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November 29, 2021 30 mins

Trevor covers the rise of the Omicron COVID-19 variant, Dr. Peter Hotez discusses "Preventing the Next Pandemic," and Thandiwe Newton talks about her documentary "President."

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
You're listening to Comedy Central. How many people here celebrate
Cyber Monday. You guys can celebrate Syber Monday. I'm disappointed.
I feel like Cyber Monday has lost like the spirit
of what it was about, do you know what I mean?
Like Black Friday still has the spirit. We're gonna line
up at midnight, We're gonna try and kill each other

(00:22):
for a TV Cyber Monday has no purpose it Like,
what's the point of Cyber Monday? Because we do cyber
every day, you know what I mean? No one waits
for this day to order some ship from Amazon. He's
just like the Amazon even as their own days. It's
got a prime day, you know what I mean. I
just feel like we've lost the spirit of what this
day was about. Was the day when we celebrated Baby

(00:43):
Jesus ordering things off? What did I buy? Oh? Everything?
I mean Cyber Monday. I'm not going to not participate. Yeah,
has bought a bunch of ships I've got off. I
didn't need anything, but I just did it because that's
what America is all about. Yeah, and I'm gonna sell

(01:04):
it on eBay now. Circle of Life, It's coming to
you from the heart of Times in New York City,
Ply City in America, It's The Daily Tonight. What Dr
Peter Hooton Newton, He's the Daily Show with Hey, what's

(01:30):
going on? Everybody? Welcome to the Daily Show. I'm Trevor Noah.
Let's jump straight into the big story today, which is
obviously the omicron variant, the coronavirus mutation causing more chaos
in the world than a Rihanna's booty pajamas. So let's
try to break it down, not the pajamas, the variants.
In another edition of Keeping Up with Corona. For most

(01:57):
of one the world has been fighting off various COVID variants,
which are all more efficient than the o G from Muhan.
We had alpha, we had lambda, delta. You know, COVID
basically turned the planet into the shittiest freat out of
all time. But just when we thought we had a
little figured out, last week's scientists in South Africa announced

(02:17):
that they discovered a new variant, and what they saw
is freaking people out. Scientists are raising to learn more
about a new COVID variant, already setting up alarm bells
around the world. According to South African scientists, the omicron
variant has more than fifty mutations and is likely to
be more transmissible. That has a bunch of mutations, a

(02:37):
disturbingly large number of mutations in the spike protein, which
is the business end of the virus. The COVID nineteen
vaccines target the spike protein. If the spike changes too
much and in the wrong way, it could make the
vaccines less effective. The president of Maderna said yesterday, what's
most scary about this virus is it has managed to
put all of its greatest hits into one variant. Yes,

(03:01):
it's all the greatest hits in one place, like if
Mama Mia killed you instead of teaching you about the
power of love. And what's so scary about this thing
is all the mutations to the virus is spike protein.
Because the spike protein is how the virus penetrates ourselves.
It's basically COVID's dick, and a mutated dick is never

(03:22):
a good thing. Yeah, there's no hallmark cards that say
congratulations on your mutator dick. But hey, I'm no experts,
So to get us a more informed perspective, I sent
Roy Would Jr. Out to CDC headquarters in Atlanta, and Roy,
I know you're standing by right now. What can you
tell us? Well, however, the omicron variant is the twelfth

(03:43):
variant of COVID and the fifth variant of concern now
spreading in the month of the global pandemic. I've been
talking to the top scientists at the CDC and everyone
seems to agree. Come on, man, just that, just stop
stop man, chill man. It's just buried after bury it

(04:05):
after bury it. Damn uh ship got the stop bro.
I'm sorry, this is what the scientists are saying. Oh no,
of course not. I'm paraphrasing Trevor. The actual scientific consensus
on the omicron is tot shit. I gotta cancel this
damn vacation. I pushed it back to three times to St.

