On Sat, May 25, 2013 at 6:26 AM, Adam Bowie <[email protected]> wrote:

> I tend to agree that it was more because the piece wasn't funny (and I say
> that as someone who did buy and like her breakthrough routine around her
> cancer). If the laughs had been much bigger it would have felt like someone
> was holding the audience at gunpoint to laugh. Sadly the piece just didn't
> really work.
>
> I do think Alice Eve was awkward though, hence her getting Tig involved
> right at the start. (SNIP)
>

Right - and this may have been Kevin's main point anyway. The contrast
between the two women could not have been more stark - including the fact
that Eve was listed as a guest, and Tig was not, and Conan, apparently as
part of the setup to her bit, introduced her as having asked if she could
come on, and I was a bit surprised she stayed on the couch for the rest of
the show. It is a comedy show, not an in-depth public affairs program; but
her whole persona is about being uncomfortably honest, so it would have
been honest and uncomfortable and potentially (at least occasionally) funny
if someone (Tig probably, but Conan, Andy or, probably most
problematically, Eve herself) had commented on the juxtaposition of  one
woman who was publicly so defined by the absence of both breasts, and
another was so defined by the over-abundance of her breasts.

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