SmartLess - "Jon Stewart"
Episode Date: September 27, 2021Day bartender and Egyptian silk connoisseur Jon Stewart joins us for a chat. Comedian, writer, director, and television host, Jon shares so much with us, from the invention of the combustion ...engine to MC Hammer quotes. This is a man who knows how to think, knows how to talk, and knows his Judge Judy. Plus, Sean gets put in the penalty box!... on another arousing episode of SmartLess.Please support us by supporting our sponsors!See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Discussion (0)
Hi, everybody.
Hi, guys.
Hey, guys.
I'm really proud of our show.
Me too.
Yeah.
And we're going in a different direction now because we spent a better part of a year screwing around.
Yeah, just making laughs, just building smiles and stuff.
But I think our listeners deserve something a little bit better.
They deserve us to be real.
So the whole episode is going to kind of be like that.
It can't just be jokes all the time.
No, we can't tell jokes all the time.
Just pull their car over to the side right now and just get real.
Yeah.
Just put it in park.
And I want you to grab the person next to you, wherever they are.
Grab them by the shoulders and square them up and look them in the eye and just say,
I respect you.
I think the world of you, but it's time for me to listen to smartness.
Here come smartness.
You know?
Yeah.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Smart.
Look, I've been I've been notified.
First of all.
I just want to say before we start with our guest that I was listening back to the interview
with Sean Penn and I heard a lot of listener feedback that I asked potentially the longest
question in the history of smartness and I people like people really gave it to me.
Guarantee that.
Yep.
I haven't finished that interview, listening to it, because.
Because of the question.
You haven't finished the question.
Oh, so worn out with your, God.
But also people were saying like,
you know, you give Bateman a lot of shit
for the long question, then you have one.
And my answer to that is fuck off.
Yeah, I love that answer.
You know, because then there's no.
Remember what I said earlier,
but you've been sunny all the time.
I know.
I've been really prickly lately.
That's so nice.
Everybody looks really awake today.
Yeah.
It's 20 minutes later than it used to be.
Wow.
Well, you're about to get into it with our guests then,
because our guest is somebody
who you do not want to tangle with.
Oh, wait, crap.
Let me finish.
Let me just say that our guests,
and I know that you review our guests
and have a lot of respect for them.
So this is going to be really interesting
to see you dig your way out.
I know that because we've talked about him
many times over the years.
He's somebody who's a sort of like a,
I don't know how you'd say it,
like a cultural icon.
Like Tyson.
Hold on.
Somebody who I've always looked up to comedically,
but also somebody who I've always looked up to for,
I think that he lends on the right side
of a lot of things, which is he just applies
a lot of what we like to call logic to issues.
And he ended up informing people
in a way through his comedy show.
He really informed, gave people a lot
of real world information and education
that they probably didn't know that they were gonna,
they thought they were just signing up for a comedy program.
And they actually got to learn.
He's a clearly a very thoughtful guy.
I don't wanna, you know, belabor it too long
just to say that he's somebody
that I'm really, really honored that he's here.
And I just think he's,
and I don't really know him.
We've met a handful of times.
I was gonna be serious.
Without further ado, Mr. John Stewart.
Mr. Good Lord.
Look at the reveal.
It was incredible.
And he's got a mask in his hand.
Wait a minute.
Did you have a mask over the camera?
I respected him until that.
And then that just destroyed.
I put it on my computer
to make sure that the computer doesn't get the virus.
Here we go.
John, this is...
Are you upset?
Jason, I was late.
Can I tell you why I was late?
Cause I could tell it upset you a little bit, Jason.
You were trying to get rid of the sound quality
in your room.
I was working at an orphanage.
No.
Oh, Jesus.
Let me see a kid.
Show me one kid right now.
Can I ask you a question?
And I don't, I don't podcast much, so I don't know.
Sure.
There's plenty of room in the space.
Has Will been kidnapped?
Yeah.
Yeah, Will's in a dark room.
I'm in a cloth, I'm in a cloth booth
inside the middle of a larger room
that also has no furniture in it.
So it's very...
Hey, listener, John Stewart doesn't hand out
a bunch of interviews.
He doesn't do this a lot.
So I'm very...
Long time.
Honored and this is very nice of you to do this.
Very thrilling.
Yeah.
Very thrilling.
I'm delighted.
They told me, you know,
you've got to do some promotion for this.
What are you promoting?
A show on Apple.
And they gave me a list of podcasts
and yours was the only one on it.
Wow.
A list of one?
A list of one.
No, I was excited to come and talk to you guys
because you're three very funny, nice, lovely gentlemen.
You're a nice man.
Back at ya.
Well, thank you.
We were gonna get to the Apple show,
but let's talk about it right off the bat.
Just a little bit about what's going on with that.
Oh, that I don't know.
I mean, I'm here to talk about whatever...
Yeah, what is the show?
Just tell me what it's called and when it's on
because I'm gonna be first in line.
It's been too long.
It's on Apple, but to be honest with you,
I don't know how to access it.