(04:28):
John's I want to go. Then ain't gonna shut everything down.
Then the next thing you know, you're gonna have strange
people delivering your food, and you gotta wonder whether or
not they've been eating some of your Frisch fries. And
then I gotta be cooped up with the boy and
I got a home school and figure out which button
is the zoom button and how to print the homework
on the printer that has no egg. Then that's just
another whole last day. And then I'm a weird with

(04:49):
a two bedroom apartment. It's three of us. It's it's
just not enough space. I can hear her phone calls
through the wall. I can hear him playing the Nintendo Switch.
I'm trying to be on the comfortence, calling God Faber
to actually get a little bit of side it is
in this house so I can enjoy my PlayStation that
I set online but inside from Monday to fucking buy.
I actually got a goddamn PlayStation that I can't even

(05:09):
play now because everybody's gonna be in the house because
you can't play violent video games around the boy. We
don't want him learning about violent But what are the
good games are there to play on a PlayStation other
than violent games? You have to pretend violence in this
country to keep from doing violence in real life. And
that I think that's what she doesn't understand. She doesn't

(05:29):
understand that that's what the video games do for me.
And I just think if I just had he just
a third bedroom, a third bedroom, all right, that's all
we need is the third bedroom, and that would give
me the space that I need. I think we would
have to move uptown and that's too far. And then
thank thank you and thank you train riding. Everybody's got
o Macron all right, thank you so much, Roy, Thank

(05:50):
you so much, Roy. Thank you for keeping us updated
on on your developments. Thank you so much for that
The problem now, look, I understand the frustration of facing
yet another new variant. I mean, how did that happen
after everything we did, I mean for two years now,
people we wore masques for some of the time with
social distanced when it was convenient. Then like half of

(06:13):
us got vaccinated. What more is it gonna take. But
at the same time, we shouldn't panic because this variant
was just discovered. So there's still a ton that we
don't know about it. We don't know how long it's
been around. We don't know if it causes more severe illness.
We don't know if it can evade our vaccines. We
know less about this variant. Then your grandmother knows about
Jojo Siwa, and she just knows. She's scared. That's it.

(06:34):
And it could very well be that all these mutations
that sounds so scary turned out to not be that
big a deal, you know, like when Apple acts like
it's making tons of changes to the iPhone, and then
we're like, how did a new iPhone? I didn't iPhone
And then you get it and you're like, wait, it's
just a slightly different camera. I killed a man in
line for this thing. So right now, basically all we

(06:55):
know about this train is that it's called omicron. That's
all we know. And even the name of the virus
has a complicated story. A World Health Organization panel has
just named the strain O macron and classified it as
a variant of concern. The World Health Organization named this
variant O macron instead of the next letters in the
Greek alphabet new or G. In a statement to the

(07:15):
Associated Press, they said they skipped new because it sounds
like the word new, and that G is a common
last name. Yes, it's true. G is a very common
last name, particularly among Chinese authoritarian leaders, as see you
who literally shows you the cloud that China has man
because the World Health Organization is like, oh, we don't

(07:37):
want to offend one guy in China. Meanwhile, Greece is
over here like what you stole our whole alphabet Malacca,
And it has been interesting to see how sensitive the
scientific community has become about naming COVID variants, right, because
back in the day, you realize, back in the day,
nobody cared like nobody cared about naming diseases. Doctors would
even name diseases, often themselves. I discovered a disease that

(07:59):
this toys the mind, making you slowly forget your life
onto the people that you love. Whenever people get this disease,
I vant them thinking, oh yeah, boy, yeah, that they
will never forget me. I means they might forget but yeah,
you know what I'm saying. It's got me quite cool.
But the good news about them skipping those letters is

(08:20):
that that means we're almost halfway to omega now, which
is the last letter of the Greek alphabet, and that
means once COVID reaches the end of the alphabet, it
can't make any more variants. People, that's your science. We
did it, baby. Yeah. Now. The truth is that so far,
there are some encouraging signs that O macron may only
be causing mild symptoms in the people who have it,

(08:41):
although experts say it will take at least a couple
of weeks before we really understand what the strain can do.
But the world isn't waiting to find out. Governments are
moving quickly tonight to limit travel into their countries in
an attempt to slow the spread of the new COVID
variant called O macron. Overnight, the United States banned entry
for non citizen travelers from South Africa and seven neighboring countries.

