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tv   The Colbert Report  Comedy Central  March 7, 2014 9:30am-10:01am PST

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comfort of rewarding connections. apply online or at a bank of america near you. >> that sour show, here it, your moment of zen. >> it's clear to me that putin not only has the upper hand from a to z, but he's enjoying himself. putin is the big bad russi >> stephen: tonight, an inovation in beauty products. you won't believe what they're squirting in rabbits' eyes now. then, are copyright lawsuits getting out of hand? unfortunately, the answer to that question has been trademarked. ( laughter ) and my guest theaster gates believes we can transform poor neighborhoods with art. that's easy-- just paint a better neighborhood over it. ( laughter ) staples is closing 225 stores.
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great-- now where will i not find the ink cartridges i need? this is the "colbert report." captioning sponsored by comedy central ( cheers and applause ) >> stephen: welcome to the report, everybody. thank you for joining us. >> stephen! stephen! stephen! stephen! stephen! thank you so much. thank you so much, ladies and gentlemen. ( cheers and applause ) thank you so much, ladies and gentlemen. i've got to say, i was-- i was a little-- thank you so much, ladies and gentlemen. i was a little bit worried there for a moment because the two stephens weren't in sync with
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each other, but then we achieved what astronomer ares call a harmonic conversion. nation, if you watch this show-- and i hope you do-- you know i treat every day of the year like it's the 4th of july. but there may be no 4th more july than today, the 6th of march. because today, ladies and gentlemen, america goot a little bit freerer. >> a surprising ruling wednesday from the high court in massachusetts. the practice of so-called upskirting-- that is, taking photos up a woman's skirt without her knowledge-- is actually legal in that state. >> stephen: upskirting is legal! let freedom ring. ( cheers and applause ) ( laughter ) oh, my. someone waxes their clapper. all right. ( laughter )
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now, nation, for the record, i want to be very clear about this. i do not approve of unauthorized groin photography. it is wrong. but are the me remind you, you cannot spell "freak" woit first spelling "free." and we owe our newfound right to assemble under strangers' legs to peeping patriot, michael robertson. now, he may not look like a civil rights hero, looks more like a guy strokin' it behind the frog pond in boston common, but that would be prejudice. because this man struck a blow for liberty. he exposed a legal loophole in his state's oppressive peeping tom law, and like a lot of loopholes, it was exposed on the subway. >> back in 2010, this guy, michael robertson of andover was aciezed of upskirting twice on the green line. his defense? the law say it's only a crime if the woman is naked. that's what his attorney argued
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last year. >> section 105 doesn't prohibit that kind of conduct. >> that is courageous of his lawyer to stand up for freedom. really courageous for her to stand up anywhere near michael robertson. this decision means that upskirting americans no longer have to sit at the back of the bus. now they can lay down on the floor like they like. because the massachusetts supreme court found the that robertson was not a peeping tom. "a female passenger on an m.b.t.a. trolley who is wearing a skirt, dress, or the like is not a person who is partially nude, no matter what is or is not underneath the skirtk, by way of underwear or other clothing." yes, underwear or no underwear, as long as you wear a skirt, technically you're not nude. that's why "basic instinct" is rated "g." ( laughter ) and for any ladies who might be upset out there, remember, massachusetts has given you the right to upskirt, too. so if you're next to a sexy
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young highlander, just grab your phone and snap a pic of his bagpipe. and it's all thanks to this hero. i would not be surprised if one day someone built a statue to honor michael robertson, one assumes right under the statue of liberty. ( laughter ) ( applause ) and folks, folks, that landmark ruling could not have come at a more appropriate time because women's history -- i'm sorry. i ment womyn's herstory monthstration. for the record, i won't be mentioning any african american women. you already had your history month. don't get greedy. but i do want to talk tonight about something that's close to all women's hearts-- women's bodies. there's a lot of pressure on women to be thin these days, and all days.