Sure.
John, by the way, if it's on Apple,
Jason means that he'll be first in line
because he will have been halfway back the line
and then he'll cut the line.
I don't know if you've seen...
No, I didn't realize that.
You can look that up.
Yeah, when the iPhones first came out,
Jason cut the line famously.
No.
Does he big foot the people?
Dude, can I just tell you that?
I don't know if I've told this story before on our podcast,
but when the first iPod came out, iPhone, Jason said,
oh, you're gonna get like a special hookup
and get the phone early.
I said, yeah, I'm gonna stay.
Somebody's gonna send it to me.
And yes, of course.
He goes, well, I'm gonna go wait in line
like everybody else.
I said, great.
So Bateman goes to the...
He's on with the people.
So he goes down to the Grove
and he's trying a big time telling me that he's with the people.
He goes to the Grove.
I'm standing in line like Star Wars movies.
Like a Star Wars movie.
To his credit, he's there like 150th in line.
Somebody, an employee at the Apple store in the Grove
sees him, goes up and says,
Mr. Bateman, just please come this way.
And he goes with him.
Of course, the paparazzi get photos of him jumping the line
and he ends up getting more shit for that.
For jumping the line.
For jumping the line.
Being a man of the people and jumping the line.
Couldn't have been more beautiful.
And when I called the paparazzi and told him to go get it.
And apparently a year later,
when I think it was Tim Cook,
was at a meeting of the folks who were in charge
of all this stuff, he literally said to them,
let's make sure our VIPs get their phones ahead of time.
Let's not pull another Bateman this year.
It's actually named after you.
It was a very embarrassing.
John, tell me about this Apple show.
Is it a standup?
Is it a scripted show?
Is it something you're directing?
You're in?
It's not a standup show and it's not a scripted show.
It's more of a kind of combining some of the things
I learned on the Daily Show
with some of the things I learned from being down in Washington.
Sort of the ethos of it is kind of that,
why are really obvious problems that have solutions?
Why don't they get addressed and fixed?
And it's kind of the ethos of it.
We're not doing that many of them.
John, the description of that show,
you are filling a surprisingly huge hole in media right now.
Like, that's an obvious thing that I just shocked
that no one's addressed yet,
or maybe no one's as smart or as savvy as you.
Well, watch the show.
You'll see we don't actually get anything done.
But my God, there seems to be so many obvious problems
with obvious solutions that we just,
we tie ourselves into knots trying to figure out
why they're not being solved when you just,
it's a big fat green button somebody needs to push
and everything will be right.
In the world.
Jason, I really wish you hadn't
have given away the ending to my show.
It's, you know, I mean, we step right into this thing
and five minutes into it, you're like,
it's a fucking green button.
And I'm like, oh, that's great.
Thanks.
Thanks.
You know what?
I'm gonna blow season four of Ozark.
How about that?
How about I jump in?
Turns out you guys all move out of Missouri
and you fucking get your own boat.
John, would it be safe to say that your show
is kind of the crying game
of the new Apple streaming service?
I don't think there's any,
I don't think there's any question about it.
And now that it's been blown, it turns out
we were all dead the whole time.
There, are you happy now, Jason?
We were all sleeping next to Suzanne Plachette.
It was just one big dream.
Oh, was that not the greatest?
It was pretty, it was pretty good.
So at the risk of doing another spoiler on,
is it, does it, and to be slightly serious,
does it all kind of boil down to ignoring the squeaky
minority and listen to the quiet majority?
I think what we find is, and it's almost like
the laws of thermodynamics, you know,
a body at rest has a tendency to stay at rest
and a body in motion has a tendency to stay in motion.
And I think the status quo generally stagnant
and does not like to take risks
or to put itself on the line
when it may be held responsible for the consequences.
And so what happens is there's a certain stagnation
and there's a certain remove that,
the people generally in charge of things
are at great remove from the people affected by things.
And that when you permeate that kind of,
that bubble that they are in,
it's very difficult to get them.
It stemmed from, you know, I remember going down on,
this is, I mean, can I, is this,
can I tell a heavier story?
Of course, yeah, please do.
Anything that starts with going down on.
Yeah, you left off at going down on.
So I'm blowing a veteran.
It was a revelation from the 9-11 hearings
and we were down there and, you know,
these guys that had been on the pile for 9-11
and had suffered for really going on decades,
the health effects of toxic exposures
and anybody who'd been down there knew, you know,
they were told the air was safe,
but I don't think things that smell like that are safe.
Yeah, there's just some kind of statistic
that it just came out this week
about how many of them have passed away
or are deathly ill.
It's just awful.
Tragic.
Yeah.
So we went down to testify in front of Congress
and we were there as a guy named John Field
who runs the Field Good Foundation.
And, you know, we've lost some people
that we'd worked with Ray Pfeiffer,
who was a firefighter that had come down
and lobbied with us and this guy Lou Alvers,
who's a cop.
He had been in the armed forces
and then he was on the bomb squad.