(09:05):
At least forty four other countries are also imposing travel restrictions.
I took immediate steps to restrict travel from countries in
Southern Africa. But while we have that travel restrictions can
slow the speed of omnicron, it cannot prevent it. But
here's what it does. It gives us time. Gives us
time to take more actions, to move quicker, to make

(09:29):
sure people understand. You have to get your vaccine. You
have to get the shot. Yes, if you give America
just a couple more weeks, surely all the anti vaccas
will finally come around and get their shots. Bless your heart, Joe, No,
for real, I mean I understand where the US is
coming from on this right. If you can slow down
the spread of omicron even a little bit, then you

(09:52):
have time to research it. You have time to work
on new vaccines and you have time to consult with
Joe Rogan on a treatment plan. I mean, hey, maybe
this time he'll say vaccines. You don't. No. So a
lot of people support this travel ban, although Republicans on
giving Biden any credit for taking a tough stance. In fact,
today Texas Governor Greg Abbott he tweeted that while Biden
is banning travel from South Africa, he's doing nothing to

(10:15):
stop South Africans from crossing the Southern border illegally. And
you know, Greg Abbott has a very good point here.
Every day millions of South Africans walk across the Atlantic
Ocean to cross the border. I mean, why did I
book a flight? I could just hits the ride. What
is this? This is the biggest sort of bullshit ever.

(10:38):
And look props to the governor of Texas for being
able to turn literally any story into a complaint about
the border. Everyone's watching Red Notice on Netflix when what
they should be doing is watching our southern border. Now,
you guys may not know this about me, but I too,
am a South African relax relax everyone in the student
relax I do not have the variant. I think the

(11:02):
O g one and as a South African who does
not have the variant, I think this travel ban is
total bullshit. I really do. I mean, first of all,
COVID is a hoax. We couldn't agree on that, right, No.
But for the second of all, omcron has already been
found in over a dozen countries, a dozen countries around
the world. Right. We don't know where it started, we

(11:23):
don't know how long it's been around. It's everywhere from
Hong Kong to Israel to Spain. So why aren't you
banning travel from all of those countries too? Huh? Only
the African countries? What's the difference between the African country? Ah,
I still don't get the logic. Well, you think O
macron is is gonna get to Europe and then just
decided to stay there. I was going to spread to America,

(11:45):
but I simply cannot leave the beauty of Barthelona. And look,
I mean, maybe America is buying itself a couple of
weeks before it gets overrun with only crown. But don't
forget don't forget about the cost of this action too,
because you do realize other countries are paying attention, and
they realize that if they're gonna get punished for telling
the world about new variants. They're gonna stop telling the

(12:06):
world whenever they are scientists discover new variants. I'm just saying,
don't be surprised when the next variant pops up in
Europe and Italian scientists come out acting like nothing is wrong.
Everything is a fine, This is a just that, oh
you say, a thick challenge. But that's where we are
right now. There's a new coronavirus that we don't know
anything about. And because of that, I can't go home

(12:31):
to my uncle's baby shower, and man, I really wanted
to go. You don't see your uncle get showered by
babies much. Anyway, when we come back, I'm gonna be
talking to an actual scientist about only cron means for
the actual world. You don't want to miss it. We
begin with the developments on the new acron coronavirus variant.
The name is this new oh my crown variant rapidly

(12:57):
spreading on my crown variant, the army crown variant, and
this is it. I might be messing up. The pronunciation
of this is that omicron o macron? How do we
say it? It's called Theron, Welcome back to the Daily Show.
We've been talking about the new only cronic variant that's

(13:18):
spreading around the world, and to continue that conversation, I'd
like to welcome Dr Peter Hotez on the show. He's
the code director of the Center for Vaccine Development at
Texas Children's Hospital and he's here to talk more about
what only cron is and how countries should be reacting
to it. Dr Hotess, thank you so much for taking
the time. Let's jump straight into this thing. Um, how

(13:41):
much should we be blaming South Africa for this new variant?
I mean basically South Africa destroyed the world? Right, this
is our fault? Yeah? I mean this, this is so demoralizing.
What's what's what's being done now to the people of
not only South Africa, but Botswana and neighboring countries Malawi, etcetera.
Look Um, it goes like this, the the our worst

(14:03):
pandemic variant threats right, the alpha variant. How did that happen?
It arose out of an unvaccinated population out of the
United Kingdom. And at the end of so we already
knew that if you leave large populations unvaccinated, that's how
the worst variants arise. And then it happened again with
the delta variant arising out of an unvaccinated population uh

(14:27):
in India. And that's what we're living with right now
in the United States and most of the world. So
what did people think was going to happen if we
refuse to vaccinate the African continent. It helped Africa vaccinate itself.
This was both predicted and predictable. So the rise of
O Macron was inevitable from the simple fact that the

