After Sarah Palin's bizarre Iowa speech attracted quite some negative humorous attention over the weekend, Jon Stewart decided to poke some fun as well, The Independent reported.

Speaking at the Iowa Freedom Summit in Des Moines on Saturday, the former Alaska governor and one-time vice presidential candidate delivered a speech that John Fund of the National Review described as "meandering and often bizarre."

"Things must change for our government. Look at it. It isn't too big to fail. It's too big to succeed! It's too big to succeed, so we can afford no retreads or nothing will change with the same people and same policies that got us into the status quo. Another Latin word, status quo, and it stands for, 'Man, the middle-class everyday Americans are really gettin' taken for a ride,'" Palin said during a "long, rambling, and at times barely coherent" speech.

"Our president musta missed growing up because this insistence... it's lawlessness of he trying to get his way, it tramples our constitution... from debt... and I want to get into the details of everything," she said, adding later on that her teleprompter had broken.

Although Stewart found plenty of ridiculous moments to cover from the Iowa Freedom Summit, including Sen. Ted Cruz channeling Ned Flanders and Texas Gov. Rick Perry channeling Howard Dean, he deemed Palin's speech as the most odd one, The Huffington Post reported.

"A lot of Republicans who will never be president met this weekend," Stewart began on Monday night's "Daily Show." "And it's the subject of tonight's Democalypse 2016."

"Incoherent, rambling, unintelligible, folksy idioms - she's not speaking at a political event. Sarah Palin is trying to sell America a Lincoln," the Daily Show host said, adding that the Republicans "cannot get more entertaining and less electable..."

"You know, that's the kind of talk you normally hear right before the pharmacist says, 'Ma'am, you've got to leave the Walgreens. Now we know what it's like to get cornered by Palin at an open-bar wedding," Stewart added, accoridng to The Wall Street Journal.