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Tag: Jon Stewart

  • ‘The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart Addresses Jimmy Kimmel’s Return & Trump’s “Authoritarian Power Grabs”: “He Does Not Give A F— Anymore”

    The Daily Show‘s Jon Stewart addressed ABC’s reinstatement of Jimmy Kimmel‘s late-night show, set to return tomorrow, and issued a stern warning to those who would continue to back president Donald Trump throughout his continued “authoritarian power grabs.”

    First tackling Kimmel’s forthcoming reprisal following his abrupt and indefinite preemption by the Disney broadcasting network, which received strong audience applause and cheers, Stewart said, “I’ll tell you, Jimmy Kimmel’s flying high like Advil today,” referencing Trump’s press conference earlier today on the causes of autism, which he linked to acetaminophen usage.

    The political comic continued, “That campaign that you all launched, pretending that you were going to cancel Hulu while secretly racing through four seasons of Only Murders in the Building, that really worked, congratulations.”

    He added of parent corporation Disney’s dominance in the media: “Wasn’t it interesting, to try and figure out all the tentacles Disney has in your daily life? It’s one thing to swear off cruises, but the Avengers? Nahhh. How is it possible that by getting rid of one company, I can’t watch Winnie the Pooh or Monday Night Football? Or listen to early Hilary Duff?”

    Later in the segment — after discussing Trump’s recent Truth Social post, in which he urged U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi to enable the Department of Justice to prosecute his political rivals — Stewart issued a call to Trump’s supporters.

    “You don’t have to bend over backwards trying to make Trump’s authoritarian power grabs seem like the rule of law. He does not give a f— anymore. He’s saying it straight-up,” the host said. “Trump is saying: ‘The people like dictators.’ Trump is saying: ‘I hate my opponents, and I want them punished.’ And Trump is saying: ‘I’ll use all the levers of government at my disposal to accomplish that goal.’ So you can get on board with that and say, ‘I’m with that,’ or you can join the rest of us and fight like hell for this constitutional republic.”

    Watch the episode here:

    Natalie Oganesyan

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  • Jon Stewart Slams Elon Musk’s Reckless “Dark MAGA” Appearance at Trump Rally

    Jon Stewart Slams Elon Musk’s Reckless “Dark MAGA” Appearance at Trump Rally

    When Elon Musk sauntered onstage at Donald Trump’s most recent Pennsylvania rally, wearing an Occupy Mars T-shirt and an all-black Make America Great Again hat, he declared himself not only a Trump supporter, but a heavy for “dark MAGA.”

    “Ooh, dark MAGA,” Jon Stewart quipped on Monday’s episode of The Daily Show. “I didn’t know it came in flavors! I wonder if for the holidays they’ll come out with peppermint bark MAGA. Or pumpkin spice MAGA.” After taking some swipes at Musk’s overly enthusiastic presence at the rally—“He’s acting like a guy who won a radio contest”—the late-night host grew serious about the tech billionaire’s assertion that Democrats are the anti-free speech party.

    “Now, you might think one of the world’s richest men controlling one of the world’s most influential platforms could be a recipe for what some may consider election interference,” Stewart began. “You stupid, stupid people. You disgust me. Election interference is what Mark Zuckerberg did.” Stewart then reminded viewers that Trump accused the Facebook founder of election interference back in 2016 and 2020, although the ex-president seemingly has no issue this election cycle with Musk offering his followers money to register swing voters.

    Stewart also noted that Trump’s campaign has called the new movie The Apprentice, a fictionalized depiction of Trump’s early rise to power, “election interference by Hollywood elites,” and that Trump has threatened legal action over its release. Said Stewart, “Oh, come on! That’s election interference? Maybe it’s election interference, but you gotta be a little bit flattered that you’re being played by Sebastian Stan.”

    The segment then cut to a clip of Musk claiming that Democrats are coming after free speech. “Elon, were you not watching the rest of the show?” Stewart asked. “A movie Trump doesn’t like is going to get sued. A tech mogul he doesn’t like, he wants to put in prison. It’s not free speech if only Trump’s admirers get to do it without consequence.”

    Stewart’s commentary turned even more contentious after he played a clip of Musk at the rally. “At least the Constitution remains intact and is there to ensure that we have the First Amendment,” Musk said. “The Second Amendment is there to ensure that we have the First Amendment.”

    “Guns don’t protect our free speech!” Stewart replied. “Our free speech is protected by the consent of the governed, laid out through the Constitution. It’s not based on the threat of violence. It’s based on elections, organizing referendums, a judicial system. Our social contract offers many, many avenues to remedy these issues, and allows sides to be heard and adjudicated. Guns, from what I can tell, seem to mostly protect the speech of the people holding the gun.”

    Stewart didn’t stop there. Musk’s words, he said, are “a tool of intimidation, and one that I think is actually being irresponsibly and recklessly invoked. Because some people in your crowd thought they might have been shadow-banned by Facebook. I mean, for God’s sake: you guys are in Butler, Pennsylvania. The whole reason you’re there is because some fucking asshole with an AR-15 tried to permanently litigate his vision of this country’s free speech. That’s why you’re there. The whole point of a society is, guns don’t decide it. I would prefer at this moment not to trade in a government that offers me many remedies for my concerns, legitimate or illegitimate, for a situation where my rights are determined by how many militia members agree with me.”

    Savannah Walsh

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  • Veterans’ fundraiser draws Bruce Springsteen, Jerry Seinfeld, Questlove and Norah Jones

    Veterans’ fundraiser draws Bruce Springsteen, Jerry Seinfeld, Questlove and Norah Jones

    NEW YORK (AP) — Jerry Seinfeld, Bruce Springsteen, Jim Gaffigan, Norah Jones, Questlove and the ever-present Jon Stewart will stand up later this year at the annual Stand Up for Heroes fundraiser.

    The fundraiser, which benefits injured veterans and their families, will also feature comedian Mark Normand and musician Patti Scialfa, who is married to Springsteen. Stewart has been a steady presence at the annual event.

    This year’s event will take place Nov. 11 at David Geffen Hall at the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts in New York City. Since its inception, Stand Up for Heroes has raised $84 million to help veterans and military families.

