Home February 12, 2012

"What's So Funny? (The campaign, that's what!)"

Big TV Comedians Want to Pick Your Next President

 
As the 2008 election fast approaches, strategists are increasingly recognizing that comedians on late-night TV have real political power that can sway voters.

Will Jay Leno, David Letterman, Conan O'Brien and friends pick our next president?

Newsmax magazine's special report "What's So Funny?" examines the impact comedians can have on a political race as their quips reveal to voters who's in, who's down — and who's out.

And more often than not, it's Republicans who are victimized by the comedians' political humor.

The report also features exclusive interviews with comic and presidential impressionist Rich Little, who has skewered political figures for more than half a century, and liberal-turned-conservative comedian and syndicated radio host Dennis Miller.

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This must-read Newsmax report explores:

  • The incredible explosion of late-night comedy programs
  • Why late-night viewers could be a decisive swing vote
  • Hillary Clinton's "problem" with humor
  • How David Letterman baited Rudy Giuliani on Iraq
  • Who is the leading brunt of late-night jokes — 1,213 last year
  • The surprising political impact of morning TV shows
  • The late-night icon who hid his political leanings
  • How Jon Stewart skewered Bush — and treated Al Gore with kid gloves
  • YouTube, Gore — and the Google connection
  • Qube TV — the right's answer to YouTube
  • Bill Maher's (joking?) call for rioting during the GOP convention
  • Political humor's founding fathers
  • Who is fairer to Republicans — Leno or Letterman
  • Conan O'Brien's stinging barbs about the GOP candidates
  • "Comedian" Rosie O'Donnell's outrageous comments about 9/11
  • How candidates have exploited late-night shows
  • Mitt Romney's on-air joke about polygamy
  • The comic David Horowitz calls "a nasty idiot"
  • How Ronald Reagan used humor to counter campaign gaffes
  • Fox News Channel's entry into comedy TV
  • The botched joke that drove John Kerry out of the presidential race
  • Why Bill Clinton's sax changed politics in the entertainment media
  • How Howard Dean fell flat on "The Colbert Report"
  • And much more.

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This edition of Newsmax magazine is not to be missed.

In addition to our in-depth cover stories and hard-hitting investigative reports, we entertain a constant stream of notable guests.

Past issues have included incisive commentary from such experts as George Will, Kathleen Parker, Michael Reagan, Ben Stein and David Limbaugh — to name a few.

This edition of Newsmax magazine also includes:

  • The sordid story of Pelosi's Congress: you won't hear this from the Times
  • Reagan's "Star Wars" arrives: it works!
  • Publishers open fire on Hillary
  • Iraq is now bankrolling al-Qaida operations
  • Rome slaps Streisand for "immoral" prices
  • Serbian leader: U.S. selling out Bosnian Christians
  • American military preps for Web wars
  • Investing overseas: Top 10 funds to consider
  • Tax-cheat Snipes plays the race card
  • States rebel over "Real ID"
  • Sweden's free-market revolution: the next Thatcher?
  • Popularity of Pelosi's Congress wanes
  • Hollywood's sobriety coaches
  • Inspector slams IRS on terrorism
  • Grandparents sue school over "Brokeback Mountain"
  • Candidates battle for Silicon Valley bucks
  • Rice: Putin's power grab is "troubling"
  • Couric anchors a sinking ship: what's next for CBS
  • The new atheists seek converts
  • Ben Stein: why U.S. media are "obsessed" with Nixon
  • Bad bosses break your heart
  • Sizzling new infrared grills
  • NASA chief's apology chills global warming scientists
  • Selling your house in a down market
  • The tardiness epidemic
  • Do you know your body mass index? It could save your heart.

There is so much more in Newsmax magazine, which won a Gold Eddie Award in the News/Commentary category of Folio magazine’s prestigious journalism awards, the Eddies.

Ben Stein says Newsmax reveals the “unafraid, uncomplicated, bare-knuckles truth about today’s dangerous world.”

Mike Reagan, the elder son of the late President Ronald Reagan and chairman and president of The Reagan Legacy Foundation, says: “I guarantee that you’ll love Newsmax magazine. The liberal media moguls hate Newsmax.”

And Sarah Palin says Newsmax is one of her top news sources and describes it as "very very helpful, valuable."

Find out why more than half a million people read Newsmax magazine each month.

Better: Be one! Get our "What's So Funny?" report and an Emergency Radio with our FREE offer — Go Here Now.

 

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