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The 'Rally to Restore Sanity' is coming! Send in the wonks.

Jon Stewart is filming his 'Daily Show' in Washington ahead of this weekend's 'Rally to Restore Sanity.' His guest list 鈥 and his questions 鈥 give the appearance that he's being soft on Democrats.

Jon Stewart appears on stage at Comedy Central's 'Night Of Too Many Stars: An Overbooked Concert For Autism Education' in New York on Oct. 2. Stewart's 'Rally to Restore Sanity is set to take place in Washington on Oct. 30.

Charles Sykes/AP/file

October 26, 2010

Jon Stewart鈥檚 鈥Daily Show鈥 is filming in Washington this week. Let the parade of the wonks begin!

What do we mean by that? Well, Stewart landed President Obama as a guest for Wednesday鈥檚 show. That鈥檚 a coup for the comedian in advance of his 鈥Rally to Restore Sanity,鈥 scheduled for Saturday on the National Mall.

But to get Mr. Obama, maybe 鈥 just maybe 鈥 Mr. Stewart agreed to have some other administration folks on as well. Such as Monday鈥檚 headliner: the chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers.

鈥淥ur guest tonight, President Barack Obama鈥檚 ... chief economist Austan Goolsbee. He鈥檚 good, too,鈥 said Stewart at the start of the show, sort of apologizing in advance for the interviewee.

And he was good, or at least smooth 鈥 Mr. Goolsbee got his top job in part because he is a skilled television performer. It helps that he did improvisational comedy when he was a student at Yale. Though he did keep thrusting his arms forward, hands clenched, in what Stewart dubbed his 鈥渟trangle motion鈥.

(We鈥檙e surprised Stewart did not go for the comic effect of the name, which sounds something like a character from a British film. 鈥淎ustan Gooooollllllssssbeeeee, International Behavioral Economist of Mystery...)

The interview was pretty substantive. It dealt with the administration鈥檚 position on why unemployment is so high (the recession dug a very deep hole, and it will a long time to climb out of it) and Republican attitudes towards Obama (鈥淚t鈥檚 like the old East German judge 鈥 he can hit a triple Lutz, and they鈥檙e still going to give him a two,鈥 said Goolsbee.)

But is Stewart too soft on Democratic interviewees? He let Goolsbee frame things up just the way the administration would like, days before a big election, on national TV. For instance, in the extended dance mix of the interview, which you can see on the web, Goolsbee described the president鈥檚 September proposal to spend another $50 billion on roads and other infrastructure as something 鈥渏ust being held up鈥 by politically motivated GOP resistance.

Perhaps there is some of that. But there are also a lot of Republican and Democratic lawmakers who think that voting for another $50 billion in government spending is not the right thing to do now, given the current fiscal environment.

Stewart鈥檚 response? 鈥淚鈥檓 with you . . . you鈥檙e Braveheart as far as I鈥檓 concerned,鈥 he said to Goolsbee.

Stewart was kidding there, probably. Perhaps he was still worried about that strangle motion.

Meanwhile, the parade of Democrats who are on the thin side and wear suits continues on Tuesday, with an appearance by Sen. Ted Kaufman (D) of Delaware, the former Joe Biden staffer who got appointed to the seat after Joe got his new VP job.

That鈥檚 the seat that Republican Christine O鈥橠onnell and Democrat Chris Coons are now vying for. (Mr. Kaufman himself was just a placeholder 鈥 he didn鈥檛 run to get elected in his own right.) Do we think Stewart might possibly raise the subject of, say, someone鈥檚 old I-tried-witchcraft-as-a-youngster statement? Or her recent pronouncements on the separation of church and state?

Perish the thought.