    Stand Up for Heroes was first held in 2007 and is produced by the New York Comedy Festival and the Bob Woodruff Foundation. Woodruff was nearly killed during a 2006 attack in Iraq while embedded with U.S. troops for ABC News.

    “Our 18th Stand Up for Heroes promises to be another great evening of laughter, music, and entertainment, as well as a time to recognize our veterans, service members, and their families,” Suni Harford, board chair of the Bob Woodruff Foundation, said in a statement. “With our event falling on Veterans Day, it’s a perfect time to share our veterans’ stories and collectively honor them.”

    Tickets for Stand Up for Heroes go on sale Thursday through bobwoodrufffoundation.org and the Lincoln Center box office.

    ___

    Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits

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  • Jon Stewart Says ‘We Dodged a Catastrophe’ After Trump Assassination Attempt, ‘but It Was Still a Tragedy’

    Jon Stewart Says ‘We Dodged a Catastrophe’ After Trump Assassination Attempt, ‘but It Was Still a Tragedy’

    Jon Stewart returned to “The Daily Show” desk Tuesday night and spoke about the attempted assassination of former President Donald Trump at a rally in Butler, Pa., on Saturday, July 13.

    “We dodged a catastrophe, but it was still a tragedy,” Stewart said on “The Daily Show.” He then paid tribute to firefighter Corey Comperatore, who was shot and killed at the Pennsylvania rally.

    “He had given his life in service to his community and he died literally shielding his family,” Stewart said of Comperatore. “He’s a reminder that in those moments of crisis, there are helpers, and we can all make a choice to try and be one of those people.”

    Earlier in his opening, Stewart joked about how “the internet is a great source of information” when “shit hits the fan” in the U.S.

    “For instance, within minutes, I found out that this is staged, and then I found out that it was actually an inside job, and then I found out it was Joe Biden who ordered it,” Stewart said, jokingly, of the Trump shooting conspiracy theories.

    The “Daily Show” host then discussed why people feel the need to immediately know the suspect’s identity and their background following a tragic event.

    “When we hear about a horrific event, you’re on pins and needles in this sort of reverse demographic lottery to make sure that the psychopathic shooter doesn’t belong to one of your teams,” Stewart commented. “You just sit there going, please, no democrats, no liberals, no progressives — it’s like that Press Your Luck game… And we’re all doing it. We have to know what our posture will be on the tragedy.”

    He added, “And none of knows what’s gonna happen next other than there will be another tragedy in this country, self-inflicted by us to us, and then we’ll have this feeling again.”

    When late-night TV returned on Monday, various hosts addressed the shooting that left one rally attendee dead, injured Trump and rattled the country.

    “My immediate reaction when I saw this on Saturday were horror at what was unfolding, relief that Donald Trump had lived, and frankly, grief for my beautiful country,” said Stephen Colbert on “The Late Show,” adding, “Though, I could just as easily start the show moaning on the floor, because how many times do we need to learn the lesson that violence has no role in our politics? The entire objective of a democracy is the fight out our differences with as the saying goes, ballot, not a bullet.”

    On NBC’s “Late Night,” Seth Meyers condemned the “horrifying” attack against Trump and called for “an inclusive politics of compassion, empathy and community.”

    Meyers added, “What we don’t need are the opportunistic purveyors of paranoia, suspicion and fear who have already rushed to fill the void with incendiary conspiracy theories and lies,” before cutting to coverage of the assassination on various news programs.

    “Jimmy Kimmel Live” guest host Anthony Anderson opened Monday’s show with a joke: “Everybody’s still shaken up by the tragic events at the Trump rally this Saturday. All weekend, I kept thinking, ‘I wonder what Jimmy Kimmel is going to say about this on Monday?’ And then I was like, oh, I am Jimmy Kimmel on Monday.”

    The “Black-ish” star added that “hopefully this will be a moment that we can all take a step back from the hatred and vitriol in our politics and maybe chill the f— out.”

    Ethan Shanfeld

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  • The Daily Show Cancels Its Trip to the RNC

    The Daily Show Cancels Its Trip to the RNC

    Photo: Comedy Central/YouTube

    Following the attempted assassination of former president Donald Trump, The Daily Show is reevaluating their coverage of the Republican National Convention. The plan had been to film a week of shows in Milwaukee, concluding with a live ep hosted by Jon Stewart. That plan is now a no-go, per Deadline. Instead, the show will go dark Monday, followed by episodes in New York Tuesday-Thursday. Stewart may take over hosting duties as early as Tuesday. TDS expressed apologies on social media for not having an immediate plan for how to handle yet another unprecedented event in politics. “Our apologies for the inconvenience,” it read, “but due to logistical issues and the evolving situation in Milwaukee, we need to reschedule our events on the ground in Wisconsin and will look to make those up in the coming weeks.”

    How other shows will handle the shooting/the convention is not yet known. Security at the RNC is expected to be tightened. Per Deadline, Stephen Colbert is still expected to do live episode after every night of the convention. These eps were always planned to take place in New York rather than on the road.

    Bethy Squires

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  • ‘The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart To Host Live Shows On Closing Nights Of RNC & DNC

    ‘The Daily Show’s Jon Stewart To Host Live Shows On Closing Nights Of RNC & DNC

    Jon Stewart is set to host live shows of The Daily Show following the closing night of the Republican & Democratic National Conventions.

    The Comedy Central host will broadcast live from Milwaukee on Thursday, July 18th, and Chicago on Thursday, August 22nd.

    Stewart will share hosting duties with the News Team throughout the DNC & RNC as part of the show’s Indecision 2024 election coverage.

    The Daily Show will broadcast from the Marcus Performing Arts Center in Milwaukee, WI, throughout the RNC and the Athenaeum Center for Thought & Culture in Chicago, IL, during the DNC.

    The News Team includes Ronny Chieng, Jordan Klepper, Michael Kosta, and Desi Lydic, alongside Dulcé Sloan and Lewis Black, with new additions Troy Iwata, Josh Johnson, and Grace Kuhlenschmidt.

    RELATED: ‘The Daily Show’: Jon Stewart Says Donald Trump “Is Like A Corruption Mr. Magoo” & Wants To Know Why Jerry Seinfeld Is “Taking So Much Sh**”

    The Daily Show will air a full week of shows from the RNC in Milwaukee (July 15-18) and the DNC in Chicago (August 19-22), respectively, airing weeknights at 11 p.m. ET/PT.