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now, some women say, "screw it. i'm big. i'm beautiful. deal with it." like kerry washington, who showed up at the oscars with a huge beer gut. brave young lady but sadly, many fall victim to societal pressure. in the u.s. alone, 20 million women suffer from an eating disorder at some time in their lives. and it's starting earlier and earlier. did you know some women only weigh 8 pounds? stop reading "cosmo." and it's not just how much ladies lose. it's where they lose it from. >> the dangerous thigh gap trend. have you heard of this? this is an obsession among some young women to get so skinny that their thighs don't touch when their feet are together. >> runway models have it. >> women dangerously obsessed with getting a thigh gap. >> stephen: yes, young girls are obsessed with having a thigh gap. i blame the impossible body standard set by spongebob. ( laughter ) then again, then again it does
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make things easier for this guy. and it is no surprise that 40% of women feel they are constantly dieting. the other 60% are starting their diets tomorrow. i swear. folks, to me, it's obvious what is going on here-- society has intrinsically linked a woman's value to her outward appearance thereby undermining her status and strengthening the patriarchal hedgemoney. what? what's that? oh, wow! i just got a masters in women's studies from wellesley. ( cheers and applause ). and i deserve this, folks. i deserve this because i have learned a ton about the ladies from watching their commercials. for instance, i know which shampoos make their hair move in slow motion. i know the cheese that makes
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them laugh. and i know the tampons that help them ride bikes. that's just for ladies. i tried using one in spin class and ended up in the emergency room. ( laughter ) ( applause ) as a feminist-- i understand chicago has a nakedded bike ride every summer. ( cheers and applause ). might come in handy. folks, as a feminist, i say women need to give themselvesaise break. that's why i'm so excited about a new product that lets women enjoy all the food they want, just not with their mouths. >> experience the unique cooling sensation of frozen yogurt. new dial frozen yogurt body wash. wrap your skin in cooling moisture for skin so refreshingly soft, people will notice. >> stephen: yes, he noticed that she showered with frozen yogurt and he's asking tcb why did you do that? ( laughter )
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now, folks, periods frozeep yogurt, dial is also releasing a greek yogurt body wash. i just hope they don't make one out of that jamie lee curtis poop yoigurt because it could make for a messy shower. but yogurt's not the only thing on the menu. the beauty industrial complex is serving an all-you-can't-eat buffet. >> today's menu-- juicy pomegranate, persimmon, and lychee surprise. positively delicious. >> avocado,olive, and almond. >> these, these, and these go in here so you can look like this. >> if you think you like hot cinnamon buns or hot cocoa or cobbler or pink frosted layer cake to eat, you haven't lived until you shower with these items. ( laughter ) >> stephen: ladies, are you getting this? your life is incomplete if you're not bathing in cake.
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and these products don't just make you look good enough to eat. they make you edible. and isn't making women into a consumable product what the beauty industry is all about? because once you smell like you had a three-way with the keebler elf and cookie puss, men will eat you up. >> my agree! ( cheers and applause ) i only have one criticism. why are women being portrayed as nothing more than sweet little things? why can't they be savory entrees? i dream of a day when young women loofa with a porterhouse steak, use a mashed potato conditioner and a manwitch self-tanner. ( laughter ) this is women's history month, goddamn it. and i say it's time to see women as more than just pieces of meat because now we can get them to
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marinate themselves. we'll be right back. ( cheers ) than chocolate, it's an invitation to stop and savor the unmistakable taste that reminds us that life is delicious. matt kenseth, what are you doing here? well, i do know a little about toyotas being #1. [ wife ] we're here to buy a camry. good timing. great choice. it took me to victory lane seven times last year. can i get you to sign something? sure. oh. can you write "you 'da man?" [ male announcer ] during toyota's #1 for everyone sales event, get 0% apr financing for 60 months on a 2014 camry. offer ends march 31st. for more great deals, visit toyota.com. yeah!! yeah!! [ male announcer ] toyota. let's go places. but that grand slam looks so good. girl: mom, with 18 options to choose from, there's over 300 combos under 550 calories. man: kid's a genius.
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girl: dad, it says it right here on the menu. man: oh. woman: hey, welcome to denny's. yo,move fast fruit flavor,fe, watermelon, blue razz green apple. your taste buds dancing. it's the jolly rancher, we make it happen. untamed fruit flavor. jolly rancher. [ jim ] mmmmm. so, hot. whoo! mmmmm. that is hot! [ male announcer ] made with real cheese and premium cuts of meat. [ ding! ] ♪ hot pockets!
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>> stephen: welcome back, nation. i just love birthdays, especially my own. i can remember them all-- from last year when my wife treated me to breakfast in bed, all the
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way back to that very special day in the hospital when i arrived kicking, screaming, and covered in goo. ah, to be 30 again. well, this week, we celebrate a very special birthday because the song "happy birthday" turns 90 years old. and i am going to wish happy birthday a festive annual age increase the way you would any 90-year-old by singing a song that reminds them what their name is. haaapppyyy. ( laughter ) ( cheers and applause ) sorry about that, folks. it turns out you cannot sing happying about the to happying
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about the even on happy birthday's happy birthday because because warner music contentiously owns the copyright to the song and has been earning millions from people celebrating their birthdays for a quarter of a century. and warner is so protective of his song, that even to sing happy birthday in a restaurant, at a concert, or a public place, you must pay royalties. don't believe these people are serious about protecting their intellectual property? marilyn monroe sang it to president kennedy and one year later they were bot both dead. folks-- i know, i know. folks, this is a shameless cash grab, and in warner music insists that happy birthday belongs to them, then i tonight offer america a birthday song that belongs to us. just as our founders intended, this song, like america sroyalty free. so, please rise, for the singing of our new national birthday anthem.
