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  • Hey, everybody. Trevor Noah here.

  • Welcome to another episode

  • of The Daily Social Distancing Show.

  • It is now day 16

  • of staying at home to prevent the spread of coronavirus.

  • And, uh, here's your quarantine tip of the day.

  • If you're at home and you're bored

  • trying to sterilize everything,

  • I've got a tip for you.

  • If you hold your cleaning product like a gun,

  • you'll feel like you're gangsta whipping every germ's ass.

  • Pop, pop! Pop, pop!

  • Break yourself, corona fool.

  • Anyway, tonight, we're gonna catch up

  • on all the latest coronavirus news.

  • New York is putting hospitals everywhere,

  • President Trump loses a trivia contest,

  • and we try to figure out what day it is.

  • So, welcome to The Daily Social Distancing Show.

  • ♪ ♪

  • ANNOUNCER: From Trevor's couch in New York City

  • to your couch somewhere in the world,

  • this is The Daily Social Distancing Show

  • with Trevor Noah.

  • -♪ ♪ -Let's kick it off with some good news.

  • According to thermometers,

  • social distancing might be working.

  • Yeah. The company Kinsa Health,

  • which makes smart thermometers

  • that upload users' temperatures to the Internet,

  • reports that fevers across the United States

  • are dropping dramatically.

  • Now, these thermometers accurately predicted

  • the rise in coronavirus hospitalizations.

  • So if they're showing dropping fevers,

  • that's a promising sign.

  • So, please, people, let's stay at home,

  • let's stay inside and keep flattening that curve

  • so that someday we can go back to our normal lives, you know?

  • Don't you want to go outside again?

  • Be out there, you know,

  • -cutting each other off in traffic, -(horns honking)

  • -complaining about your allergies, -(sneeze)

  • getting invited to your friend's improv show.

  • You know, now that I say it,

  • maybe-maybe quarantine isn't that bad.

  • Maybe we should just stay here a little longer.

  • Also, there are some positive signs

  • coming out of the epicenter of this pandemic, New York.

  • Recently, it has gone from being the City That Never Sleeps

  • to the City That Lays Awake At Night

  • Filled With Existential Dread.

  • But the good news is that,

  • faced with the prospect of overrun hospitals,

  • the city is adapting.

  • The enormous Javits Convention Center

  • has now been converted into a hospital with 1,000 beds.

  • There's an emergency field hospital

  • being constructed in Central Park.

  • Entire hotels will soon be rented out

  • and converted into hospitals.

  • And 5,000 new ICU beds

  • were recently installed inside one of Mayor de Blasio's shoes.

  • Basically, any giant spaces are being filled with beds,

  • even if they kind of smell.

  • Also-- some more good news--

  • the Navy has sent over the U.S. hospital ship Comfort--

  • great name-- which docked here in New York yesterday.

  • The Comfort has 1,000 hospital beds on board,

  • which New Yorkers are very excited about.

  • In fact, so excited that, yesterday,

  • a crowd gathered to welcome the boat to the city,

  • which is obviously extremely counterproductive

  • in Social Distancing Land,

  • but it also shows you how much New York has changed.

  • Yeah, 'cause, normally,

  • we hate it when people show up to the city.

  • Like, a month ago, New Yorkers would have gathered

  • to throw rats at that boat.

  • "Your mother says hello!"

  • And beds aren't the only reinforcements

  • New York is getting right now.

  • Over 76,000 doctors and nurses,

  • many of them who had already retired,

  • have volunteered to step up and help out during this crisis,

  • which is pretty amazing.

  • And a few days ago,

  • a flight full of health care workers from Georgia

  • flew to New York to help lend a hand.

  • And I'm really grateful to them.

  • And I also just hope that they didn't land at LaGuardia,

  • 'cause they'd walk around the terminal like,

  • "We're too late. The city is already destroyed."

  • Be like, "No, this is what it normally looks like."

  • And I'm really grateful for those doctors from Georgia,

  • not only because their help is needed

  • but also because doctors from Atlanta will probably be

  • the most entertaining doctors you've ever had.

  • They'll be mumble-rapping their diagnosis.