    As part of Indecision 2024, Stewart will host two live episodes following the presidential debates. He will host the episodes on Thursday, June 27, and Tuesday, September 10, after the debates between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump.

    In addition to his weekly hosting duties on The Daily Show, Stewart also recently took on podcasting with The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart.

    “After much reflection, meditation and prayer, I have decided to extend my work week to two days,” Stewart said in a statement. “All hail Comedy Central!”

    Armando Tinoco

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  • Jon Stewart Says Apple Asked Him Not To Have FTC Chair Lina Khan On ‘The Problem With Jon Stewart’

    Jon Stewart Says Apple Asked Him Not To Have FTC Chair Lina Khan On ‘The Problem With Jon Stewart’

    Last month, the U.S. Justice Department and more than a dozen state attorneys general sued Apple, claiming that the tech giant has an illegal monopoly over the smartphone market and warning that Apple’s monopoly on smartphones could extend to other areas of the economy, including entertainment.

    Tonight on The Daily Show, Jon Stewart offered a view into his own tussle with Apple related to his Apple TV+ comedy show The Problem With Jon Stewart.

    “I wanted to have you on a podcast and Apple asked us not to do it,” the Daily Show host said to his guest, Federal Trade Commission Chair Lina Khan, referencing the podcast that was an extension of the Apple show, which the tech giant canceled in October.

    “They literally said, ‘Please don’t talk to her,’” Stewart told Khan.

    The FTC chair has been outspoken about her concerns over what she sees are monopolistic practices by tech giants like Apple which, she told Stewart tonight, have stifled consumer choice.

    Stewart offered another example.

    “They wouldn’t let us do even that dumb thing we just did in the first act on AI,” Stewart said, referring to a segment earlier in tonight’s show on what he termed “the false promise of A.I.”

    “Like, what is that sensitivity? Why are they so afraid to even have these conversations out in the public sphere?” he asked.

    “I think it just shows the danger of what happens when you concentrate so much power and so much decision making in a small number of companies,” answered Khan.

    tomt

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  • Jon Stewart Made Millions By Overinflating Value Of His Home But Attacked Trump For Doing The Same: Report

    Jon Stewart Made Millions By Overinflating Value Of His Home But Attacked Trump For Doing The Same: Report

    Screenshot: Simon Ateba

    Comedian Jon Stewart was called out for benefitting handsomely by overinflating the value of his New York City penthouse.

    Stewart reportedly sold the penthouse in 2014 for 829% more than its assessed market value.

    The New York Post obtained assessor records showing a market value of just under $1.9 million for the property at the time.

    Stewart though, managed to sell the duplex to financier Parag Pande for $17.5 million.

    According to the Post, the “actual assessor valuation was even lower, at $847,174.”

    RELATED: Flashback: Tucker Carlson Hammered Jon Stewart So Hard it Ended His CNN Gig

    Jon Stewart’s House

    Details of the sale of Jon Stewart’s penthouse have been known for some time. And anybody who cared could have easily obtained those assessor records since 2014.

    But, what prompted the information to come to light was The Daily Show host’s recent insistence that Donald Trump’s civil fraud trial proved he left victims in his wake by overinflating the value of properties.

    Stewart played a clip of Shark Tank star Kevin O’Leary insisting the New York AG had gone after Trump using an archaic law despite the fact “there were no Victims, no Damages, no Complaints.”

    Stewart though, insists otherwise.

    “How is he (O’Leary) not this mad about overvaluations in the real world?” he said. Stewart even used the sale of a Trump penthouse in his example for gullible viewers.

    “Because they are not victimless crimes,” he concludes.

    Hypocrisy, party of one.

    RELATED: ‘Shark Tank’ Star Kevin O’Leary Torches Trump Civil Ruling – ‘It’s Un-American’

    Daily Show Host Fires Back

    Without the aid of cut-and-paste video clips, which his show is known for (they present out-of-context clips as news, then say, ‘Hey, we’re just comedy,’ while fans actually get their current events information from them), Jon Stewart’s response to the report didn’t go well.

    Stewart wrote on X with all the fervor of a disheveled AOC late to her latest therapy session. Roping in irrelevant other cases – hush money, insurrection! – to suggest he’s not nearly as bad as Trump.

    “OMG!! I’ve been caught doing something not remotely similar to Trump! I guess all I need to do now is start a fraud college, steal classified docs, bankrupt casinos, pay hush money, grab pussies, discriminate in housing, cheat at golf and foment insurrection and you’ll revere me!” he said.

    Just keep firing until something sticks, Jon.

    This is a guy the left reveres as an intellectual. They also view him as funny. And yet, he’s giving off serious Rashida Tlaib ‘impeach the mother******’ vibes as a defense.

    Obviously, the overinflation of values isn’t an apples-to-apples comparison. But Stewart showing he can’t reign in his emotions in his defense isn’t an exoneration either.

    O’Leary said in his interview that the practice of trying to sell properties at higher prices is practically like breathing in the real estate business.

    “That fact that he was found guilty, you might as well find guilty every real estate developer on Earth,” O’Leary told The New York Post. “I don’t understand where someone got hurt … What developer doesn’t ask for the highest price valued for any building they built?”

    Certainly, Jon Stewart did just that.

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    Radio Host Mocks Karine Jean-Pierre’s ‘Fragility’ After She Abruptly Ends Interview

    Rusty Weiss

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  • Jon Stewart pays tribute to dog crew member Dipper

    Jon Stewart pays tribute to dog crew member Dipper

    Jon Stewart gave an emotional tribute to his dog Dipper on Monday night during his “moment of zen” segment on “The Daily Show.”Stewart announced that his dog, and fellow “Daily Show” crew member, Dipper, had passed away on Sunday night.”Dipper passed away yesterday,” Stewart said. “He was ready. He was tired, but I wasn’t.”Stewart then shared how his family got Dipper after his kids wanted to raise money for Animal Haven in New York City. When selling cupcakes outside, the shelter brought out a brindle pitbull who lost his leg after being hit by a car. Stewart’s family decided to adopt Dipper that day and was a member of the family for the past 12 years. Stewart also shared that Dipper would come to “The Daily Show” every day and was a member of “The Daily Show” dog crew. “We’d come to tape this show, and Dipper would wait for me to be done,” Stewart said. “He met actors and authors and presidents and kings. And he did what the Taliban could not do, which is, put a scare into Malala Yousafzai.”Stewart then showed a video of Malala Yousafzai running away when she saw Dipper in the hallway when she appeared on the show. “My wish for you is one day you find that dog, that one dog… It’s just… It’s the best,” Stewart said before dedicating his “moment of zen” to a video of Dipper.

