Bush, Bush, Colbert
Hot Air » W.H. Correspondents Dinner: Bush Kills, Colbert Bombs
Check out the video at Hot Air.
knowing how to win wars since before 1993
Hot Air » W.H. Correspondents Dinner: Bush Kills, Colbert Bombs
Check out the video at Hot Air.
RightWinged.com on 30 Apr 2006 at 7:43 pm
VIDEO: White House Correspondents Dinner - President Bush & Impersonator…
Last night I mentioned the White House Correspondent’s annual dinner event, and it’s odd guest list. Well, it turned out to be a less funny event than I’ve seen in the past, but President Bush’s “speech” was pretty funny, so……
stick_dog wrote:
To see the entire video (3 parts, 25 minutes) in youtube version, click on my name/website.
Posted 01 May 2006 at 2:24 am ¶
Andromidust wrote:
Bush’s speeches are always funny. Someone please inform him of this.
Posted 02 May 2006 at 12:49 pm ¶
Doug P wrote:
You really thought Bush was funny??? Clever in concept….but not in content. I thought it was kind of stupid. Colbert, on the other hand, didn’t get the laughs in the room, but that only made it funnier to those of us watching at home.
Posted 02 May 2006 at 4:42 pm ¶
Erica F wrote:
All I can say about Colbert’s speech is that it was “ballsalishous!” (daily show) He’s a genious!
Posted 03 May 2006 at 12:55 am ¶
pete wrote:
LOL bush rox
Posted 05 May 2006 at 5:49 pm ¶
chris mankey wrote:
Comedian’s Bush spoof stays on iTunes Top 10
By Noam Cohen The New York Times
MONDAY, MAY 22, 2006
The after-dinner speech that refuses to go away has scored another distinction: top of the charts.
An audio version of the roast of President George W. Bush by Stephen Colbert of the Comedy Central cable channel rose to the rank of No. 1 album at Apple’s iTunes store Saturday, three weeks from the night of the White House correspondents’ dinner at which it was delivered. Also in the Top 10 were new releases by the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Pearl Jam and Paul Simon.
The audio version of Colbert’s speech was delivered to iTunes through Audible.com, a company that provides audio content for downloading, including books, radio shows and shorter performances. It costs $1.95 to download. Neither C-Span nor Audible was able to say how many downloads there had been. Colbert was traveling and could not be reached for comment.
By many accounts, Colbert’s performance landed with a thud among his influential audience of journalists and politicians, who were more overtly enthusiastic about a comedy routine involving Bush and a professional George W. Bush impersonator. But the broadcast of the speech is having a lucrative afterlife online, an unusual development for its owner, the nonprofit cable network C-Span.
This month, C-Span ordered more than 40 versions of the speech removed from the popular video-sharing sites YouTube.com and iFilm. C-Span said it had ordered the clips removed to assert its copyright on recordings of the performance, and shortly thereafter it allowed Google Video to stream it free of charge. In the two weeks since, it has been at or near the top of Google’s list of most popular videos. Over the weekend, it was still No. 4 there.
C-Span said it owned anything that it filmed with its own cameras - that is, everything that appears on its three channels except what is said on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate, where government cameras are used.
Now that another iteration of the performance, the Audible recording at $1.95 a download, is spreading among the public, C-Span, which was founded in 1979 and gets 95 percent of its financing from the cable industry, said it was uncomfortable with the impression that it was a commercially minded content provider.
The network said copies of a DVD of the event, priced at $24.95, had sold only in the “very low thousands.”
The after-dinner speech that refuses to go away has scored another distinction: top of the charts.
An audio version of the roast of President George W. Bush by Stephen Colbert of the Comedy Central cable channel rose to the rank of No. 1 album at Apple’s iTunes store Saturday, three weeks from the night of the White House correspondents’ dinner at which it was delivered. Also in the Top 10 were new releases by the Red Hot Chili Peppers, Pearl Jam and Paul Simon.
The audio version of Colbert’s speech was delivered to iTunes through Audible.com, a company that provides audio content for downloading, including books, radio shows and shorter performances. It costs $1.95 to download. Neither C-Span nor Audible was able to say how many downloads there had been. Colbert was traveling and could not be reached for comment.
By many accounts, Colbert’s performance landed with a thud among his influential audience of journalists and politicians, who were more overtly enthusiastic about a comedy routine involving Bush and a professional George W. Bush impersonator. But the broadcast of the speech is having a lucrative afterlife online, an unusual development for its owner, the nonprofit cable network C-Span.
This month, C-Span ordered more than 40 versions of the speech removed from the popular video-sharing sites YouTube.com and iFilm. C-Span said it had ordered the clips removed to assert its copyright on recordings of the performance, and shortly thereafter it allowed Google Video to stream it free of charge. In the two weeks since, it has been at or near the top of Google’s list of most popular videos. Over the weekend, it was still No. 4 there.
C-Span said it owned anything that it filmed with its own cameras - that is, everything that appears on its three channels except what is said on the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate, where government cameras are used.
Now that another iteration of the performance, the Audible recording at $1.95 a download, is spreading among the public, C-Span, which was founded in 1979 and gets 95 percent of its financing from the cable industry, said it was uncomfortable with the impression that it was a commercially minded content provider.
The network said copies of a DVD of the event, priced at $24.95, had sold only in the “very low thousands.”
Posted 22 May 2006 at 12:42 pm ¶
Blogads 3.0
Google Ads
The Colbert Blackout
The Courage of Stephen Colbert
Colbert Blackout - Kennedy Hype
New Acronym Needed
Bush calls Times’s expose “disgraceful”