(14:49):
African continent is virtually entirely unvaccinated maybe six percent that
runs off to zero. And and the point is, there
was never the leadership, the policy decision to work with
African governments to get the African people vaccinated. And so
I feel that people in Southern Africa are are paying

(15:10):
for this twice one they're not vaccinated, and now we're
going to punish them further on enacting implementing travel restrictions,
which we already know don't work. Um, they haven't worked
this entire epidemic. Why would they work? Now, let me
ask you this question that this is this is really confusing.
I think for a lot of people in and around
the variants. And I think it's a two part question.
Number one, how do we know or do we know

(15:32):
where this variant comes from? You know, because people say
South African variant or not, but it was, it was
sequenced as I understand in South Africa. Nobody knows where
it's from. Correct. And then and then the second part
of that is, are we not only discovering a variant
now but not where the variant is? Like if people
start testing all over the world and they now understand
what to test for, aren't we just gonna see you know,

(15:54):
oh macron popping up everywhere as if it is pretty
of course. So that's how that's always my first talking
point when people are ringing their hands about the omicron variant.
They're saying, oh my god, but it's in multiple European
countries and in Australia, in Canada, maybe the United States.
And I say, well, yeah, that's been true of every
variant we've had. By the time we identify a new variant,

(16:17):
it's almost always all over the world. And so the
fact that it's in multiple European countries, in Australia and
Hong Kong and Canada like the US, that always happens.
It's it's it's not unique to O macron, it's it's
true of every every variant. From the very beginning we've
known this. For instance, when we were all focused on
enacting travel bands from China right as to be epidemic began,

(16:41):
the pandemic began. What happened? This virus came in from
southern Europe to ignite the horrible epidemic in New York
City and in in the spring of That wasn't that
was a lesson in itself. By the time we identify
a new variant, it's already gone global. So looking at
the situation now, you have people panicking, you have stock
markets tumbling, you have you know, people canceling their travel plans.

(17:05):
Nobody knows what to do. Airlines said they canceling flights
to and from South Africa, then they said they're gonna
undo it. From the UK, governments don't seem to know
what they're doing. Was this a knee jerk reaction? Did
did they react without thinking first or did they do
the right thing in getting ahead of it because they
don't know what what what the new variant is all about?
Where where do you see this going? As a scientist
who's actually studying these viruses. Well, I think it's a

(17:28):
little bit of that. I think a lot of it
is the fact that these governments and the u N
agencies were heavily criticized in the past for not reacting
fast enough. In some ways, I think this is an overcompensation.
But when you break it down, UM, I think, you know,
we have to we have to be more realistic about
how serious this this variant is. First of all, the

(17:49):
fact that it's in multiple countries, We've already said that's
not a surprise. That happens with just about every variant
point number one, point number two. In terms of severity
of illness, there's no evidence I've seen that this the
this that the illness produced by the amicron variant is
work anything else that we've seen. So take those two
things off the table. In terms of its resistance to vaccines, um,

(18:13):
it will almost certainly not be as susceptible to the
original vaccinations as the original strains. But we've seen this before.
We've had another variant out of South Africa in called
the B one three five one the beta, which should
have been a wake up called back then uh and
then went out of South America the LAMBDA, and the

(18:33):
point is there was enough crossover or what Tony Facci
calls spill over from our existing vaccines to partially cross
neutralize it. So my hope is that that's the case
with our current vaccines, especially for individuals who have gotten
three mRNA vaccines, where there's a thirty three three RNA doses,
where there's a thirty to forty fold rise and virus

(18:54):
neutralizing antibody. So I am hopeful there will be at
least partial protection and we'll know that over the next
week or so. So our lab is looking at our
vaccine against the omicron variant, but Darren is doing the same,
Fiser is doing the same, J and J is doing
the same, so we'll know that hopefully over the next week.
The best thing people can do right now is to
use all the vaccines that are available, So get three

(19:16):
doses if you can of m R and A, vaccinate
your kids, and if you've been infected and recovered, if
you can get vaccinated on top of that, that's the
best gives you the best possibility of helping you weather
these new variants. Do you think before I let you go?
Do you think um like scientists slash whovel was marketing this.
Do you think they made a mistake by calling it
a vaccine? Do you think that's confused some people because

