Wednesday, November 7, 2012

Colbert's Super PAC gets nod from Mitt Romney

By Craig Berman, NBC News contributor

Finally, Election Day is here and "The Colbert Report's" Stephen Colbert reigns triumphant. Not because he's been elected to anything -- but because he and his Super PAC,??Making a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow,? got a (likely unintentional) hat tip in the final hours of campaigning.

Mitt Romney recently told voters, ?We can begin a better tomorrow, tomorrow.?

?He used our slogan!? Colbert said. ?I think that proves that Mitt is a candidate just as serious and sincere as I am.?

But while the onslaught of political ads are over, the pundits and their punditry will?be with us always. And the pundits were right in the crosshairs on both?"Colbert Report" and "The Daily Show," though how any of the hosts managed to decide which clips to use among the sheer volume of noise on television is a mystery.

?Obviously on Wednesday or, God forbid, Thursday or December or whenever this thing is figured out, we?ll know which pundits were wrong, which were wronger, and which were ?Oh my God, that guy was really wrong!'? Jon Stewart said on "The Daily Show."

Regardless, there are unlikely to be any meaningful consequences for the losers. ?Punditry is like musical chairs. The only difference is that when the music stops, nobody moves the chairs. They just keep adding more chairs,? Stewart said.

"Colbert Report" guest Nate Silver also weighed in. ?I?m not very pro-pundit, I have to say. If pundits were on the ballot against Ebola, I might vote Ebola -- or third party.?

Perhaps that?s partially because of his tiff with Joe Scarborough, the MSNBC morning host who read Silver?s computer model predicting an overwhelming chance of an Obama victory and sniped, ?Anybody who thinks this race is anything but a toss-up right now is such an ideologue that they should be kept away from typewriters because they?re jokes.?

?Yeah, Silver and his math are jokes because math has a liberal bias. After all, math is the reason Mitt Romney?s tax plan doesn?t add up,? Colbert said.

Meanwhile, Jimmy Kimmel continued to quiz random people on the streets of Los Angeles -- to continued sad, hilarious effect.

His most recent sidewalk escapade involved sending a reporter for "Lie Witness News" to ask people whether they'd voted yet, even though no polls were open in California when they initiated the quiz. Pretty much everyone was planning to vote later that evening ... but a few happily admitted to the fact that yes, they had voted, and lines were long.

Even a man in an Elmo costume couldn't be trusted to tell the whole truth, so he got a special prize: A sticker on his furry chest reading, "I lied."

Still, there was one voter who couldn't lie about choosing the next U.S. president, mainly because a dog can't vote. "Late Night's" Jimmy Fallon brought his dog Gary to the studio and offered her (yes, her) up two bowls of kibble -- in hopes he could lend some insight into who will win on Tuesday. So who did Gary pick? Check out the video to find out. The future of the nation could be at stake.

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Source: http://entertainment.nbcnews.com/_news/2012/11/06/14967805-stephen-colberts-super-pac-gets-an-unexpected-nod-from-mitt-romney?lite

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