    Jon Stewart gave an emotional tribute to his dog Dipper on Monday night during his “moment of zen” segment on “The Daily Show.”

    Stewart announced that his dog, and fellow “Daily Show” crew member, Dipper, had passed away on Sunday night.

    “Dipper passed away yesterday,” Stewart said. “He was ready. He was tired, but I wasn’t.”

    Stewart then shared how his family got Dipper after his kids wanted to raise money for Animal Haven in New York City. When selling cupcakes outside, the shelter brought out a brindle pitbull who lost his leg after being hit by a car.

    Stewart’s family decided to adopt Dipper that day and was a member of the family for the past 12 years.

    Stewart also shared that Dipper would come to “The Daily Show” every day and was a member of “The Daily Show” dog crew.

    “We’d come to tape this show, and Dipper would wait for me to be done,” Stewart said. “He met actors and authors and presidents and kings. And he did what the Taliban could not do, which is, put a scare into Malala Yousafzai.”

    Stewart then showed a video of Malala Yousafzai running away when she saw Dipper in the hallway when she appeared on the show.

    “My wish for you is one day you find that dog, that one dog… It’s just… It’s the best,” Stewart said before dedicating his “moment of zen” to a video of Dipper.

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  • The Real Difference Between Trump and Biden

    The Real Difference Between Trump and Biden

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    Produced by ElevenLabs and NOA, News Over Audio, using AI narration.

    Americans likely face a choice this fall between two men they don’t want for president. Or they can stay home and get one of the two guys they don’t want for president anyway. The reasons for voter disdain are clear enough: Poll respondents say Joe Biden is too old, an impression reinforced by last week’s special-counsel report, and they have always been troubled by Donald Trump’s judgment and character (though a majority think he’s too old too.)

    Voters have genuine questions about both men. But we’ve seen each occupy the presidency. One thing the two administrations have made clear is that whereas Biden follows an approach to governance that seems to offset some of his weaknesses, Trump’s preferred managerial style seems to amplify his.

    Many people treat elections as a chance to vote a single individual into office; as a result, they tend to focus disproportionately on the personality, character, and temperament of the people running. But voters are also choosing a platform—a set of policies as well as a set of people, chosen by the president, who will shape and implement them. The president is the conductor of an orchestra, not a solo artist. As the past eight years have made very clear, the difference in governance between a Trump administration and a Biden administration is not subtle—for example, on foreign policy, border security, and economics—and voters have plenty of evidence on which to base their decision.

    But for the sake of argument, let’s consider the potential effects of Biden’s failures of memory and Trump’s … well, it’s a little tough to say what exactly is going on with Trump’s mental state. The former president has always had a penchant for saying strange things and acting impulsively, and it’s hard to know whether recent lapses are indications of new troubles or the same deficits that have long been present. His always-dark rhetoric has become more apocalyptic and vengeance-focused, and he frequently seems forgetful or confused about basic facts.

    To what extent would either of their struggles be material in a future presidential term? One key distinction is that Biden and Trump have fundamentally different conceptions of the presidency as an office. Biden’s approach to governance has been more or less in keeping with the traditions of recent decades. Biden’s Cabinet and West Wing are (for better or worse) stocked with longtime political and policy hands who have extensive experience in government. Cabinet secretaries largely run their departments through normal channels. Policy proposals are usually formulated by subject-area experts. The president’s job is to sit atop this apparatus and set broad direction.

    Biden doesn’t always defer to experts, and he has clashed with and overruled advisers on some topics, including, notably, the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan. Such occasional clashes are fairly typical—as long as they’re occasional. As my colleague Graeme Wood wrote this week, “The presidency is an endless series of judgment calls, not a four-year math test. In fact, large parts of the executive branch exist, in effect, to do the math problems on the president’s behalf, then present to him all those tough judgment calls with the calculations already factored in.”

    This doesn’t mean that Biden’s readily apparent aging doesn’t bring risks. The presidency requires a great deal of energy, and crises can happen at all hours and on top of one another, testing the stamina of any person. The oldest president before Biden, Ronald Reagan, struggled with acuity in his second term, an administration that produced a huge, appalling scandal of which he claimed to be unaware.

    In contrast to the model of the president as the ultimate decision maker, Trump has approached the presidency less like a Fortune 500 CEO and more like the sole proprietor of a small business. (Though he boasts about his experience running a business empire, the Trump Organization also ran this way—it is a company with a large bottom line but with concentrated and insular management by corporate standards.) As president, Trump had a tendency to micromanage details—the launching system for a new aircraft carrier, the paint scheme on Air Force One—while evincing little interest in major policy questions, such as a long-promised replacement for Obamacare.

    At times, Trump has described his role in practically messianic terms: “I alone can fix it,” he infamously said at the 2016 Republican National Convention. He has claimed to be the world’s foremost expert on a wide variety of subjects, and he often disregarded the views of policy experts in his administration, complaining that they tried to talk him out of ideas (when they didn’t just obstruct him). He and his allies have embarked on a major campaign to ensure that staffers in a second Trump administration would be picked for their ideological and personal loyalty to him. Axios has reported that the speechwriter Stephen Miller could be the next attorney general, even though Miller is not an attorney.

    Perhaps as a result of these different approaches to the job, people who have served under the men have divergent views on them. Whereas Biden can seem bumbling and mild in public, aides’ accounts of his private demeanor depict an engaged, incisive, and sometimes hot-tempered president. That’s also the view that emerges from my colleague Franklin Foer’s book The Last Politician. “He has a kind of mantra: ‘You can never give me too much detail,’” National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan has said. “The most difficult part about a meeting with President Biden is preparing for it, because he is sharp, intensely probing, and detail-oriented and focused,” Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said last weekend. (As Jon Stewart noted on Monday night, the public might be more convinced were these moments videotaped, like the gaffes.)