(19:37):
they say, well, if I have a polio vaccine, that
I'm fine. I don't get polio. If I get the
measles vaccine, I don't get measles. Do you think they
should have just called this like the shot, like a
COVID shot, like you have a flu shot. You know,
I think, you know, if they had always from the
beginning said this was a three dose vaccine, then people
would have understood this better. And it's a three dose vaccine.
I really do think it halts not only sympto madic

(20:00):
illness and hospitalization. But there's some data now showing kid
also halt infection as well. It's just that it wasn't
marketed that way, it wasn't build that way. But you know,
if you look at all our pediatric vaccines, for instance,
what do we do with our kids. We give a
series of primary immunizations, you wait six months to a year,
and then you give the boost and that's what gives

(20:21):
you the long lasting, durable protection. The point is the
MR and A vaccines were just going by the same
playbook that every other vaccine we have, and and and
I tried to give that message back in January February,
but I think, you know with the other problem that
we had was the company c e O s you
know where we're sending out these press releases. And you
know when company CEO send out press releases, they're not

(20:42):
meant for you or for me. They're meant for the
shareholders to spectacularize their accomplishments and the jack up the
stock prices. And and they were very effective at doing that,
but it was tone deaf to the impact on how
these vaccines would be perceived by the public. Well again,
do always hays. Thank you so much for the time
and good luck. Thanks for all your great stuff. I

(21:03):
really appreciate, appreciate you. Don't forget people. Dr Hotel's book
Preventing the Next Pandemic is available now. All right, when
we come back, the one and only tund Newton will
be joining me right here in the studio, So don't
go away. Welcome back to the Daily Show. My guest
tonight is Emmy Award winning actor and producer Tunda Newton.
She's going to talk about her new documentary about the

(21:25):
fights for democracy in Zimbabwe. Wow, Tense Tund Newton, Welcome
to the show. Thank you for having me. Um, Let's
jump straight into it. You know, when I first heard
that you were going to be part of making a
film about an election that was stolen, about people who
felt like they were robbed, about a democracy that was

(21:45):
under threats, I was like, are you doing something about America?
And then no, the information came out and I was like, no,
this is this is about Zimbabwe, a story that I've
been following almost my whole life because of South Africa's
proximity to the country. But but let's let's talk about
that immediately. This is a story not just about Zimbabwe,
but about democracy as a whole, and you decided to

(22:08):
tell it. What inspired you to go this is the
moment to tell this story? It was frustration more than anything.
I've been a human rights activist for two decades. UM.
Activism very often comes out of suffering personal suffering or
certainly witnessing the suffering of others, um And that was
both those aspects were true for me, and I have
been fighting for the rights of women and children, UM.

(22:32):
And I realized recently that I've been a spokesperson for
people all over the world except for Zimbabwe, my own home,
because I feared the political backlash. And what happened last
in two thousand nineteen is that I realized that this

(22:53):
isn't about politics. This is human rights, and this is
about the future of humanity. Right is the work that
I've done in Congo. Similarly, um is this is it's
a framework that is we can see all over the world.
You talk about is this America, Well, yes it is.
It's happening in Zimbabwe, it's happening in Congo, it's happening

(23:15):
in the United States, it's happening in the Middle East.
It's happening everywhere. This imbalance, this knowledge of where power
rests and an inability for that to be shared amongst everybody.
So to see my fellow Zimbabwean's being devastated, and it's
obviously it's been going on a long time. And we
thought McCabe, you know, but the release of mcgabe, but

(23:39):
that was, yes, that was a big story, so much hope. Yes,
a lot of people saw the story of Zimbabwe and
here you had a leader who, you know, like many
other leaders in the world, came into power with really
good intentions, it seemed at the time. I mean, you
see the story unfolding in so many countries where the
people who to free a country are not often the

(24:01):
people who are best to lead that country is free.
And look, this is what JIMSA is currently, say Nelson Chamisa,
a young politician in Zimbabwe who is men and Gaga's
opposition men and should be happy to have a powerful opposition,
should and win win, and then you show the country
that even with a powerful opposition, you're still the rightful

(24:21):
person to lead. I would love to know how you've
got the access that you did in the selection, because
I mean, when you're watching this documentary, oftentimes you watch
documentaries and you know it's interviews that are predominantly trying
to tell you what's happening in the story. In this story,
you are in the story miss seeing what is happening.
You know, you're seeing how votes are being manipulated. You're
seeing how precincts are reporting one person winning by three

