. It's a looted a time talking to people and hoping that you can piece things together to eventually get the full version of a story. And if I could just you know, look, you had a little fun with us at the correspondent centers. Boys, Uh, we know that's we know that. But the but the honest, the honest response to uh, to your line that night is, look, if we were in a position to release that information the second we got it, of course have done that. But part of the exercise of writing a book, and part of why it's different from writing for a newspaper or producing a television show, is that the people you're talking to, the sources you're working with, will be more candid with you, and we'll share more information. It's not just audio. It is documents, it is notes that they're taking in real time. It is their personal views and recollections when they feel they're sharing it for history and not you know, a show that's going to air in a couple of hours from now. That is that makes no sense to me because I mean, like, it's not like this is ancient history. Well it's sort of. It's it's sort of this happened a year ago, and you're telling me the politicians are like, well, this will never see the light of day in a year. It is it is. It is actually extraordinary, and it's one of the things that I think, I mean, I think these are the people running the country when we were trying to tell when we were when we were having When we were doing these interviews, you would see people sort of various, sort of uptightening this is this is for history, and like, oh well, if this is for history and thinking it is out, next may I mean, like, let's talk about the you know, some of the other stories. For instance, there's a part in the book. We actually have the audio here and we'll go to the real students. There's a part of the book when you're interviewing don't Trump himself. All right, there you are interviewing the man. And in the middle of this interview, does he call Lindsay Graham? Doesnay Graam call him? Lusa? Graham calls him, Lindsay Gram calls him while you haven't ben seen the lobby at marl Lago from his guests to see Lindsay Graham calls him, and Trump does not get up from the couches, excuse me, follows He just like sits there and like takes that call on his cell phone and that puts the speaker so we can hear it. So we've actually got the audio. Let's let's let's play that call. And most importantly, would you tell them one thing? Can Trump play golf? Legitimately play golf. Okay, but I thought it was local ship. So we go played for the first time. You know, I've heard her head, so we're playing on a timers kind of right. We shot even Car it's the three flotter, come to me, but he would have been more under than even Car playing by the lug of the job. After that started to him with my game. Even legitimate dick may anymore and you don't believe it to play with him. So he's the thing for for context for me, is this is the same Lindsey Graham who off the January six was bringing up the twenty five amendment. He was like, this is too much, We've gone too far. And then Trump has him on the phone and he's just like, dance for me. And this is three months later, so this is pretty ye is this Does this show us that the politicians are lying to the people or they're lying to Trump? That's that's a really good question. Look, I think we were shocked, uh not that Lindsay Graham will be calling Trump at that point, but you know, we all know that Lindsay Graham rode back to Donald Trump really fast that his pronouncements on the night of January six, I had a very very short expiration date on them. But I think just hearing in in real time in front of us this, you know, sort of dancing a monkey routine was really an extraordinary moment. I don't know that he's lying to anybody. I think Lindsay Graham genuinely believes that he is playing a vital role as a diplomat between the establishment of the Republican Party and Donald Trump. Knocked up is right. I just that's clearly how he's rationalizing it. It puzzled even some of his colleagues in the Senate, but you just heard there, you know just how far it goes. I think Trump knows that Lindsay isn't like his biggest fan in the world, and they're privately you know, rolls his eyes, but that he's sort of, uh, you know, is trying to sort of stay in the arena, and so he has to keep Trump on his good side. And I think, you know, like, you know, obviously Lindsay Lindsay is pretty obviously aware of Donald Trump's liabilities and would admit that in privacy. I think, like what's the old saying, you can't be sbs or I think they kind of both know that the other isn't totally on the level, and so I guess it works, right, I mean not for the country, it seems yeah, It's just it just seems like if you know, if if Donald Trump didn't have as many scandals as he did. I feel like every single chapter in this book could have been its own book in a different time with the different presidency. To the great point I didn't know, but like this point in the book where you guys uncovered the fact that Jared Kushner is the person who got Kanye West his campaign manager, and all of this was essentially a scheme to try and siphon black votes away from the Democrats. Like I'm like that in in and of itself, that would be the bombshell of the day. And that was just like, oh yeah, just one part of the book. Look, it's a great I think it's a great episode of sort of political uh you know, hijinks, right, But it's really revealing both of how desperate they were to try to mess with the basic electoral map of this election. I think it's also really revealing about how the White House and the President's family saw, you know, black voters and what they would be drawn to in this election, the notion that the way to get too siphon black votes away from Joe Biden was to get this sort of screwball celebrity into the race, and just you know, of course those people will uh you know, vote for him instead of the guy they know is the former a two term vice president. That says a whole lot about the people who running the country. You know, look, with the Trump crowd, it's like a cartoon version of like past presidents, you know, like the president's son in law, who, by the way it worked in the White House, which is okay. Uh. And then secondly, it's like basically running the country as a de facto senior advisor with no actual title beyond senior advisor. And he's also like running the campaign on the side too, and and running the campaign he's trying to wire in a third party candidate who happens to be like a celebrity. Like he's doing all this and like ostensibly there's ethics rules that kind of exists in the White House, but um, it makes a mockery of any sort of like political norms or tradition. A great way to put it, because what it feels like this book exposes in a in a really scary way because it's revealing and it's shocking. But when you get to the end of the book, you go, man, America is in trouble because it feels like there's a facade that is being presented by Washington, d C. It feels like there is definitely a game that's being played, you know, in the Capitol versus what everyday Americans are experiencing. And then the most important thing is it feels like the two party system has failed because now it feels like Republicans on all with Trump, they play along to try and keep their role, and then like Democrats on altigate. But it feels like the thing is a sham, and by the time the American people find out that it really is a sham, it will be too late. Well, one of the things that we hope we've accomplished with this book is to expose that sham to a pretty significant degree. The American people, I deserve to know what a gigantic gap there is between the way they're politicians behave in public and the things they say in private about policy, about each other, and even about the American people. So again that's sort of the overarching journalistic exercised to it were, Well, I'll tell you this if you if you, if you wanted to get it out there. A book is a nice stot, but if you really want people to pay attention, you've gotta make it into a TV show. Gentlemen, thank you so much, because it's coming your lot of to God. There's feel talk about the book. This will not talking available right now. We're gonna take a quick break, but we're right back talk to this. Thank you. Well, what's all starts to ke. Thank you so much for tuning in. But before we go, Before we go, please consider supporting the National Network of Abortion Funds. There are glossis organization on the ground building power to remove financial, logistical, cultural, and political barriers for abortion. And they form a network of over seventy grassroots organizations and they recognize the power of local activists knowing what their communities need. So right now, abortion is still legal in all fifty states, So if you can, please donates at the link below. Until next time, stay safe out there, and remember when the cell phone comes out, that's when your pants go back on. Watch The Daily Show weeknights and eleven ten Central on Comedy Central. In stream full episodes anytime on on Paramount Plus. This has been a Comedy Central podcast

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