Jon Stewart vs Cramer

Ok

If you have not caught the last few nights of the Daily and what fun they have been having with Mad Money's Cramer, you have really missed something.

The Morning Joe decided to stick his nose in the dust up, and he got spanked.

And if you haven't been watching, you don't understand why its fun to be a left wing commie. I suggest watching Morning Joe tomorrow to see if he is smart enough to IGNORE the fun at his expense.

Comments

J.D. Kessler said…
OK it was too much fun.

Here is what this was about.

Can the Jon Stewart - Jim Cramer Feud Ever End?
By Roger Catlin on March 10, 2009 11:49 PM | Permalink | Comments (4)
The war of words between Jon Stewart and Jim Cramer sees no sign of ending.

Yet another night on "The Daily Show" Tuesday was focused on what CNBC's Cramer said in his defense, this time on a variety of NBC related properties, from NBC's "Today" show to MSNBC's "Morning Joe."

And Stewart fired back by using some of the other Viacom properties -- appearing to talk about his situation on shows from Nickelodeon's "Dora the Explorer" to MTV's "The Hills."

It was just the kind of clips that the NBC shows will pick up one more time and try to get some kind of reaction from Cramer, who might as well admit that on more than one occasion, he may have been a little too bullish on Bear Stearns in the weeks before its collapse.

Stewart says he doesn't know much about what the market will do either, but at least he doesn't promote himself as all-knowing, as Cramer often is on CNBC, where one promo subs him in for God, declaring "In Cramer We Trust"



The war of words between Jon Stewart and Jim Cramer sees no sign of ending.

Yet another night on "The Daily Show" Tuesday was focused on what CNBC's Cramer said in his defense, this time on a variety of NBC related properties, from NBC's "Today" show to MSNBC's "Morning Joe."

And Stewart fired back by using some of the other Viacom properties -- appearing to talk about his situation on shows from Nickelodeon's "Dora the Explorer" to MTV's "The Hills."

It was just the kind of clips that the NBC shows will pick up one more time and try to get some kind of reaction from Cramer, who might as well admit that on more than one occasion, he may have been a little too bullish on Bear Stearns in the weeks before its collapse.

Stewart says he doesn't know much about what the market will do either, but at least he doesn't promote himself as all-knowing, as Cramer often is on CNBC, where one promo subs him in for God, declaring "In Cramer We Trust"

Network news people secretly love being name dropped on "The Daily Show," even if it makes them seem a little foolish. If nothing else, they can use the footage to liven up their own shows as they defend themselves. They'll never win the fight, though, as Stewart has something they certainly do not: a sense of humor.

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