Impeachment 2° Day 3: House Managers Finale

Yesterday the House Impeachment managers laid out the links to the consequences of private citizen Donald Trump’s fiery incitement on January 6 and it was devastating.

Impeachment prosecutors took senators on a wrenching journey inside the horror of the US Capitol insurrection, making a devastating case that Donald Trump had plotted, incited and celebrated a vile crime against the United States.

Their previously unseen video evidence showed a bloodthirsty mob defiling Congress, heroism from overpowered police officers pleading for backup, high-profile lawmakers running for their lives and staffers hiding behind locked doors.

Surveillance footage depicted then-Vice President Mike Pence being hustled away with rioters calling for him to be hanged only yards away. A police officer screamed in pain, trapped between a door and an invading crowd. In a horrific scene, Trump supporter Ashli Babbitt tried to climb through a window smashed by rioters before falling back, shot dead by a Capitol Police officer.

“When his mob overran and occupied the Senate and attacked the House and assaulted law enforcement, (Trump) watched it on TV like a reality show,” lead House impeachment manager Rep. Jamie Raskin said Wednesday. “He reveled in it. And he did nothing to help us as commander in chief. Instead, he served as the inciter in chief, sending tweets that only further incited the rampaging mob.”

The stunningly powerful presentation painted the most complete narrative yet of the assault on the Congress as it met to certify Joe Biden’s election win on January 6.

Their explicit and unsettling case made clear that the terror inside the corridors of power was even more frightening than it had first appeared. It’s now apparent that only good luck, and the bravery of police, prevented senior members of Congress injured or killed.

A day of clear legal arguments left a grave question hanging in the air: How could anyone with an open mind not process the almost unbelievable scenes of US democracy under assault and not vote to convict the ex-President?

House Impeachment managers have eight more hours today to solidify their case against private citizen Trump. Many Trumpublicans still refuse to convict Trump, they hopefully will suffer the consequences at the ballot box for their cowardice.

The Breakfast Club (Good Memories)

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.

This Day in History

South Africa frees Nelson Mandela; Allied leaders in the last months of World War II sign the Yalta accords; Ayatollah Khomeini’s followers seize power in Iran; inventor Thomas Edison born.

Breakfast Tunes

Mary Wilson (March 6, 1944 – February 8, 2021)

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

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Late Night Today

Late Night Today is for our readers who can’t stay awake to watch the shows. Everyone deserves a good laugh.

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

Law & Order: Impeachment Unit

Even the narrator is feeling the frustration.

Cowardly GOP Senators Look Away As Devastating Footage Shows Exactly Who Incited The Capitol Riot

Republican Senators Rand Paul, Marco Rubio and Rick Scott couldn’t bring themselves to watch as House prosecutors opened their impeachment case with a video demonstrating in no uncertain terms that the former president bears responsibility for the deadly insurrection at the U.S. Capitol Building

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah

Trump Rolls Out Trash Lawyers for His 2nd Impeachment Trial

As Trump’s second impeachment trial begins, Democrats show a video of Trump’s speech on January 6 interspersed with scenes of violence from his supporters, and his defense team struggles to make its case.

Can Gorilla Glue Be Used on Hair? Absolutely Not

A woman made headlines for using Gorilla Glue in place of hairspray, and Dulcé Sloan balks at the absurdity of it while marveling at the resourcefulness.

Indian Farmer Protests – If You Don’t Know, Now You Know

Tens of thousands of farmers are taking to the streets of New Delhi to call for the repeal of India’s contentious new agriculture laws.

Late Night with Seth Meyers

Trump’s Second Impeachment Trial Begins

Impeachment Managers Make Powerful Case Against Trump to Open Trial: A Closer Look

Seth takes a closer look at former President Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial, where House impeachment managers laid out powerful evidence of his guilt while most Republican senators had no interest in holding him accountable.

