Consider This from NPR - 25 years Ago Jon Stewart Took Over The Daily Show And Redefined Political Comedy
Episode Date: January 14, 2024Jon Stewart ushered in a new era of late night comedy and pushed the boundaries between news and entertainment.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy...
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You might have forgotten, but Jon Stewart wasn't always host of The Daily Show.
Welcome. Welcome, welcome to The Daily Show. Craig Kilbourne is on assignment in Kuala Lumpur. I'm Jon Stewart.
25 years ago this month, Stewart, who was then known as a stand-up comedian, took over Comedy Central's satirical news program, replacing host Craig Kilbourne.
You're out of order. He's out of order. This whole trial is sexy.
In those early episodes, Stewart looks so young and kind of smug, right? Like the comedian who
totally gets the joke, but is going to let you in on it too. And he was about to crash into the
intersection of politics and comedy in a way that would change the landscape
of late-night comedy TV. I remember early on a meeting in the executive producer's office,
and this was months after he had started as the host, and he was clearly grappling with what he
wanted the show to be, And he explained that he wanted the
show to have more of a point of view. That's Mo Rocca. He's a correspondent for CBS Sunday
Morning and creator and host of the Mobituaries podcast. He started working on The Daily Show in
1998 and was there until 2003. I can tell you, I remember distinctly meeting the eyes of one of
the producers.
And I think other people were looking at each other this way and thinking,
uh-oh, is this going to make the show unfunny?
And being worried that a comedy show was incompatible with a show that had a point of view. And obviously we were proven wrong.
The show became much more successful.
But I remember that there was definitely concern like, uh-oh, what's this show going to become?
It's time for a hastily thrown together editorial.
I'm sure many of you are curious.
Is my beloved Daily Show going to change?
Well, it might, subtly.
And I know change can be painful, but from change comes
growth. When Jon Stewart took over the show, I think what surprised people was that he had a
focus. He knew what he wanted to say about media and about politics. Eric Deggans is NPR's media
critic and analyst. Jon Stewart comes along and he decides that he's going to
be very incisive and he's going to talk about what's actually happening. He's going to satirize
media from the inside out. He's going to target hypocrisies by politicians. And when they come
on to do interviews on his show, sometimes he's going to confront them in ways that might make
them uncomfortable, that might make the audience uncomfortable.
Making politicians uncomfortable was not something that had really been done in the late night comedy show format, which was usually focused I think held back people like Johnny Carson and Jay Leno,
who didn't want to offend more conservative audience members.
I was not elected to serve one party. You were not elected.
So that's how Jon Stewart changed the game in terms of late night.
With Stewart at the helm, The Daily Show created an
infotainment hybrid, comedy and pointed political commentary that was new to late night TV.
Consider this, when comedy and politics mixed, a comedian became a trusted source for news.
So what's happened since those lines got blurred?
From NPR, I'm Andrew Limbaugh. It's Sunday, January 14th.
It's Consider This from NPR. Matt Brennan is deputy editor of entertainment and arts for the Los Angeles Times and has written about the cultural impact of The Daily Show. I spoke with him about the limits of infotainment. And he focused it on politics and the news and the media in a way that hadn't been done before,
and then spawned so many imitators
that I think it now qualifies as a subgenre.
Folks like Stephen Colbert, John Oliver, Samantha Bee,
all of whom came up under Stewart,
then launched their own shows with a similar kind of style, but their own bent on it. And now that kind of new satire
is a familiar part of American culture in a way that it was not in 1999.
Yeah, I want to bring it over to closer to today where, you know, there's been some data out of
Pew Research Center showing that more and more news consumption is happening on social media, right? On YouTube, Facebook,
TikTok, et cetera. And I've noticed that you can see a lot of what looks to me like the Daily Show's
DNA in that ecosystem, you know, even stuff on the political right, like Ben Shapiro's monologues on
The Daily Wire, right? Or like what Stephen Crowder does on YouTube or Rumble.
And it's a lot of consuming news by way of dunking on news, right?
