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The difficulty of the task, Albanese says, isn't being funny. After all, the show has a stable of funny people including host Jon Stewart and the other correspondents: Aasif Mandvi, Jason Jones, Al Madrigal and Jessica Williams. The hard part is processing the information rapidly, so that the comedy is predicated on actual themes and currents.
For the DNC, which will take place Sept. 4-6 in Charlotte, N.C., Albanese believes a topic will be the lack of message, summing up the campaign as "Hey, those guys are crazier, right?"
Bee describes the improvising nature of the work as "fishing all day," while keeping broad themes in mind. Though one might suspect the correspondents have a harder time interviewing people at the RNC than the DNC, she says the opposite is true. They're more recognizable to liberals.
"It's a little like a 'Star Trek' convention for us," says Bee of the DNC. "It's actually easier to talk to people at the RNC even if they know us because they actually don't care about us. They have a little bit more swagger, to be perfectly honest."
Oliver has one reason to prefer the RNC: It's where he met his wife. Four years ago, he, along with a cameraman and producer, were fleeing security when a group of army veterans helped them hide. Last year, Oliver married one of those veterans, Kate Norley.
"I did not go into these conventions thinking I was going to meet my wife," says Oliver. "I didn't even go in thinking I was going to have a pleasant time, and I got a wife out of it."
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