Jimmy Kimmel Live

Trump Circus Back in Washington for Impeachment Trial #2

The circus is back in Washington for the second impeachment trial of Donald Trump, Republicans are too afraid to do the right thing, the two lawyers defending Trump formed a disaster duo and Trump was said to be deeply unhappy, officials in Palm Beach are discussing whether or not he is allowed to live at Mar-a-lago, Trump sycophants always use his middle initial when saying his name, plans are in place to safely re-open Broadway, and while Jimmy is more than happy to wait his turn but with that being said – he gives a list of people he should get the vaccine before, and he chats with a “vaccine hunter”

The Late Late Show with James Corden

What’s the Deal with Trump’s Impeachment Lawyer?

James Corden looks at the headlines, first diving into the opening day of Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial in the Senate. The star of the day was Trump’s new lawyer, Bruce Castor, and his general inability to articulate arguments. And James checks in with the show band to see what’s on their Valentine’s Day playlist.

Cartnoon

The Legend of Johnny Appleseed aka John Chapman

Chapman was born on September 26, 1774, in Leominster, Massachusetts, the second child of Nathaniel and Elizabeth Chapman (née Simonds, married February 8, 1770). His birthplace has a granite marker, and the street is now called Johnny Appleseed Lane.

Chapman’s mother, Elizabeth, died in 1776 shortly after giving birth to a second son, Nathaniel Jr., who died a few days later. His father, Nathaniel, who was in the military, returned in 1780 to Longmeadow, Massachusetts, where, in the summer of 1780, he married Lucy Cooley.

According to some accounts, an 18-year-old John persuaded his 11-year-old brother Nathaniel Cooley Chapman to go west with him in 1792. The duo apparently lived a nomadic life until their father brought his large family west in 1805 and met up with them in Ohio. The younger Nathaniel decided to stay and help their father farm the land.

Shortly after the brothers parted ways, John began his apprenticeship as an orchardist under a Mr. Crawford, who had apple orchards, thus inspiring his life’s journey of planting apple trees.

There are stories of Johnny Appleseed practicing his nurseryman craft in the area of Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, and of picking seeds from the pomace at Potomac River cider mills in the late 1790s.[1] Another story has Chapman living in Pittsburgh on Grant’s Hill in 1794 at the time of the Whiskey Rebellion.

The popular image is of Johnny Appleseed spreading apple seeds randomly everywhere he went. In fact, he planted nurseries rather than orchards, built fences around them to protect them from livestock, left the nurseries in the care of a neighbor who sold trees on shares, and returned every year or two to tend the nursery. He planted his first nursery on the bank of Brokenstraw Creek, south of Warren, Pennsylvania. Next, he seems to have moved to Venango County, along the shore of French Creek, but many of these nurseries were in the Mohican River area of north-central Ohio. This area included the towns of Mansfield, Lisbon, Lucas, Perrysville, and Loudonville.

The story of Johnny Appleseed almost ended in 1819 in Ohio. One morning he was picking hops in a tree when he fell and caught his neck in the fork of the tree. Shortly after he fell one of his helpers, an eight year old boy, found him struggling in the tree. Unable to get him out of the tree, young John White cut the tree down, saving Chapman’s life.

According to Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, toward the end of his career he was present when an itinerant missionary was exhorting an open-air congregation in Mansfield, Ohio. The sermon was long and severe on the topic of extravagance, because the pioneers were buying such indulgences as calico and imported tea. “Where now is there a man who, like the primitive Christians, is traveling to heaven barefooted and clad in coarse raiment?” the preacher repeatedly asked until Johnny Appleseed, his endurance worn out, walked up to the preacher, put his bare foot on the stump that had served as a podium, and said, “Here’s your primitive Christian!” The flummoxed sermonizer dismissed the congregation.

He would tell stories to children and spread The New Church gospel to the adults, receiving a floor to sleep on for the night, and sometimes supper, in return. “We can hear him read now, just as he did that summer day, when we were busy quilting upstairs, and he lay near the door, his voice rising denunciatory and thrillin—strong and loud as the roar of wind and waves, then soft and soothing as the balmy airs that quivered the morning-glory leaves about his gray beard. His was a strange eloquence at times, and he was undoubtedly a man of genius,” reported a lady who knew him in his later years.[13] He made several trips back East, both to visit his sister and to replenish his supply of Swedenborgian literature.

