Jon Stewart revealed in his podcast earlier this week that some politicians he had in “The Daily Show” were only honest in the green room, and that his representatives seemed bewildered when the concept of authenticity was discussed.

Stewart was interviewing the “Pod Save America” ​​Jon Lovett and Jon Favreau in their “weekly” podcast when the latter asked politicians to ignore their representatives when trying to say what they think, causing a rapid recognition of Stewart.

“We would invite all the people from the press of the offices of the senators and the offices of the town of Congress to come to the show in the afternoon,” Stewart said Thursday. “And we would, as, a panel with them. I would talk to them and ask questions.”

“Inevitably [went]”Then, you know, my boss, I would love to have a successful appearance in” The Daily Show “, I think it would be really useful for my boss. What is your advice on what would make a successful appearance? ‘” He added.

Stewart continued: “And I would say: ‘Oh, well, you know, your boss could come to the program and tell me what they think, and then what I will do is, as I will say what I think about what they said, and then we will talk about it.’ ‘ “

“‘I’m not telling you a strategy!'” He recalled. “‘I’m saying what to speak like a person!'”

Previously, Stewart mentioned President Donald Trump and his open will to accept a plane of $ 400 million Qatar, half jokes that politicians who justify such things in his program are regularly outraged in the Green Sala on having to go to television to defend them.

“I’ve always told the greatest truth that he will listen to CNN and MSNBC and News are in the Green Sala,” Stewart said. “The Green Sala is where the truth is. The Green Chamber is where political leaders and anchors say true shit.”

Stewart said that
Stewart said that “the greatest truth that he will hear in CNN and MSNBC and News” talks about air.

Brad Barket/News

Stewart excorsed his fellow expert Jake Tapper earlier this week for publishing a book about the cognitive decline of former President Joe Biden, and argued that a journalist should tell his spectators what is happening while learning him, instead of when he is profitable.

As for honesty within its own circles, Stewart suggested on Thursday that there is a lot of space.

Stewart, a self -described Democrat who has been an open political expert for almost three decades, continued arguing that there should be “emotion, not concern” within the party around how the Democrats recover from the loss of the presidential elections of 2024.