  • (mumbling): ♪ You have the corona, the virus

  • (mumbling) ♪ Stuff in the sinus

  • (vocalizing)

  • So, thank you, Georgia. We're not gonna forget this.

  • New York will not forget what Georgia has done for us.

  • In fact, when this is all over,

  • New York is gonna send some of its subway masturbators

  • to your state just to say thanks.

  • And speaking of appreciation,

  • last night, the Empire State Building

  • lit up like a siren

  • to honor all the medical workers serving

  • on the front lines of this epidemic.

  • Now, this might have been a good idea when they first pitched it.

  • But I will tell you, as someone who lives in New York,

  • it was terrifying.

  • The Empire State Building--

  • giant light flashing around.

  • And can you imagine if someone was high in their living room?

  • They must have freaked out.

  • Just like, "Shit, dude.

  • I think we're getting pulled over by that building."

  • (inhales)

  • But, look, just because there are some signs for optimism

  • doesn't mean we should become complacent, people.

  • Because, remember, coronavirus is still growing

  • around the globe.

  • Worldwide, there are now 800,000 cases

  • in at least 171 countries.

  • You know, with the spread of coronavirus,

  • we're learning so many things.

  • We're learning how fragile our medical systems are.

  • We're learning that we need a stronger safety net in society.

  • We're learning we need to pay teachers more.

  • We're learning that thinking about exercise

  • isn't the same as actually doing it.

  • We're also learning which leaders around the world

  • deserve the title of leader.

  • For instance, in Hungary,

  • President Viktor Orbán has convinced his parliament

  • to let him rule by decree until the pandemic is over,

  • which essentially makes him a dictator

  • for as long as he wants.

  • Although, I'm not gonna lie, being a dictator

  • during coronavirus is a little less fun. Huh?

  • He's gonna be like, "I sentence you to torture!

  • "Which you need to administer to yourself

  • "because it is not safe for other people to touch you.

  • "So can you torture yourself over Zoom

  • and you can send me the video?"

  • "No, I-I don't have Zoom."

  • "Ah. Then I guess there will be no torture."

  • "Ah, I wish I... I wish I had Zoom."

  • And over in Belarus,

  • another leader is President Lukashenko.

  • He's probably one of the worst because he's refusing

  • to cancel public sporting events,

  • and instead, has been recommending

  • that Belarusians avoid getting the virus

  • by just going to the sauna

  • and then taking a couple of shots of vodka

  • two to three times a week.

  • That's a real thing a president said. Yeah.

  • And you know your medical advice is bad

  • when it makes Goop look reasonable.

  • 'Cause, I mean, Goop may tell you

  • to put an egg in your vagina,

  • but at least they tell you to do it at home

  • and wash your hands first.

  • Now, if you're gonna talk about leaders

  • who don't deserve the title "leader,"

  • you would be remiss if you didn't mention the man himself,

  • the president of the United States, Donald Jericho Trump.

  • Every day, he shows us why he is not the right leader

  • for this moment, or any other moment.

  • And, look, luckily,

  • he decided to back off his plan

  • to quickly reopen the economy by Easter,

  • but he does continue to make a fool of himself.

  • Like yesterday, he tried to show off to everyone

  • how much he knows about South Korea,

  • and he failed spectacularly.

  • At one point during this press conference,

  • the president said that he knows South Korea better than anybody.

  • Mr. President, you said several times

  • that the United States has ramped up testing,

  • but the United States is still not testing per capita

  • as many res... as many people

  • as other countries like South Korea.

  • I know South Korea better than anybody.

  • It's a very tight. Do you know how many people are in Seoul?

  • Do you know how big the city of Seoul is?

  • -(woman speaks off microphone) -38 million people.

  • That's bigger than anything we have. 38 million people.

  • For the record, only ten million people live in Seoul,

  • not 38 million.

  • Wow.

  • Trump was so wrong,

  • but with so much confidence.

  • I would pay anything

  • to see him be a contestant on The Price Is Right.

  • "So, uh, what's your bid on this new dishwasher?"

  • "That's easy. $57 billion, Drew."

  • "What?"

  • "I know. I know it all."

  • See, this is why I don't really think Trump is a billionaire.

  • Not because he's a liar, not because he's a fraud.

