The only redeeming factor in this docu was the overview of Iraq and the troops--seeing firsthand what they are enduring in the sandbox landscape there--135 degrees of dehydration. The comedy?!--if you can call it that--sucked! Terrible. When Ross kicked off with that slur against Rosie O'Donnell's p-ssy--not in the least even humorous--really bad slur. Didn't get any laughs either. His poem bits were funny--it would have been so much better if this bunch could stick with clean humor instead of smut. And all of them use "f-in" as an adjective over and over and over. It's constant f this and f that. Doubt that Bob Hope needed to use constant obscenity to get a laugh. And what a motley crew they were. It was an embarrassment. This is all our country could get to volunteer to entertain our troops?? I used to think Drew Carey was funny, but this made me disrespect him. And Kathy should have dressed her TV part with the blue eye-shadow rather than be herself--herself is not funny and not in the least presentable--a slob. The classroom film that got included because a soldier gave it to Ross to insert was extremely touching and those Iraqi children were just beautiful!! Which made the Iraqi joke slurs onstage all the more trite. The only reason to watch this is to get a feel for the war in Iraq and to see the super tacky Saddam Hussein palace decor--especially those beautiful children and other natives like the bellboys who laughed genuinely and were human beings just like the rest of us. War is sad because of the "us and them" division it creates where "them" are all deemed enemies; when, in fact, we are all spiritual beings here, having a human experience. War is not meant for children and other living things.