(24:45):
d thousand votes when there are only like a hundred
thousand people who live in that area. How did you
also see that there's access by one party and none
by another right. But how how did you get the
access into I mean, because Zimbabwe has been the tourist
for very long, and that the ruling party, the zann PFA,
said no, we're running our elections. We've won and that's
none of your business. So how did you get in

(25:06):
and how did you get your people in safely? To
tell that story? Camilla Nielsen wonderful filmmaker. She had already
made a documentary called Democrats, which was about McCabe and
they had allowed her to film full access both parties. Um,
so here she was. They actually banned her first documentary
mcgarbe banded with using the same law that they used

(25:30):
for pornography, that it wasn't good for people to watch anyway. Um,
And that happened, and then Camilla went on a three
year legal battle to have Democrats be shown and she
won so as a result, she had the freedom to
continue her work as documentary maker. And all we see

(25:52):
in this film is what she witnessed. She doesn't there's
no talking heads, she doesn't get anyone to say anything.
She doesn't manipulate anybody. One of the things I love
about her as a filmmaker. She has the it's called
a cinema verity. It's a style where you do not
intrude on what you see. All you see in this
film is what was actually happening. And it is more

(26:14):
crazy than any kind of murder mystery, any kind of
z I a drama. You cannot believe what's happening in
front of your eyes. You know, when a story like
this is told about a country like Zimbabwe on a
continent like Africa, there is a certain apathy that infects
people when watching this, they go like, well that is
what happens. You know, they'll be like, well, that's that's

(26:34):
a third world country, that's what happens. You know that
it's bound to happen. Of course that will happen. And
yet it feels like now maybe because of what's been
happening in the US, maybe because of what's been happening,
and you know, whether it's Brexit or Ukraine or it
feels like there is a different understanding of a shared
threat if people are not careful. What is that idea?
What do you think people can learn in watching this,

(26:56):
regardless of where they live, about democracy? We are a
common human See, we're a common humanity, and one thing
that people will realize is that the people that they
see are so like them. You'll recognize that what's happening
in Zimbabwe is happening, as I'm said, everywhere, because we
are all in a fight for our freedom, all of us.
Whether it's in our business, whether it's at the workplace

(27:18):
and you're an actress, in the film business, whether it's
you're a sportsman and you're trying to take a knee
to say enough. We are all fighting for our freedom
and there are microcosms everywhere. Watch or don't watch this documentary,
but not watching, not not see Okay, here's one thing.
This change doesn't happen fast, and we think it does

(27:41):
because we're in a time of incredible media technology. But
the truth is real systemic change takes time. Have faith,
have faith feel something. That's the other thing I would say,
feel something. This documentary others like it force you to

(28:01):
actually engage and feel. We need to bring feeling back
into our humanity. I really believe it. And the irony
that technology, strangely is, has come from lack of feeling,
you know, and it's very often orchestrated by people who
who have lost their capacity to feel. You know. We

(28:23):
know that We're in a world now where there are
people that just don't have empathy. It's scary, right, but
then work with us, work with us that still feel,
that still cry every day, that still can't turn away
from the television. There is a system that currently works.
It's it's hideous, but it's moving forward. We also know
that there are people suffering in this system, and there

(28:44):
are people cheating the system. If we find the cheaters,
those that are suffering will suffer less and that it
won't happen and we can start something in our lifetimes.
That's why I tell people to watch it. Watch the documentary,
draw the parallels to the world you live in. And

(29:05):
the best way to say it is feel thank you
so much for joining me on the show. Always a
pleasure to have you here. All right, people, President will
be in theaters December seventeen, and it will be available
on digital in February. We're gonna take a quick break,
but we'll be right back after this. Well, that's our
show for tonight, But before we go, some exciting news.

(29:26):
The Daily Show has some holiday merch that has just dropped.
It's our Happy Belated Holiday's sweatshirt. Yes, the only gift
that won't have you worried about supply chain issues. So
if you want to check it out, scan the QR
code or head to the link below. Until tomorrow, stay
safe out there, get your vaccine, and remember, try to
get on only Crown's good side now by standing for

(29:48):
it online. Yeah, then when it gets here it will
be like this guy is cool. What's the daily show? Weeknights,
learned Company Central and stream food episodes any time, all
on Paramount Plus. This has been a Comedy Central podcast
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