    Former Trump aides are not so complimentary. Former White House Chief of Staff John Kelly called Trump “a person that has nothing but contempt for our democratic institutions, our Constitution, and the rule of law,” adding, “God help us.” Former Attorney General Bill Barr said that he “shouldn’t be anywhere near the Oval Office.” Former Defense Secretary Mark Esper described him as “unfit for office.” Of 44 former Cabinet members queried by NBC, only four said they supported Trump’s return to office. Even allowing for the puffery of politics, the contrast is dramatic.

    None of this is to say that Biden’s memory lapses aren’t worth concern or that he is as vigorous as he was as a younger man. But someone voting for Biden is selecting, above all, a set of policy ideas and promises that he has laid out, with the expectation that the apparatus of the executive branch will implement them.

    Voting for Trump is opting for a charismatic individual who brings to office a set of attitudes rather than a platform. Considering the presidency as a matter of individual mental acuity grants the field to Trump’s own preferred conception of unified personal power, so it’s striking that the comparison makes the dangers posed by Trump’s mentality so stark.

    David A. Graham

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  • Jon Stewart’s return to ‘The Daily Show’ felt familiar to those who missed him while he was away

    Jon Stewart’s return to ‘The Daily Show’ felt familiar to those who missed him while he was away

    NEW YORK – No, Jon Stewart really wasn’t sitting at his desk at Comedy Central for the last nine years, waiting for someone to turn the lights back on.

    Yet it almost felt that way during Stewart’s return to “The Daily Show” Monday night. His signature moves — blunt satire, facial grimaces, incisive use of video and some occasional lectures — were all intact. Public figures are served notice that the media’s sharpest bull detector is back on the job.

    Stewart has said that the lack of a comedic outlet for his observations as the presidential campaign unfolded largely drove his decision to reprise his most memorable role, one night a week through the election. The much-diminished Comedy Central, unable to find a successor to Trevor Noah as host, happily welcomed him back.

    Questions about the future of late-night TV, which is rapidly shedding viewers and losing influence, won’t be answered in one night. Neither will that night prove Stewart can regain the position of prominence he stepped away from in August 2015.

    But it was a promising start.

    “Are you disappointed yet?” Stewart said after one sophomoric joke, about naming “The Daily Show” election coverage, “Indecision 2024: Electile Dysfunction.”

    HE DOVE DIRECTLY INTO THE NEWS OF THE DAY

    Stewart seemed to take a page from MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow when she turned a daily hosting role into a weekly one. Both resisted trying to do too much, to cram a week’s — or in Stewart’s case, nine years — worth of material into one show. He moved swiftly into the news, and up-to-date doings of President Joe Biden and his Republican rival.

    In Biden’s case, it meant directly addressing questions about his age and fitness for office, which the president’s supporters surely want to avoid. He examined Biden’s news conference last week meant to counter characterizations in special counsel Robert Hur’s report on classified documents found in Biden’s home.

    “Joe Biden had a big press conference to dispel the notion that he may have lost a step and, politically speaking, lost three or four steps,” he said.

    He said about Biden aides who thought it was a good idea for him to turn down a Super Bowl interview in favor of a TikTok appearance: “Fire everyone.”

    Stewart showed tape of administration officials like Vice President Kamala Harris and other Democrats testifying to Biden’s sharpness and suggested it might be a good idea to film the president in those meetings so the public can see him.

    Yet Stewart also used tightly-edited videotape of Donald Trump and his family during depositions saying they couldn’t recall things to counter the notion that Biden is alone in showing memory issues during such high-pressure legal proceedings. “The Daily Show” even found one where Trump said he couldn’t remember talking about how good his memory is.

    His main point: Worries about whether either the 81-year-old Biden or 77-year-old Trump are up to the toughest job in the world shouldn’t be swept under the rug.

    “It is the candidates’ job to assuage concerns, not the voters’ job not to mention them,” Stewart said.

    HE WAS PRETTY WELL-RECEIVED BY CRITICS

    Based on one night, a handful of critics noted Stewart’s seamless transition.

    Alison Herman of Variety wrote that “it almost seemed like he never left,” a phrase repeated in the headlines of reviews by both NPR critic Eric Deggans and CNN’s Brian Lowry.

    “From the show’s opening moments, Stewart eased back into the host’s chair without missing a beat, firing off jokes with a familiar style that felt like he had left just a few weeks ago, rather than in 2015,” Deggans wrote. “He brought a confidence the show sorely needs.”

    Jeremy Egner of The New York Times wrote that “Stewart’s first night found him grayer — at one point he used his own wizened face as a prop in a joke about the presidential candidates’ ages. But he was otherwise in classic form.”

    The comparison of Stewart returning to “The Daily Show” and two candidates likely staging a rematch was too obvious to let go by. Correspondent Dulce Sloan, ostensibly talking about discouraged voters, said they needed someone new, more than just “old white dudes” coming back to reclaim a job.

    “We’re talking about the election, right?” Stewart said.

    The “campaign” interlude allowed Stewart, and viewers who had drifted away from “The Daily Show” after he left, to become acquainted with unfamiliar cast members. An on-set interview with Jordan Klepper, who will host the show for the rest of the week, was less successful.

    During his time away, Stewart spent time as an activist fighting to get benefits for Sept. 11, 2001, responders and two years hosting “The Problem with Jon Stewart” on the Apple TV+ streaming service. He made a subtle allusion to the latter on Monday, saying he would be making jokes about China and AI, subjects that reportedly made Apple uncomfortable before axing the show.

    ___

    David Bauder covers media for The Associated Press. Follow him at http://twitter.com/dbauder

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.





    David Bauder, Associated Press

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  • Jon Stewart returns to host

    Jon Stewart returns to host


    Jon Stewart returns to host “The Daily Show” – CBS News


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    The long-awaited return of “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” premiered Monday on Comedy Central. Stewart talked to “CBS Mornings” about his once-a-week slot ahead of the 2024 presidential election.

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  • Jon Stewart, Rachel Maddow Test Monday Media Model to Boost Talk TV

    Jon Stewart, Rachel Maddow Test Monday Media Model to Boost Talk TV


    Can Mondays do for the TV business what Thursdays and Sundays once did? Some of the medium’s best-known personalities are trying to figure this question out.

