[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TVawARS2oCQ&w=500&h=307&rel=0]
Later today (starting around noon) Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert–both mainstream liberal comedians, media critics and Barack Obama partisans–aided by tens of thousands of their viewers (supporters?) will try to both outdo and lampoon the antics of rightwing entertainer Glenn Beck (and the Republican Party/Tea Party) with their “Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear” on the Mall in Washington D.C. The event’s purpose remains murky but that has not stopped thousands from committing themselves from braving snarled traffic and unreliable train schedules to get to the US capital. By tonight the TV pundits would have had their way with the event’s meaning and impact. So before you surrender your critical faculties to bloviating pundits, feast on this video of “A Conversation About Comedy and Politics” that I helped organize with a New School graduate student Lorena Ruiz in late September. (Lorena started thinking about this in the Spring already.) Predictably, because of its timing, the speakers (and the audience during question time) spent much time reflecting and previewing today’s DC rally. The panel features an excellent cast: The Gregory Brothers (the guys behind Autotune and “The Bed Intruder Song” with Antoine Dodson), Onion senior editor Baratunde Thurston, former Daily News and Colbert Report producer Dan Powell, and humorist Steve Almond. It’s definitely worth your time. After the necessary introductions, the action starts about 4 minutes into the video. Ribald comedy and spot-on analyses ensue for the next hour and a half. — Sean Jacobs

Further Reading

Who deserves the city?

Colonial urbanism cast African neighborhoods as chaotic, unplanned, and undesirable. In postcolonial Dar es Salaam, that legacy still shapes who builds, who belongs, and what the middle class fears the city becoming.

Djinns in Berlin

At the 13th Berlin Biennale, works from Zambia and beyond summon unseen forces to ask whether solidarity can withstand the gaze of surveillance.

Colonize then, deport now

Trump’s deportation regime revives a colonial blueprint first drafted by the American Colonization Society, when Black lives were exiled to Africa to safeguard a white republic.

On Safari

On our annual publishing break, Gaza’s genocide continues to unfold in real time yet slips from public grasp. This is not just a crisis of politics, but of how reality is mediated—and why we must build spaces where meaning can still take root.

The battle over the frame

As Hollywood recycles pro-war propaganda for Gen Z, Youssef Chahine’s ‘Djamila, the Algerian’ reminds us that anti-colonial cinema once turned imperial film language against its makers—and still can.

Fictions of freedom

K. Sello Duiker’s ‘The Quiet Violence of Dreams’ still haunts Cape Town, a city whose beauty masks its brutal exclusions. Two decades later, in the shadow of Amazon’s new development, its truths are more urgent than ever.

When things fall apart

Against a backdrop of global collapse, one exhibition used Chinua Achebe’s classic to hold space for voices from the Global South—and asked who gets to imagine the future.

The General sleeps

As former Nigerian president Muhammadu Buhari’s death is mourned with official reverence, a generation remembers the eight years that drove them out.