Jon Stewart rips into Santelli, CNBC
Jonathan Berr
Mar 5th 2009 at 1:15PM

CNBC reporter Rick Santelli may have been brave enough to talk about a revolt 
against the Obama administration's proposal to help homeowners, but apparently 
he's afraid to face Jon Stewart.

Santelli, whose reports from the Chicago Mercantile Exchange are as close to 
street theater as the General Electric Co. (GE) network gets, canceled his 
scheduled appearance on Comedy Central's "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" 
without explanation. The normally affable Stewart was incensed -- but instead 
of getting mad, he got even by giving the most scathing critique of CNBC I have 
ever seen.

"Rick Santelli is angry that these loser homeowners are going to be bailed 
out," Stewart said. "For God's sake, this guy works at CNBC, the best of the 
best . . .''

Well, as the comedian pointed out, it's not exactly clear what CNBC does so 
well. He ran some clips (some of which, to be fair, may have been taken out of 
context ) showing that the business news channel has aired loads of misleading 
or just plain old wrong news analysis during the economic crisis. Jim Cramer's 
famously boneheaded call on Bear Stearns is included but so are lesser known 
gems such as Larry Kudlow saying the worst of the subprime mortgage mess is 
over.

A CNBC spokesman couldn't be reached for comment. Santelli did not respond to a 
voice mail and an email. 

But my favorite moment from the Stewart montage was Carl Quintanilla's 
interview with Allen Stanford, in which he spoke of how the Texan had generated 
above average returns. In closing, Quintanilla asked Stanford whether it was 
"fun" to be a billionaire. Shockingly, the answer is "yes."

It's little wonder that Santelli was a no-show. Santelli's Feb. 19 diatribe -- 
which some on the right have likened to a Howard Beale-like "I am mad as hell 
and can't take it any more" moment -- has become the hottest thing to hit the 
blogosphere since the octo-mom. Some have speculated that Santelli's rant was 
staged, a claim he has denied.

Santelli has appeared uncomfortable with his new celebrity. But by sticking his 
neck out, then pulling it back, he is only inviting more criticism. President 
Obama's spokesman has already accused Santelli of not knowing what he was 
talking about. Stewart's criticism, though, was more damaging.

"Wow, if I'd only followed CNBC's advice, I'd have $1 million today -- provided 
I'd started with $100 million," joked Stewart. "I can see why Santelli is mad 
at homeowners.''

watch the video at:
http://www.dailyfinance.com/2009/03/05/jon-stewart-gives-scathing-cnbc-critique/
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