    When Jon Stewart re-emerges Monday night as a one-night-a-week host of Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show,” he will join MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow and Jen Psaki in making bespoke Monday appearances for their network, part of what has become a low-key scheduling experiment that actually has high stakes: In a medium best known for offering viewers the same hosts in the same time slots five nights a week, can TV networks that thrive on news-and-talk programs generate new attention and advertising dollars by doling them out less frequently ?

    “Monday is really appealing,” says Stephanie Morales, vice president of media intelligence at Magna, the Interpublic Group media-research firm. It tends to be the second-most-watched day of the week on linear TV, behind Sundays, she says. And viewers of talk and news programs tend to come in with headier expectations, she adds, because they anticipate the host tacking a stack of events that took place over the weekend. Mondays can be a great place to have a top newsmaker or celebrity guest, says Morales, because of the more intense viewership.

    MSNBC and Comedy Central declined to make executives available for comment.

    Their task is a difficult one. By creating a Monday-only talent slot, both networks have created what are essentially three different programs they must promote, market and book. Stewart will cede “Daily Show” broadcasts on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday to the program’s current group of correspondents. Maddow and Psaki make occasional appearances outside of their programs, typically when a big headline rises in the current election cycle and MSNBC offers a different sort of analysis programming in primetime that makes use of multiple contributors.

    Making sure a single day counts for more seems critical to Comedy Central, which lured Stewart back to hosting “The Daily Show” once a week for the 2024 election cycle. Prior to the news of his return, the Paramount Global network had been testing various guest hosts and the show’s own correspondent team — seemingly without much success. Roy Wood Jr., seen as a potential successor to the show’s most recent full-time host, Trevor Noah, opted to leave when Comedy Central would not offer solid details about its plans for the series. What’s more, the late-night show went dark during the recent Hollywood labor strikes, while rivals kept repeats on the air.

    The lack of original episodes may have taken a toll. Advertisers trimmed their support of “Daily” in 2023, according to Vivvix, a tracker of ad outlays. “Daily Show” generated nearly $20.2 million in ad sales in the first 10 months of 2023, compared with $39.9 million in 2022. In 2014, Stewart’s last full year as host, the show took in $129.1 million — a figure it has not matched since.

    Executives at Comedy Central see Mondays as the biggest viewing day of the week for younger audiences — especially men between 18 and 49. They also see Stewart using the day to recap events from the weekend and previous week and for setting an agenda for the week to come.  

    Jon Stewart has the personality to bring in new unique households,” Janice Prewett, group director of media strategy at independent Dallas agency TRG. “There is more opportunity for continued ratings and unique household growth as people are exposed to short-form videos of Jon on the Internet, which could pull them toward tuning in to the show.”

    But will his presence bring more viewers to the rest of the week, when the show’s correspondents will take the lead? Stewart and his WME agent, James Dixon, will serve as executive producers of the program and will have a say on both content and talent. Whether they can grow the program for the long term, or are simply going to keep it going in an election year, remains to be seen.

    There are some signs that a Monday strategy can pay off — a little. In 2023, advertisers increased their spending on MSNBC’s Monday broadcast of “The Rachel Maddow Show,” according to data from ad-tracking company iSpot. The program’s Monday broadcast generated $4.9 million in advertising last year, am 11.6% increase over the $4.4 million in ad dollars spent in 2022, when Maddow announced that she would do Mondays only starting in May of that year.

    Meanwhile, MSNBC has also seen new ad dollars committed to its Monday 8 p.m. slot, according to iSpot. The Monday hour anchored by Chris Hayes in 2022 snared approximately $4.6 million, in 2022, a figure that jumped 21% in 2023 to $5.6 million for an hour that has been anchored by Psaki since late September (Psaki also anchors a show middays on Sunday).

    The move appears to have brought new viewers to the network’s 8 p.m. slot. In January, “Inside with Jen Psaki” on Monday nights notched a 20% gain among viewers between 25 and 54, the demographic most coveted by advertisers, along with a 7% increase in overall viewers. To be sure, such spikes might be expected given that a rotating array of hosts had been anchoring the hour in place of Hayes, who has gained time to devote to other projects for the company.

    Yet there’s little indication the move has helped MSNBC’s ratings across the rest of the week. The overall audiences generated by Maddow and Psaki on Mondays are not duplicated on Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday or Friday.

    “We do not anticipate the specific host change to result in greater viewership. However, we anticipate a potentially small ratings boost as the political season ramps up,” says Prewett. The opportunity for MSNBC, she adds, comes in ”aligning with audiences that Jen and Rachel resonate with most,” but “once the audience settles into the change, there will likely not be a huge opportunity for unique household gains.”

    A case of the Mondays may be a tough one to solve.



    Brian Steinberg

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  • Jon Stewart returning to

    Jon Stewart returning to

    Jon Stewart returning to “The Daily Show” through 2024 election – CBS News


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    In a significant shake-up in late-night TV, Jon Stewart is set to make a grand return in hosting “The Daily Show” weekly in its upcoming season. CBS News’ Vladimir Duthiers has more.

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  • Jon Stewart returning to ‘The Daily Show’ — but only one night a week – National | Globalnews.ca

    Jon Stewart returning to ‘The Daily Show’ — but only one night a week – National | Globalnews.ca


    Jon Stewart is returning to The Daily Show.

    Stewart, who for 16 years helmed the late-night show during its most popular era and transformed the Comedy Central satirical news program into a political heavy hitter, is rejoining the show as a part-time host for the 2024 U.S. election cycle.

    He will make his return to the hosting chair on Feb. 12 and will appear every Monday night leading up to and including the election.

    He is also expected to stay on through 2025 in the role of full-time executive producer.

    Stewart rather cryptically announced his return on social media Wednesday.

    “After much reflection I have decided to enter the transfer portal for my last year of eligibility,” he wrote.

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    Stewart’s homecoming comes after a year-long search for the show’s next host, following Trevor Noah’s abrupt exit at the end of 2022.


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    For the past year, The Daily Show has been relying on a procession of guest hosts that have included Kal Penn, Leslie Jones, Chelsea Handler, Hasan Minhaj and Sarah Silverman.