He preached the gospel as he traveled, and during his travels he converted many Native Americans, whom he admired. The Native Americans regarded him as someone who had been touched by the Great Spirit, and even hostile tribes left him strictly alone.[14]

He cared very deeply about animals, including insects. Henry Howe visited all the counties in Ohio in the early nineteenth century and collected several stories from the 1830s, when Johnny Appleseed was still alive:

One cool autumnal night, while lying by his camp-fire in the woods, he observed that the mosquitoes flew in the blaze and were burned. Johnny, who wore on his head a tin utensil which answered both as a cap and a mush pot, filled it with water and quenched the fire, and afterwards remarked, “God forbid that I should build a fire for my comfort, that should be the means of destroying any of His creatures.” Another time, he allegedly made a camp-fire in a snowstorm at the end of a hollow log in which he intended to pass the night but found it occupied by a bear and cubs, so he removed his fire to the other end and slept on the snow in the open air, rather than disturb the bear.

In a story collected by Eric Braun, he had a pet wolf that had started following him after he healed its injured leg.

More controversially, he also planted dogfennel during his travels, believing that it was a useful medicinal herb. It is now regarded as a noxious, invasive weed.

According to another story, he heard that a horse was to be put down, so he bought the horse, bought a few grassy acres nearby, and turned it out to recover. When it did, he gave the horse to someone needy, exacting a promise to treat it humanely.

During his later life, he was a vegetarian.[19] He never married. He thought he would find his soulmate in heaven if she did not appear to him on earth.

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Impeachment 2°

Yesterday was the opening day of the second impeachment trial of now former President Donald J. Trump.The only topic that was on the table for discussion was whether the trial itself was constitutional. After presentations from the House managers and Trump’s defense lawyers, the vote was a bipartisan 56 – 44 – six Republicans voting with all the Democrats. the video the house managers showed was chilling and may not be safe for family or work place viewing.

Today the House managers will present their case for conviction which they have said contains evidence which has not been seen.

The Breakfast Club (Opportunities)

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.

This Day in History

A Cold War prisoner exchange; boxer Mike Tyson convicted of rape; Arthur Miller’s ‘Death of a Salesman’ opens on Broadway; Bob Dylan’s ‘The Times They Are a Changin” released.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

So see every opportunity as golden, and keep your eyes on the prize – yours, not anybody else’s.

Roberta Flack

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Late Night Today

Late Night Today is for our readers who can’t stay awake to watch the shows. Everyone deserves a good laugh.

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

The NFL Is Helping Out The Only Way They Know How

Reality Sets In After A Weirdly Normal Super Bowl Sunday

After a Super Bowl Sunday that in many ways felt downright normal, including the familiar scene of Tom Brady hoisting the Vince Lombardi trophy, Americans woke up to the reality of an ongoing pandemic and an impeachment trial beginning in the Senate.

Foggy Pine Books Owner Reacts With Shock To Colbert Super Bowl Special Commercial

Last night after the Super Bowl, small business owner Mary Ruthless watched in shock as Stephen Colbert ran a segment on their Boone, NC bookstore and premiered a commercial for the store starring Sam Elliott and Tom Hanks. Foggy Pine Books has been busy filling orders ever since!

Quarantinewhile… Taylor Swift Has Bigger Problems Than The “evermore” Lawsuit

Quarantinewhile… Move over, Utah theme park, Taylor Swift doesn’t have time for your lawsuit. She’s busy being sued by Stephen Colbert.

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah

The Daily Show with Trevor Noah

Farewell to Lou Dobbs, the most North Korean broadcaster America has ever seen

Biden’s Scandalous Start: Dissing Space Force & Flying on a Plane

Joe Biden has been president for less than three weeks and has already had more scandals than we can keep track of, including his pre-noon swearing-in, Hunter Biden’s upcoming book and Jen Psaki’s Space Force insult

Brady’s Big Win, Trump’s Impeachment Trial & A Vacationing Rioter

The Tampa Bay Buccaneers win Super Bowl LV, the U.S. Senate plans Trump’s annual impeachment trial, a Capitol insurrectionist gets to go on vacation, and a Utah school reverses a decision that would’ve allowed students to opt out of Black History Month curriculum.