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♪ happy birthday to you happy birthday to me ♪ now we all get to sing. happy birthday for free ♪ and the candle's red glare don't set fire to your hair ♪ you're getting so old. and sure shaped like a pear. ♪ happy birthday-- insert name here. ♪ if you don't know it, just mumble softly. ♪ warner music can't sue me and the home of the brave ♪ make a wish! we'll be right back. ( cheers and applause ) vo: volkswagen has the most vehicles on the road
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with over 100,000 miles. that's the power of german engineering. go to his therapist so make that happen. don't sit down. where did you get those amazing pants? jennie: oh! i got them at old navy. amy: can you spin please... jennie: sure amy: can you... double time jennie: again? sure. are all of these questions going to be about my pants? amy: uh, this is a law firm... so, yes. tell me about your shirt. jennie: it came for free... with the pants. amy: you know, i don't like when people lie to me. jennie: it's true. amy: how much are the pants? jennie: twenty-five dollars... amy: what?!? jennie: but not for long... amy: congratulations, whatever your name is, u got the job!! , la, la, make sure to lock up on your way out!!!! move! sorry!!
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( cheers and applause ) >> stephen: welcome back, everybody. my guest tonight is an activist working to transform poor neighborhoods with art. well, that explains all the chalk outlines in chicago. please welcome theaster gates. whooo! good to see you! thank you so much for coming on. brother gates, how are you? >> super good, man, things are well. >> stephen: i just met you backstage a little while ago and i almost have a contact high off
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of all the positive energy that comes off the of you. you are an artist, correct? >> i am. >> stephen: how would you describe your art? >> i believe my art is interested in transforming ugly things into beautiful things. the perception of ugly spaces into beautiful spaces. >> stephen: let me explain to the people a little bit how you do that. you live in chicago. you're an insulation and social practice artist and your work has been shown in chicago, all over the world at this point. you hold masters degrees in fine art, religious studies, and urban planning, mr. smarty plant, and the founder of the nonprofit rebuild foundation. let's show an example of-- just one of the things that you do in chicago. jimmy, show one of the photos that we of of mr. gates. that's the house on the left you found and bought. and this is what you did do it
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on the right. >> that's right. >> stephen: explain to me how you transformed this house. what do you think this house means now? >> well, at first the house is abandoned. >> stephen: yes. and what does that mean? >> that meant that-- well, when things are abandoned, other things start to happen in the house, like people would go into the house. and do bad things in the house. >> stephen: you can use the word "gang violence" if you'd like. >like. some. >> it was under used and we converted the house into a small archive and invited our neighbors and friends to use the archive from time to time. it was a way of creating kind of an amenity in a neighborhood where there were seemingly few amenities. >> stephen: let's show the next house here, jimmy. this house, there it is on the left first, ands and that you did to it on the right. when you turn the house on the left-- when you turn it into a work of art, do you give it a
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name? >> yeah, i do. >> stephen: is that called something? >> it's called a listening how. >> stephen: why? >> because there is a collection of albums in there there a record store called dr. wax, and we play albums there. >> stephen: here's the thing that worries me about your work, okay. is that you're turning things into art they use to not have to think about. ( laughter ). >> is there i've never gone up to a house or seen a house before and say i don't get this house the way i don't get some art. do i have to "get" your houses to enjoy your houses or do i have to be in them? >> i think it's super cool that people don't get the houses. and i think it's also really important that the houses not register as art, necessarily. what's important to me is that people know that an artist made an intervention in the city that's very different from another kind of person making an intervention. >> stephen: now, why did you want to do this? this is on the south side of
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chicago why do that on the south side of chicago? why not do some place where the property value is is already pretty darn high and you can flip a house and get a show on tgtv. >> right, right. >> thought about that. but my vocation isn't a developer. my vocation-- my-- my belief, my calling is to be an artist. and i think that the-- to have a building like this on the north side, on the north shore, and to transform it would be business as usual. >> stephen: how do the people in the neighborhood take it, you know, if they see a house that, you know, has been there a long time and they come along and you create this art space out of it. how do they take it? do they like what happened in the neighborhood? >> well, for five years, that was my house, it looked like that. >> stephen: so you lived there. >> i was the poor guy on the block. and they were like so sorry, do you need some help. >> stephen: is this the first house you did, your own house? >> this is my house. >> stephen: did you do any houses around there. >> i'm building a house.