  • Just because I don't think he understands how numbers work.

  • He's like, "Okay, Trump Tower.

  • "That's worth 80 billion.

  • "Plus Mar-a-Lago-- another 52 billion.

  • I'm worth 675 billion, folks."

  • But once again, this just proves

  • that if you say a number with confidence,

  • anyone will believe you.

  • 98% of people know that.

  • So, look, there are many leaders

  • around the world who are failing,

  • failing, failing, failing right now.

  • But the good news is,

  • there are many other leaders who are rising to the occasion.

  • South Korea's leaders handed their coronavirus policies

  • to medical experts,

  • and it quickly brought the virus under control.

  • South Africa's president has been lauded for being quick

  • to shut down the country and laying out plans.

  • And here in America,

  • in the absence of leadership from the White House,

  • governors from California to Ohio are stepping up

  • to fill the void.

  • Basically, what's happening in America is

  • whatever happens when a family has, like, an alcoholic dad,

  • and then the kids just have to raise themselves.

  • That's what's going on in the U.S. right now.

  • Yeah, Trump is AWOL, so the kids are just like,

  • "All right, I-I guess I'm just gonna drive to the supermarket?

  • "Yeah? I'll just drive myself.

  • Kathy, do you want to make lunch?"

  • The one governor who's crushing it the most right now

  • is Andrew Cuomo. Yes.

  • Thanks to his handling of the coronavirus,

  • his approval rating

  • has soared to a seven-year high.

  • And-- and this is crazy--

  • he's even becoming, uh,

  • something of a coronavirus crush for many people.

  • Yeah. People online are falling in love with him

  • because of coronavirus and how he's handling it.

  • I'm not gonna lie. Those people include me.

  • My Tinder profile now lists me as a Cuomo-sexual.

  • And the thing that I've been enjoying

  • about Cuomo is that in these dark times,

  • he also provides us with some entertainment.

  • It's not just facts, it's not just plans.

  • It's entertainment.

  • I wait for his interviews on CNN that he has with his brother,

  • because they always yield gems like this.

  • Let me ask you something.

  • Uh, with all of this adulation

  • that you're getting for doing your job,

  • are you thinking about running for president?

  • -Tell the audience. -No. No.

  • No, you won't answer?

  • No. I answered. The answer's "no."

  • -I answered the question. -No, you're not thinking about it?

  • Sometimes it's one word. I said "no."

  • -No. -Have you thought about it?

  • No.

  • Are you open to thinking about it?

  • No.

  • Might you think about it at some point?

  • No.

  • How can you know what you might think about

  • at some point right now?

  • Because I know what I might think about,

  • and what I won't think about.

  • But you're a great interviewer, by the way.

  • Appreciate it. Learned from the best.

  • Okay, from now on, we should make it a rule

  • that every single politician has to be interviewed

  • by their siblings, 'cause siblings don't give a (bleep).

  • Did you see how he interrogated him?

  • "Are you running for president?" "No."

  • "Are you running for president?" "No."

  • "Are you running for president?" "Leave me alone!"

  • "Leader says what?"

  • "What? Aah, you got me!"

  • So look, right now,

  • leaders around the world who are messing up--

  • they might want to take this crisis a little more seriously

  • because remember this.

  • Coronavirus will disappear some day,

  • but your screwups will never go away,

  • not even with a sauna and a couple shots of vodka.

  • Well, that's our show for today.

  • Before we go, though, don't forget.

  • Doctors and nurses and first responders around the country

  • are still struggling to get the masks, gloves and gowns

  • that they need to protect themselves.

  • But you can help.

  • So please go to Thrive Global's First Responders First

  • and donate whatever you can

  • to get PPE to the people saving lives right now.

  • And if you want to help in New York City specifically,

  • then you can go to the New York Mayor's Fund COVID-19 response

  • and donate there.

  • Stay safe out there. Wash your hands,

  • don't murder your roommates, and I'll see you again tomorrow.

Hey, everybody. Trevor Noah here.

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コロナウイルス時のリーダーシップ。トランプ氏はどこにスタックアップしているのか?| 日刊社交辞令ショー (Leadership During Coronavirus: Where Does Trump Stack Up? | The Daily Social Distancing Show)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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