Late Night with Seth Meyers

Aides Claim Trump Feels Happier Since Leaving White House

GOP Senators Want to “Move On” from Trump’s Second Impeachment Trial: A Closer Look

Seth takes a closer look at former President Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial being a chance to hold Trump accountable for his crimes and to shine a national spotlight on the decay of the GOP and our democratic institutions.

Jimmy Kimmel Live

Super Bowl for the Ages, Maskless Celebrations & Fighting on The Bachelor!

Jimmy recaps the Super Bowl, and talks about Tom Brady winning his 7th ring, the random guy who ran across the field during the game, Tampa Bay fans not taking COVID precautions as they partied in the streets without masks, MyPillow Mike Lindell continuing his fight against election fraud, Lou Dobbs being cancelled by Fox Business, the beginning of impeachment trial #2 for Donald Trump, the refreshingly quiet world with Joe Biden as President, and a lot of childlike fighting on a new episode of “The Bachelor.”

Is the NFL Ready for a Singing Referee?

James Corden kicks off the show with a big congratulations to Super Bowl MVP Tom Brady, and James admits he was fixated on the referees and imagines himself as a singing referee. And James down the streaker who took the second half by storm with a pink one-piece swimsuit. After, the gang celebrates Dave’s birthday — but no song. Enjoy the chair, Dave!

Cartnoon

February is Black History month. part of that history is learning how disgracefully Blacks were treated even after the American Civil War. This is the sad history of Ota Benga who was born sometime in 1883 in the rain forest of the Congo, long after slavery was ended in the United States.

Ota Benga (c. 1883 – March 20, 1916) was a Mbuti (Congo pygmy) man, known for being featured in an exhibit at the 1904 Louisiana Purchase Exposition in St. Louis, Missouri, and as a human zoo exhibit in 1906 at the Bronx Zoo. Benga had been purchased from African slave traders by the explorer Samuel Phillips Verner, a businessman searching for African people for the exhibition, who took him to the United States. While at the Bronx Zoo, Benga was allowed to walk the grounds before and after he was exhibited in the zoo’s Monkey House. Except for a brief visit to Africa with Verner after the close of the St. Louis Fair, Benga lived in the United States, mostly in Virginia, for the rest of his life.

African-American newspapers around the nation published editorials strongly opposing Benga’s treatment. Robert Stuart MacArthur, spokesman for a delegation of black churches, petitioned New York City Mayor George B. McClellan Jr. for his release from the Bronx Zoo. In late 1906, the mayor released Benga to the custody of James M. Gordon, who supervised the Howard Colored Orphan Asylum in Brooklyn.

In 1910 Gordon arranged for Benga to be cared for in Lynchburg, Virginia, where he paid for his clothes and to have his sharpened teeth capped. This would enable Benga to be more readily accepted in local society. Benga was tutored in English and began to work at a Lynchburg tobacco factory. [..]

In 1914, when World War I broke out, a return to the Congo became impossible as passenger ship traffic ended. Benga became depressed as his hopes for a return to his homeland faded. On March 20, 1916, at the age of 32 or 33, he built a ceremonial fire, chipped off the caps on his teeth, and shot himself in the heart with a borrowed pistol.

He was buried in an unmarked grave in the black section of the Old City Cemetery, near his benefactor, Gregory Hayes. At some point, the remains of both men went missing. Local oral history indicates that Hayes and Benga were eventually moved from the Old Cemetery to White Rock Hill Cemetery, a burial ground that later fell into disrepair. Benga received a historic marker in Lynchburg in 2017.

Phillips Verner Bradford, the grandson of Samuel Phillips Verner, wrote a book on the Mbuti man, entitled Ota Benga: The Pygmy in the Zoo (1992). During his research for the book, Bradford visited the American Museum of Natural History, which holds a life mask and body cast of Ota Benga. The display is still labeled “Pygmy”, rather than indicating Benga’s name, despite objections beginning a century ago from Verner and repeated by others.