    “Jon Stewart is the voice of our generation, and we are honored to have him return to Comedy Central’s The Daily Show to help us all make sense of the insanity and division roiling the country as we enter the election season,” said Chris McCarthy, president and CEO of Showtime/MTV Entertainment Studios, in a statement.

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    “In our age of staggering hypocrisy and performative politics, Jon is the perfect person to puncture the empty rhetoric and provide much-needed clarity with his brilliant wit.”

    The Hollywood Reporter suggests that The Daily Show is likely to rely on a team of correspondents for the remainder of the week, including Jordan Klepper, Desi Lydic, Ronny Chieng, Michael Kosta and Dulcé Sloan.

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    Stewart’s homecoming is being heralded as a major coup for Comedy Central, as he was the one to transform the show that not only mocked the news cycle but also informed viewers about political and current affair issues.

    He was the recipient of the 2022 Mark Twain Prize for American Humor and garnered a collective 56 Emmy Award nominations for his work on The Daily Show.

    He is credited with launching the careers of Stephen Colbert, John Oliver, Trevor Noah, Michael Che, and Samantha Bee, as well as Steve Carrell, Jessica Williams, Olivia Munn and Josh Gad.

    The Daily Show airs on Comedy Central and is available the next day on Paramount+ in Canada.

    &copy 2024 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.





    Michelle Butterfield

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  • Lawmakers Question Apple On Whether China Concerns Were Behind End Of Jon Stewart’s Show

    Lawmakers Question Apple On Whether China Concerns Were Behind End Of Jon Stewart’s Show

    Members of a special House committee fired off a letter to Apple, questioning whether the decision to end The Problem with Jon Stewart was due to concerns over the company’s relationship with China.

    Last month, it was announced that the Apple+ show was ending, and The New York Times reported that Stewart told members of his staff that the company was concerned about some of the show’s topics, including China. Stewart wanted creative control of the series, according to the Times and other reports.

    In a letter to CEO Tim Cook, the members of the House of Representatives’ Select Committee on Competition with the Chinese Communist Party wrote, “If these reports are accurate, it potentially speaks to broader concerns about indirect Chinese Communist Party (CCP) influence over the creative expression of American artists and companies on CCP-related topics. It also highlights an additional reason, beyond the traditionally-cited national security rationales, why we encourage Apple to accelerate its efforts to reduce its dependence on the PRC in its core business.”

    The letter was signed by the committee’s chairman, Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-WI) and its top Democrat, Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL).

    The lawmakers wrote, “If Jon Stewart can potentially be impeded from offering commentary on the CCP, what does this mean for less prominent personalities? While there is a chance that a high-profile individual like Jon Stewart can locate another streaming service where he can express his views on PRC-related matters, an aspiring comedian who wants to use satire to make broader points about human rights and authoritarianism faces even bleaker prospects. Respectfully, we believe that this needs to change and responsible creative professionals should be able to freely write and perform on PRC-related topics.”

    The committee also wrote, “To reassure the creative community in light of these reports, we also respectfully request that Apple publicly commit that content that could be perceived as critical of the CCP or the PRC is welcome on Apple TV+ and other Apple services.”

    The committee is asking for a briefing by the company by Dec. 15, and they also plan to speak to Stewart’s representatives.

    A spokesperson for Apple did not immediately return a request for comment.

    The committee has scrutinized China’s influence on American business, including its impact on Hollywood. Gallagher, Krishnamoorthi and other members met with Walt Disney Co. CEO Bob Iger last spring, and held a roundtable with filmmakers and producers on their experiences with the Chinese government and its censorship. The committee also has been planning to have a roundtable to discuss the issues related to entertainment and sports.

    In an interview with Deadline, Gallagher said one of the problems the committee sees is “self-censorship on the front end.”

    “What choices are they already making, knowing that they don’t want to offend China, when they decide to embark on a project? Ask yourself: When was the last time a movie featured a Chinese villain? I can’t think of one. Maybe that’s evidence that self-censorship is happening.”

    In the letter, Gallagher and Krishnamoorthi wrote, “Although we recognize the difficult situation companies may find themselves in, potential decisions to not renew shows, or not produce a film or show in the first place, due to anticipated CCP objections to particular content deny U.S. viewers and global audiences access to important information about the PRC that reflects a broader variety of perspectives.”

    More to come.

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  • ‘The Problem With Jon Stewart’ Is Ending at Apple Amid “Creative Differences”

    ‘The Problem With Jon Stewart’ Is Ending at Apple Amid “Creative Differences”

    Some problems are not easily solved. The New York Times reports that Jon Stewart’s weekly talk series The Problem With Jon Stewart has ended at Apple TV+ after two seasons as a “result of creative differences” between the comedian and the streamer.

    The decision to part ways was reportedly reached earlier this week, with the show’s staff finding out on Thursday that the show would not be returning for a third season, weeks before taping was set to begin. The tension reportedly stemmed from Stewart and Apple executives butting heads about topics the show would cover in its third season, including AI, China, and the forthcoming 2024 election. Per The Hollywood Reporter, Stewart insisted on having full creative control at the show, refusing to be “hamstrung” by Apple, ultimately choosing to walk away from the series “rather than have his hands tied.” However, a source with knowledge of the situation told Variety that the split between Stewart and Apple was an “amicable one.”

    The Problem With Jon Stewart debuted in 2021 as a part of Stewart’s multiyear first-look deal with the tech giant. The series debuted six years after Stewart’s storied 16-year run as host of Comedy Central’s The Daily Show, which saw the comedian transform the low-rated political comedy series into a cultural force, turning him into one of the nation’s leading voices in media and politics in the process. 

    The Problem With Jon Stewart initially began as a biweekly show, later switching to a weekly format. Each episode centered on one hot-button cultural topic, ranging from globalization to climate change, racism, mass incarceration, and gun control, and often saw the comedian engage in intense debates surrounding the subjects. Over the course of its run,  The Problem With Jon Stewart earned five Emmy nominations, including outstanding talk series and outstanding writing of a talk series.

    “One of the hardest things to do is take an objective look,” he told Vanity Fair ahead of the series second season. “A postmortem. Trust your discomfort when you’re seeing things that aren’t working or feel a little off.” 