And I'm wondering, is that fair to trace back to Jon Stewart?
Yes, absolutely.
I think especially as The Daily Show under his leadership evolved, Stewart became at times a very perceptive and often a very effusive
critic of the American news media, and not just what we would describe as sort of right-wing or
right-leaning news outlets like Fox News, even though he was a ferocious critic of Bill O'Reilly. He also was a critic
of shows like Crossfire on CNN, and really any kind of political news media that either failed
to cover the facts of the news appropriately, or made sort of ridiculous claims about bias or things that people weren't covering.
But interestingly, he, unlike some of these folks who are starting to kind of claim themselves as news outlets or sources of information,
he famously disavowed the label of journalist.
He preferred to be understood as a comedian.
The quote that he used was,
I want to sit in the back of the country and make wisecracks.
I don't think he quite understood how powerful he was becoming as a source of information,
particularly for Gen X and millennial consumers
who were not and continue not to be viewers of things like the nightly news programs
on the broadcast networks.
But by the time the show ended, I think it would be inaccurate not to refer to The Daily Show
as a form of news for many of the people watching it,
because that is the place where they were getting their news of the day, in addition to the internet.
And I think sort of by the end of his tenure, Stuart, I think it felt to me as though there
was a level of discomfort with having to walk that line. Because as you and I
know, there's a different set of actual ethical standards that you have to follow as a journalist
at a traditional news outlet versus folks who don't abide by those rules. And that does put
limitations in place on what you can and cannot say. And I think Stuart kind of almost ran into the buzzsaw of his own success in handling the news.
The issue is that it's a deflection, right?
What he's saying is like, oh, I'm just some guy.
When it's, you know, pretty clear that he wasn't just some guy.
Yeah, he was never just some guy because he had this platform. I think one thing
that has sort of developed in the cultural discourse since his hosting of the show began
is this idea that when you have a platform, that platform is powerful, whether you define it as
news or you define it as entertainment. I think when The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, when he started hosting in 1999,
the concept of infotainment was relatively young. And now it is so baked into the cake
because of people like Jon Stewart that we don't even use the word anymore.
Is there anything that sort of occupies the space that uh the daily show with john stewart
did back in its prime i mean i know the daily show is still around but i feel like it's you
know cultural weight has sort of waned over the years so is there anything that like lives up to
to the john stewart years you know the daily show when it was airing in the early 2000s
its ratings would not have been enough to keep it on the air if it had aired on CBS
in addition to all the standards and practices reasons it wouldn't have aired on CBS.
But if you took those ratings and ported
them to 2023, people would be clamoring to
have that show on their network because you could
concentrate people in one place for half an hour a day in a way that you really can't now.
You know, you wrote about Jon Stewart back when he stepped down from The Daily Show in 2015.
And in that piece, you outlined some of the same criticisms that we brought up here.
But in the last line of the piece, you say, whatever his shortcomings, we loved him back. And I just want
to kind of pinpoint what was it about his show that you loved? For me, what I loved was his level
of sincere engagement in the issues of the day. Whatever criticisms I might have had of his stance on, you know, I'm not a member of the United States and the world mattered,
that it was important for viewers, especially younger viewers, to know what was happening,
and that it was appropriate for people to then have opinions about the things that were happening in the world around them,
and that he could sort of help guide them through it.
And that's why I started and ended that piece with talking about his post-9-11 monologue,
which I think was the most kind of emotional example of that feeling that he gave us,
which was of not a detached, neutral, quote-unquote objective anchor, but of a fellow citizen in our society
who happened to have the platform
to tell it how it is, as the saying goes.
And for that, I will always be a fan of Jon Stewart,
whatever my complaints.
Matt Brandon of the Los Angeles Times.
Thanks a lot.
Thanks so much for having me.
This episode was produced by Connor Donovan and Avery Keatley.
It was edited by Jeanette Woods.
Our executive producer is Sammy Yenigan.
It's Consider This from NPR. I'm Andrew Limbaugh.