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The Breakfast Club (Look Within)

Welcome to The Breakfast Club! We’re a disorganized group of rebel lefties who hang out and chat if and when we’re not too hungover we’ve been bailed out we’re not too exhausted from last night’s (CENSORED) the caffeine kicks in. Join us every weekday morning at 9am (ET) and weekend morning at 10:00am (ET) (or whenever we get around to it) to talk about current news and our boring lives and to make fun of LaEscapee! If we are ever running late, it’s PhilJD’s fault.

This Day in History

The Beatles appear on TV’s ‘Ed Sullivan’; Sen. Joseph McCarthy launches his anti-communist crusade; World War II’s Battle of Guadalcanal ends; Soviet leader Yuri Andropov dies; author Alice Walker born.

Breakfast Tunes

Something to Think about over Coffee Prozac

Open your eyes, look within. Are you satisfied with the life you’re living?

Bob Marley

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Late Night Today

Late Night Today is for our readers who can’t stay awake to watch the shows. Everyone deserves a good laugh.

Saturday Night Live

Super Bowl Pre-game Show Cold Open

James “No, Not That One” Brown (Kenan Thompson) interviews Kansas City Chiefs coach Andy Reid (Aidy Bryant) and Tampa Bay Buccaneers coach Bruce Arians (Aidy Bryant) during the NFL Super Bowl Pre-game show.

center>Weekend Update: TwinsTheNewTrend on Songs They’ve Never Heard Before

TwinsTheNewTrend (Kenan Thompson, Chris Redd) stop by to react to some music they’ve never heard before.

Weekend Update: Lowell Fitzroy and Janet Noonan on Cancel Culture

Lowell Fitzroy (Mikey Day) and Janet Noonan (Heidi Gardner) stop by Weekend Update to talk about some children they cancelled.

Weekend Update: Biden’s Stimulus Plan

Weekend Update anchors Colin Jost and Michael Che tackle the week’s biggest news, like Mitch McConnell criticizing Marjorie Taylor Greene for her extreme conspiracy theories.

Weekend Update: Morgan Wallen Video & Super Bowl Bets

Weekend Update anchors Colin Jost and Michael Che tackle the week’s biggest news, like a man building a backyard rollercoaster for his children.

The Late Show with Stephen Colbert

Rowdy Friends, Please Stay Home This Year

Bonus points if you find a way to eat the entire chicken wing mountain before the game ends.

Famous Films And The NFL Come Together For Stephen’s Super Bowl Special Monologue

Stephen Colbert loved every minute of Super Bowl LV, but he thinks the player introductions would have been more entertaining if award-winning directors took over. Watch the monologue from Stephen Colbert’s special post-Super Bowl monologue now!

Pondering the Pundits

Pondering the Pundits” is an Open Thread. It is a selection of editorials and opinions from around the news media and the internet blogs. The intent is to provide a forum for your reactions and opinions, not just to the opinions presented, but to what ever you find important.

Thanks to ek hornbeck, click on the link and you can access all the past “Pondering the Pundits”.

Follow us on Twitter @StarsHollowGzt

Paul Krugman: Fighting Covid Is Like Fighting a War

Why Biden needs to go big and ignore the worriers.

There has been some pushback from progressive pundits — most notably Larry Summers, but he’s not alone — against President Biden’s proposal for a very large Covid relief package. Before I get into the reasons I believe this pushback is misguided, let me say that it’s refreshing to discuss good-faith criticism coming from people who actually have some idea what they’re talking about, as opposed to the cynical, know-nothing obstructionism that has become the Republican norm.

Nonetheless, the critics are wrong. No, the Biden plan isn’t too big. While the pundits’ concern that the size of the package might produce some economic stresses isn’t silly, it’s probably overwrought. And they have the implications of an expansive plan for the future completely backward: Going big now will enhance, not reduce, our ability to do more later.

To see where the criticism goes wrong, we first need to be clear about what the Biden administration and its allies in Congress are trying to accomplish.