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>> stephen: are you building a compound. theafter, are you a cult leader. >> i think it's really important -- >> stephen: possibly, possibly? does anyone call you father? >> no. >> stephen: do you have child brides? >> no, no. >> stephen: tell me now because when the subpoena comes, it will be worse. >> one of the things they really wanted to do was is it possible to think about a neighborhood that has not been fully thought about in a long time? it's under resourced, and can i take my skills as a creative person, and then show how with a little bit of resource and a little bit of imagination, a neighborhood could have the possibility of being like every other good neighborhood the city. >> stephen: you created art centers by doing this as well. >> absolute. >> stephen: do you have, like, ambition to revitalize the south side? do you take this to other cities? could you take this kind of thing to detroit where you transform what's already there into something more useful--
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could you turn scrap metal into a robocop for detroit? >> right. that's been done. >> stephen: okay, yeah. ( laughter ). >> but i do think there's a way in which-- whether i do it or not, that there are people in detroit, in gary, indiana, in akron, ohio, who really-- who are already on the ground doing the work. but they may not have the resource that they need. they may not have the strategies that they need to be successful. they may not have access to banks and the philanthropic community. and i think what i could do better is demonstrate this as a model in chicago and in st. louis and in omaha where i work, and then say this model has the capacity to be a greater scale if we would identify people in those neighborhoods around the country, who are already doing the work but they maybe need a little bit more support. >> stephen: can people buy your art? or to 53 your art do i have to have a house large enough to put another house in it? do you sell your art? can i get an original theaster
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gates, like throw a master bathroom in that? >> yeah, bathroom, living room, kitchen. >> stephen: can i do something in a pale pink? i already have the towels. >> i can do that. >> stephen: theaster, i look forward to it. theaster gates, artist, entrepreneur. entrepreneur. we'll b[ female announcer ] hot pockets sandwiches are even tastier, with delicious quality ingredients. like hickory ham... that's right baby. ...and our buttery seasoned crusts. then we add hot. because hot makes everything better. [ ding! ] [ female announcer ] better taste. better quality. ♪ hot pockets! [ female announcer ] better taste. better quality. it's an invitation to stop and savor the unmistakable taste that reminds us that life is delicious. to help pay for her kids' ice time, -before earning 1% cash back... -guys!
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-everywhere, every time... -close the front door! and 2% back at the grocery store, even before she got 3% back on gas with no hoops to jump through, katie used her bankamericard cash rewards credit card to stay warm and toasty during the heat of competition. that's the comfort of rewarding connections. apply online or at a bank of america near you. matt kenseth, what are you doing here? well, i do know a little about toyotas being #1. [ wife ] we're here to buy a camry. good timing. great choice. it took me to victory lane seven times last year. can i get you to sign something? sure. oh. can you write "you 'da man?" [ male announcer ] during toyota's #1 for everyone sales event, get 0% apr financing for 60 months on a 2014 camry. offer ends march 31st. for more great deals, visit toyota.com. yeah!! yeah!! [ male announcer ] toyota. let's go places. so i get invited to quite a few family gatherings. heck, i saved judith here a fortune with discounts like safe driver, multi-car, paperless.
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you make a mighty fine missus, m'lady. i'm not saying mark's thrifty. let's just say, i saved him $519, and it certainly didn't go toward that ring. am i right? [ laughs ] [ dance music playing ] so visit progressive.com today. i call this one "the robox." but that grand slam looks so good. girl: mom, with 18 options to choose from, there's over 300 combos under 550 calories. man: kid's a genius. girl: dad, it says it right here on the menu. man: oh. woman: hey, welcome to denny's. yo,move fast fruit flavor,fe, watermelon, blue razz green apple. your taste buds dancing. it's the jolly rancher, we make it happen. untamed fruit flavor. jolly rancher.
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( cheers and applause ) >> stephen: good night.
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captioning sponsored by comedy central captioned by media access group at wgbh access.wgbh.org - lemon... what do you think? "kidnapped by danger, colon, "the avery jessup story, comma, "brought to you with limited commercial interruptions "by pride bladder control pads. pride: make every room a bathroom." - really, is that the title? 'cause as the writer, i was thinking of naming it dancing with ophelia-- - don't overthink this. it's a classic love story. boy meets girl. girl gets kidnapped by asian dictator. boy makes movie to get girl back. girl's so grateful she does birthday things to boy. boy falls asleep. - you're forgetting boy meets girl's mother.

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