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Here's footage of Stephen Colbert covering the moon landing

I know, the moon landing anniversary has come and gone, but here's one more clip.

If you didn't realize it, Stephen Colbert also covered the historic event on July 20, 1969. Well, in a way. I'm assuming that this is probably a little more true-to-life than a lot people might realize, since Colbert was into this stuff when he was young and actually does have a soft spot for Nixon. The kid they have playing him is pretty funny.

The Colbert Report Mon - Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c
40th Anniversary of the Moon Landing
www.colbertnation.com


What You Missed Last Night: Dan Rather with an afro

I haven't seen Dan Rather on TV in quite some time. I believe he still does a weekly news show for HDNet, but you don't see him much anywhere else (especially CBS - ahem). But he showed up last night on The Daily Show in a very funny way, in a story about President Obama and Vice President Biden going out to get some burgers.

Paul Conrad: Drawing Fire - an early look

paul conradThe PBS series Independent Lens will feature the documentary Paul Conrad: Drawing Fire on November 7 at 10 pm as part of the documentary series' salute to politics and journalism during the month of November.

Paul Conrad is now a freelance political cartoonist, but spent the majority of his career as a political cartoonist for the Los Angeles Times. Before joining the Times he drew for the Denver Post after graduating from the University of Iowa where he started drawing political cartoons for the school newspaper, The Daily Iowan. Conrad drew his scathing cartoons through eleven presidencies, starting with Harry S. Truman and continuing to the present day. Ostensibly a liberal, he had no desire to adhere to the party line, and, while his favorite targets were the likes of Richard Nixon and Ronald Reagan, he would also occasionally upset people on the left with his opinionated drawings, and attacked Clinton for what he considered selling out the Democratic party.

The special mixes interviews with the Pulitzer prize-winning Conrad, his friends, family and colleagues with a surfeit of his cartoons that covered some of the most tumultuous times in recent history, from Vietnam and Watergate to 9/11 and the current conflict in Iraq. It's a wonderful piece of film making about an outspoken man who does what every artist strives to do: create images that convey what is impossible to express in words.

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