Right from the beginning some of us tried to explain that the pandemic slump isn’t a conventional recession, and the required policy response isn’t conventional stimulus. What we’re dealing with is more like a natural disaster than a normal recession, and the appropriate policy response is mainly a kind of disaster relief.

After all these months, however, this remains a peculiarly hard point to get across; even some sophisticated economists sometimes fall into the trap of assessing policy in traditional stimulus terms.

Charles M. Blow: A Holistic View of Vaccine Hesitancy

From the perspective of Black people, particularly many young ones, the government is not to be trusted.

I recently had a conversation with a younger friend of mine — a Black man in his 30s here in Atlanta — about whether I was going to get the Covid-19 vaccine when it becomes available to me and whether I should.

My answer was clear: Absolutely.

So was his: Absolutely not. At least not yet, not until he was able to see over a longer period of time how others responded to it. In fact, he was somewhat astonished that I was eager to be vaccinated, treating it as a gullibility or naïveté on my part.

It wasn’t necessarily that he didn’t trust vaccines, it was that he didn’t trust the government that was pushing it. This mistrust, I believe, is an underappreciated part of vaccine hesitancy, particularly among younger Black people.

It is now a well-established fact that Black people are getting the vaccine less than their white counterparts and also express more doubt about it. But those numbers are more complicated than the top-line takeaways might suggest.

Jennifer Senior: The Women Who Paved the Way for Marjorie Taylor Greene

She’s the latest descendant in a lineage of Republican women who embrace a boffo radicalism.

When I was coming of age as a journalist, it was an article of faith — and political science — that female Republican politicians subdued their party’s excesses. It was a measurable phenomenon, even: Republican women voted to the left of their male counterparts in Congress.

But as the G.O.P. began to radicalize, becoming not just a small-government party but an anti-government party — a government delegitimization party — this taming effect ceased to be. Moderates of both sexes cleared out of the building. A new swarm of firebrands rushed in. Not only did female Republican elected officials become every bit as conservative as their male counterparts; they began, in some cases, to personify the party’s most outlandish tendencies.

This is the thought I keep returning to when I think about Marjorie Taylor Greene: That there is something depressingly familiar about her. She’s the latest descendant in a lineage of Republican women who embrace a boffo radicalism, who delight in making trouble and in causing offense.

Amanda Marcotte: Republican Senators aren’t beholden to their base — they’ll acquit Trump because they agree with him

Republicans who claim they want to “move on” are lying, since the best way to do that is bar Trump from running

‘Tis the night before his second impeachment trial, and all through the Senate, cowardly Republicans are still grasping for some way to let Donald Trump off the hook while not looking complicit in his attempt to violently overthrow the government by sending a fascist crowd to storm the Capitol. (Hint: It’s impossible.) So Republicans are reaching for their most potent weapon in the battle to convince the D.C. cocktail party circuit that they’re still respectable statesmen: the welcoming arms of Politico, the beltway media outlet always willing to lend a sympathetic ear to pathetic excuses and amplify the silliest of GOP spin in the name of neutrality.

“Where Democrats and Republicans agree on Trump,” read a Monday morning headline at Politico. “Both parties want to be rid of him. They just differ on the means.”

Even without reading the full piece, one can tell this is hoary nonsense, as even the conventional wisdom holds that Republicans always make it a point to disagree with Democrats, even on basic questions of fact. “Always be ‘triggering‘ the liberals” has eclipsed any actual ideology as their main organizing principle. Still, we here at Salon buck the trends popularized by social media and make a point to actually read an article we deign to comment on. In this case, however, it does not improve the situation.

“Donald Trump’s second impeachment trial in as many years has Democrats and Republicans in rare agreement: Most senators want to get it over with, and they want the former president to go away,” writes Andrew Desiderio.

Cartnoon

Famous Films And The NFL Come Together For Stephen’s Super Bowl Special Monologue

Stephen Colbert loved every minute of Super Bowl LV, but he thinks the player introductions would have been more entertaining if award-winning directors took over. Watch the monologue from Stephen Colbert’s special post-Super Bowl monologue now!

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