Friday, October 19, 2007

The Daily Show Takes It to the Next Level

This is pretty amazing stuff I'm just finding out about. From TV Decoder, the TV blog of the New York Times...
Beginning today, eight years of episodes of “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” are fully accessible on the show’s Web site.

Videos of every skit, every joke and every guest are available for free, fully searchable on TheDailyShow.com. According to Comedy Central, 13,000 videos will be stored in the database...

Now the content can live forever online. While Web sites increasingly offer streaming versions of television shows, “The Daily Show” is unique because the videos have been made fully searchable through a system of tags. Thanks to those tags, the site serves as a handy archive of correspondent reports: 301 videos are tagged with Steve Carell’s name; 187 are tagged Mo Rocca. It also records years of jokes about newsmakers: a search for George W. Bush finds 844 videos; a search for Al Gore returns 159. Mr. Flannigan said the show’s writers and producers are thrilled to use it as a resource.

The video archive is part of a larger MTV strategy to create branded Web sites for popular shows...

Videos from the Craig Kilborn era of “The Daily Show” will be added to the site early next year. A similar site for “The Colbert Report” is also in development.

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