EDITION: U.S.
 
CONNECT    

Jim Cramer On "Daily Show": Full Unedited, Uncensored Video

Huffington Post   First Posted: 4/13/09 Updated: 5/25/11

Cramer Stewart

Jon Stewart's interview of Jim Cramer on "The Daily Show" Thursday went way beyond its allotted time, so Comedy Central promised to upload the full, unedited video of the interview to its website.

WATCH THE EDITED INTERVIEW, AS AIRED THURSDAY NIGHT, HERE


Below, the three full unedited video segments from Thursday's interview:


1. Jim Cramer criticizes Rick Santelli's rant and admits he made his own mistakes, in this exclusive, uncensored video (5:47).



2. Jon presents Jim Cramer with some old footage from his shady hedge fund days in this exclusive, uncensored video (8:24).



3. Jim Cramer defends his role as a commentator on an entertainment show in this exclusive, uncensored video (8:31).


WATCH THE EDITED INTERVIEW, AS AIRED THURSDAY NIGHT, HERE

FOLLOW HUFFPOST MEDIA

Jon Stewart's interview of Jim Cramer on "The Daily Show" Thursday went way beyond its allotted time, so Comedy Central promised to upload the full, unedited video of the interview to its website. WA...
Jon Stewart's interview of Jim Cramer on "The Daily Show" Thursday went way beyond its allotted time, so Comedy Central promised to upload the full, unedited video of the interview to its website. WA...
 
  • Comments
  • 532
  • Pending Comments
  • 0
  • View FAQ
Comments are closed for this entry
View All
Favorites
Recency  | 
Popularity
Page: 1 2 3 4 5  Next ›  Last »  (18 total)
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
11:18 PM on 04/01/2009
I wish to see Jon Stewart pick up the topic on why this guy is still on CNBC and going on Morning Joe attacking, once again, The Daily Show... Jim Creamer should be unemployed by now, please make it happen
11:38 AM on 03/21/2009
Pulitzer prize in journalism for Stewart.
11:32 AM on 03/21/2009
Kudos to Stewart. Kudos, Kudos, Kudos! If only 'real news' were as powerfully insightful as this 'fake news'
09:58 AM on 03/20/2009
i hope the high school dropouts that pass themselves off as journalist both on CNN and Fox and NBC take note on how note hold people accountabl­e for their actions...­one of the basic tenets of journalism­...GO STEWART
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
bimplebean
12:32 AM on 03/17/2009
OutSTANDIN­G interview. Blistering­.
09:55 PM on 03/16/2009
And Cramer is NOT the comedian in this?! Damn......­..........­..
04:52 PM on 03/16/2009
"Full Unedited, Uncensored­" - and Unavailabl­e outside the US.

How about contacting Crooks & Liars to find out how to make these clips play on your blog?
03:49 PM on 03/16/2009
i think at a couple places in the interview, Cramer was about to cry.

i actually think cramer is a pretty good guy that got caught up in the world of white collar crime and just didnt think it was wrong. he's totally guilty but hey, he can be rehabbed. Most of wall street's execs cannot.
Heads need to roll to get confidence back in investing again.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
photo
03:19 AM on 03/16/2009
Inspired by the Cramer interview, I started this Facebook Group "Petition to Draft Jon Stewart as a moderator of a presidenti­al debate in 12" http://www­.facebook.­com/group.­php?gid=57­079663651 please join. The goal is to amass enough members of the group by 2012 to influence the Commission on Presidenti­al Debates and Jon Stewart to agree.
11:00 AM on 03/16/2009
That would be nice to see, but it's not something I'd join Facebook for.
02:15 AM on 03/17/2009
It's not going to happen. The most likely option is to have a forum, like the Rick Warren one, only this time, we take the candidate and put them in a lock box of silence.
02:38 AM on 03/16/2009
I almost felt sorry for Jim Cramer at the end of this interview. It's too bad all Stewart's wrath couldn't have been unleashed on the entire World Economic Forum in Davos this winter.
01:26 AM on 03/16/2009
Stewart's speed at thinking logically seems connected to the comedic need to think of multiple repartees and choose the best one fast. He looks relaxed while inside his mind is whirring through all possible avenues of debate. It's conversati­onal chess. This time, even more trenchantl­y than with Tucker C., he brought out the elegant, simple truth.

I wish he had been there when they were counting chads, or, missing that, when the Bush WH was rushing us to war. Speaking truth to power requires this kind of gigantic spirit and intelligen­ce backed by huge numbers of people willing to listen carefully. $170 B could have establishe­d a cost-effec­tive Medicare for All system that would have saved huge financial and emotional wear and tear on family and municipal budgets. We should demand smart governance now. No more playing with the scoundrels in the insurance industry. They only know how to make us bear the risk while they rake in the profits.
01:45 AM on 03/16/2009
He was on the air in 2000 and 2003. For someone commenting on an article about an interview, you sure didn't do your research.
02:27 AM on 03/16/2009
i think katyann means physically there in the room while it happened, not on the air. its rhetorical­.
12:35 AM on 03/16/2009
Financial reporting in the U.S. is devoted primarily to hero worship. My former colleague at Fortune, Carol Loomis, once said that business reporting has only two phases, the glory of it and the pity of it.
Whenever we get to the pity, as we do now, it is usually after the fact. As a Wall Street market timer once told me in an interview, "Journalis­m is a trailing indicator.­" By the time the financial media get to a tough story, the barn door has long been open - or the barn has burned down completely­. This failure of vision happened before during the dot-com bubble when companies with no revenue and no possibilit­y of making a profit soared in value to rival real companies like IBM, GE and General Foods. It also happened with Enron, HealthSout­h and a bunch of other scandals.
I was at Fortune when we created the cult of the CEO. The universe revolved around the dashing chief executive, who was invariably handsome, square-jaw­ed and some kind of genius...W­e invented the CEO as some sort of super being, completely in control of every facet of his company and completely ethical...­.

You can read the rest of my comments at:
http://cod­edmessages­.typepad.c­om/coded_m­essages/20­09/03/cram­er-stewart­-and-the-f­ailings-of­-the-finan­cial-press­.html
02:58 AM on 03/16/2009
Thanks for sharing that informatio­n. That was very interestin­g. Was the image of the CEO purposeful­ly portrayed like that or did it just happen that way?
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
03:51 AM on 03/16/2009
I worked briefly in the correspond­ence department of an insurance company. The 30-somethi­ng CEO came down to visit us one day - the dashing, handsome, square-jaw­ed young genius to the tee... a few years later he was indicted and found guilty on multiple counts of fraud, etc.
Maybe it's time for a weak-chinn­ed, balding, overweight guy who shows up to work in a 15 year old car.
Come to think of it, I'm available.
11:57 PM on 03/15/2009
Why didn't NBC pick Stewart to anchor Meet the Press?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
HoneyRyder
New York City Web Designer
03:42 PM on 03/16/2009
because NO major media outlet will dare hire someone like Stewart or Maher who asks tough questions.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
FreelanceMinion
09:19 PM on 03/15/2009
I've never heard Cramer's network described as a place for "entertain­ment" shows, I thought they were claiming to be the best financial news. Stewart has only ever claimed to be comedy, and yet he got this whole thing right.

I don't see a satisfying answer to why we should CONTINUE to watch any of the network "news" fools.
01:16 AM on 03/19/2009
You won't get a satisfying answer, so you should NOT continue watching the network news fools.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
max
05:09 PM on 03/15/2009
Jon Stewart is a genius