“I think I’ve become one of those Trump supporters that you keep speaking of, and I essentially am completely immune to any bad news about Trump,” Roe told Rush. “You know, for hundreds of days since Trump came on the scene, every day I wake up to Trump lost a debate, he insulted media, he insulted Megyn Kelly, he’s not acting presidential. It’s always something new. So as the Doctor of Democracy, I’m gonna ask if you can make a diagnosis for me, and I’m gonna tell you, this is my worst symptom, and I’m being a hundred percent honest. My wife thinks I’m nuts. But I stay up at night and watch 2016 election night TV coverage reruns on YouTube —“

Roe in Bonita Springs, Florida, who called in to the Rush Limbaugh Show on Friday may have opened the floodgates for a great new fad: watching television reruns of Election Night 2016.

Watching the changing faces of the talking heads on CNN, MSNBC, ABC and the other networks is the best televised comedy you’ll ever see, particularly at 9 p.m. when it started to hit home that Donald Trump, the candidate they all laughed at during the campaign, and not Hillary, was going to be president.

“Oh, it’s funny as hell,” Rush told Roe. “I’ve advocated that people take some time to do it. You can find the coverage on YouTube, and I’ve told people, you know, start about seven o’clock, and you’ll see everybody begin to change at nine. That’s when it begins to creep over them that something’s wrong. And you go from a party-like atmosphere of just practically uncontrollable joy to disbelief and panic inside of two hours. It is fascinating to watch it again. And it explains why we’re where we are now. They still haven’t come to grips. They don’t think they’ve awakened from the bad dream yet.”

“Yeah,” said Roe. “And for me, every time I watch these reruns, I grab a little adult beverage and it’s like celebrating all over again.”

Sob sisters, both female and male, started coming out of the woodwork loudly wailing their regret.

like the little kindergartener suddenly realizing Mommy’s leaving him with all those strangers on his first day at school, CNN’s Wolf Blitzer, looked like he was about to cry.

Hillary Clinton shill and ABC debate moderator Martha Raddatz did cry.

CNN political commentator Van Jones hit the melodrama button asking: “How do I explain this to my children,” calling Trump’s victory a “nightmare” and “white lash” that will make parents “afraid of breakfast” with their children in the morning.

Election night was a public slap in the face to the talking heads of television and their running dog mainstream media pals who had repeatedly told their viewers, listeners and readers nonstop throughout the campaign that Trump would NEVER win.

All but impossible to walk that one back.