    Chris Murphy

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  • Farewell to ‘Strike Force Five,’ Late Night’s Winning Podcast Experiment

    Farewell to ‘Strike Force Five,’ Late Night’s Winning Podcast Experiment

    I’ll miss Jimmy Fallon most of all.

    Not because Fallon is going anywhere. In fact, he’s right back where he started from—once again hosting The Tonight Show on NBC, now that the writers strike is officially over. But what I’ve learned over the past two months is that Fallon’s talk show doesn’t actually play to his strengths. In an ideal world, he wouldn’t spend his evenings giggling at warmed-over movie star anecdotes or slow-jamming the news. (Do they even do “Slow Jam the News” anymore?) Really, he’s a born fifth banana whose blunders are the ideal scaffolding for savage jokes lobbed by the likes of Stephen Colbert, John Oliver, Seth Meyers, and Jimmy Kimmel.

    Those four, along with Fallon, are the hosts of Strike Force Five, a Hail Mary podcast from the industry’s five principal late-night hosts that wrapped its 12-episode run Tuesday—weeks after the merciful conclusion of the work stoppage that prompted them to collaborate in the first place. (Proceeds from the podcast, sponsored primarily by brands headed by George Clooney and Ryan Reynolds, went to late-night staff members affected by the strike.)

    The end of the writers strike is undoubtedly a net good, for both the writers themselves and Hollywood more broadly. But I can’t help wishing it didn’t have to mean the end of Strike Force Five, a shaggy, surprisingly compelling project that allowed five men who have collectively appeared on television for, oh, one billion hours to show sides of themselves that don’t always make it to air. 

    Just a few years ago, the pandemic forced the network late-night hosts (and Oliver, their one major cable equivalent) to innovate, turning their backyards and attics into ersatz studios and enlisting their families to pitch in as guests and band members. It was a tough time to live through, but it injected some new life into a staid format. Strike Force Five did something similar on a much smaller scale, unshackling everyone (except, again, Oliver) from the strictures of the “monologue, video bit, guest one, guest two” format, as well as the network standards that forbid them from swearing. They’re free to swap war stories, trade self-deprecating insults, and marvel at weird personal anecdotes, like how Colbert’s mother briefly dated Nicaraguan dictator Anastasio Somoza. 

    All five of these straight white fathers have been comfortably ensconced at their current shows for about a decade. More weirdly, all of them but Meyers admit in the podcast’s first episode that they harbored childhood dreams of joining the clergy. (“I said to my dad, ‘I want to be a vicar when I grow up,’ and he said, ‘No, you just want people to listen to you,’” says Oliver, drawing wry noises of recognition from his cohosts.) But alike as they are, Strike Force’s off-the-cuff nature allowed each to take on a specific role: Kimmel as the straight-shooting leader, Colbert as the wise elder statesman (and grade-A Wife Guy), Meyers as the frazzled family man, Oliver as the aloof outsider. 

    Hillary Busis

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  • Jon Stewart Gives Trump-Defending GOP Governor A Blistering Legal Fact-Check

    Jon Stewart Gives Trump-Defending GOP Governor A Blistering Legal Fact-Check

    Youngkin, in the wake of the indictment connected to Trump’s handling of classified documents, wrote on Twitter that such a system led to selective prosecution of some people while “others are not” prosecuted, claiming that parents in Virginia have also been the target of “politically motivated actions.”

    “The Problem with Jon Stewart” host retweeted a clip from his show’s account that noted he agrees with the idea of a “two-tiered justice system” before schooling the Republican governor on Trump’s place within it.

    “He has lived his entire adult life in the space twixt, illegal and unethical. He’s in the tier where you get the platinum arraignment package – no cuffs, no mugshot, all-you-can-eat fingerprint ink.”

    “Yes. It’s all selective prosecution and when you’re in the good tier, you can do whatever you want and you’re probably going to be fine,” said Stewart.

    “In fact, you might even be elected president – twice.”

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  • Jon Stewart Declares Coverage of Trump’s Arrest an “Epic F–king Media Fail”

    Jon Stewart Declares Coverage of Trump’s Arrest an “Epic F–king Media Fail”

    Jon Stewart was always going to skewer the historic arrest and arraignment of former president Donald Trump. However, he bided his time until the season finale of his own Apple TV+ showThe Problem With Jon Stewart, rather than gifting the commentary to his former Daily Show home.

    The veteran late-night host crashed Tuesday’s episode of The Daily Show dressed as Star Wars character Obi-Wan Kenobi, but didn’t provide any takes on the indictment in his conversation with Roy Wood Jr., instead joking about his persona as “the wise sage who mentors the young host.”

    But on Thursday, Stewart wasted no time tearing into the cable news media’s “jaded” coverage of Trump’s arrest, playing a montage of anchors being let down by the anticlimactic proceedings. “Oh, were you disappointed? Were you depressed?” Stewart asked. “Here’s why: because you treated this like the final confrontation with Thanos, and then it actually just played out like what it was, a boring-as-shit legal procedure at the very beginning of what will be a long, drawn-out, laborious legal process.” He added, “But please continue being let down by the expectations you motherfuckers created.”

    This week the former president was charged with 34 felony counts related to the hush money payment made to porn star Stormy Daniels ahead of the 2016 election, and Stewart had some fun with the amount of said payment. “By the way, does anybody—and this is just an off-topic thing—did anyone think $130,000 to Stormy Daniels seems a little light? In this economy?” he asked. “That’s just a dollar figure not of this era. That’s some shit like Taft or Coolidge would have pulled. Coolidge would’ve been like, ‘How about $130,000, or perhaps…hmm…a Model T?’”

    Stewart played several clips across MSNBC and CNN where various commentators called Trump’s indictment “underwhelming” and “unimpressive.” “Only our media, those cloistered, short-attention-span, own-ass-spelunking…” Stewart began before pausing to add, “no, defenders of democracy, find a president paying hush money to a Playboy model and an adult-film star, and then cooking the books to help himself win an election, underwhelming and boring.”

    He went in for the final kill by playing a clip of MSNBC personalities discussing why “the silence of Mitch McConnellfall or no fall—speaks volumes,” before declaring, “Epic fucking media fail!”

    Savannah Walsh

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