] A trot through the blogosphere suggests that Stewart's ] hyper-sincere Crossfire turn may have cost him a few ] fans, even as it solidified his diehard base. I wouldn't ] be surprised if the news media's recent crush on Stewart ] -- the rave reviews of America, the high-profile ] journalists appearing on his show -- turned a corner ] after this. As America: The Book makes clear, nobody ] likes a civics lecture. But you'd be hard-pressed to ask ] for more entertaining television than Friday's live ] smackdown. Stewart's naked appeal to his hosts to "please ] stop, stop, stop. Stop hurting America," had a loopy, ] apocalyptic power. It burned a hole in the screen, like ] Peter Finch as the crazed anchorman in Network, ] bellowing, "I'm mad as hell and I'm not going to take it ] anymore." ] ] ] A while back, I called Jon Stewart the "court jester" of ] this election. But he may be more like the fool in King ] Lear, speaking brutal truth to a king who is already too ] far gone to hear it. Sure, Stewart's job is to make us ] laugh, not to lecture us. But as Lear's fool asked, "May ] not an ass know when the cart draws the horse?" [ Yep. -k] Stewart Caught in the Crossfire - Something actually happens on a talk show! By Dana Stevens |