He's just this unbelievable guy.
He'd been through like 160 chemotherapies
and you could, you see it all.
And we knew that we were losing Lou over the past
six months to a year that we'd been advocating
and bringing him down to DC.
So we're down and Lou's to my right and we're sitting
and we're in this room of Congress people,
half of whom don't even show up to the hearing.
It's like a hearing of like,
I think the committee's like 18 Congress people.
It was like seven that are there.
Two of them, Louie Gohmert and Jim Jordan,
who are, I think they're in the dumb ass coalition.
I think that's the official title of what they're in.
They come in, they sit for a minute,
get counted as present and then take their name tags
and leave.
So they count as present.
So Lou gives his testimony and it's about, you know,
I'm here because I don't ever want other people
to go through what I've been through
and I'm here to make sure that that doesn't happen.
And it just, Lou felt there's something off.
It just wasn't, you know,
this guy is pretty stoic to begin with,
but I could tell like that night is liver fails.
He goes into hospice.
That night, literally on the way back from Washington, right?
So I'm furious.
I rip into the Congress people for their inattention
for their, you know, these guys answered the call
five seconds after 9-11.
It's been fucking 18 years.
What are you doing?
One of the Congress people,
and I was complaining about how there was nobody there
in the room that's like seven Congress people.
It's just, it's a metaphor for the way that we ignore.
They all hold them up as heroes.
Never forget the heroes of 9-11.
Here these guys are, and nobody's in the fucking room.
All right.
So the head of the committee,
I think his name is Elliot Cohen.
He's a Congressman Democrat.
He says to me, look, I understand you're upset,
but please know like we're very busy.
Yeah.
And I was like that right there crystallized for me
what the issue was.
I'm sitting next to someone
who has decided to spend his last moments on this earth
advocating for those who are suffering
from similar fates to his
and trying to alleviate some of the consequences
that they may face in the future if this doesn't get done.
And this motherfucker is just like,
I got 10 meetings today.
Yeah.
I mean, I mean, you can't expect me to go to all of them.
And so I was, to me, that's the disconnect.
It's rhetoric versus reality.
It's those who are affected by things
versus those that control them.
And those dynamics, the daily show was like,
it was like being a weatherman
for like the daily bullshit, right?
I'm hoping that this show is kind of more
of a climatologist view kind of a,
how are these systems incentivized?
Right.
And how do we rearrange that?
Not just an observation,
but how the fuck did we get here?
And I was going to kind of say,
I was going to bring that back to,
it seems very, to me anyway, to a layman such as myself,
and I actually don't get laid that often,
was that you started the daily show as a comedy show.
It was kind of a Trojan horse, if you will,
in that you, it was a hilarious, hilarious show.
The only time I got to do it,
you weren't even hosting somebody else was,
I had like Cordray or somebody else.
No, that was in the contract.
That was on purpose.
That was something that...
It felt very personal.
It was before you'd ever been in show business
and I had to put it in there.
If someone in Will Arnett ever gets in this business, please.
That's fucking foresight.
And I, but I remember, it seems to me,
you started doing that show
and it became so much more relevant,
not just comedically,
but it also became very much part of the conversation
because you can see the kind of,
you can see that the genesis of these things,
as you railed against things comedically
and the issues got more and more serious
and you kind of dug deeper into it,
kind of, there did feel like there was a point
where you were like, come on, everybody,
what the fuck is going on?
And my question is, did you then sort of graduate
since you've left the daily show?
Was there like a frustration threshold
that you fucking burst through?
You're like, I can't even joke about it anymore
because this shit is so stupid.
I gotta do something about it.
And you people are acting like such fucking idiots.
Was there a moment where you were just like,
God, I can't even,
it's not even funny almost anymore.
How long was the question that you asked
that people gave you shit for?
I know.
How long was it?
The Sheldon Payne question was a fucking embarrassment.
It was an embarrassment.
But I will say that my question just now
was what we call half abatement.
Half abatement.
Half abatement.
No, it was half abatement.
We get half abatement.
I mean, I think it's, look,
satire has always been a way of processing things
that mean a lot to you.
So comedy has always been used to process things that,
and it's always a continuum.
The show is a recipe.
Sometimes it was incredibly silly.
Yeah, we did an episode on 9-11 first responders,
but I also got a church choir to sing,
go fuck yourself to a reporter on Fox News.
Like, it's always that kind of, you know, it's,
it's scatological and it's,
but at the heart of it, satire really isn't,
it's comedy about things you care deeply about.
And that's always been the recipe.
I think I probably just have gotten less elegant.
And we will be right back.
And now back to the show.
You know, John, your daily help for those of us
who are not as informed was so appreciated.
Yes, agreed.
And I'm sure incredibly effective.
Agreed.
It seems like we need not less of you, but more of you.
It's to make it as rarefied as you can get it.
I want to be the saffron of comedy.
John.
Rich, little bit of flavor, put it into the sauce.
It creates maybe a tinge of color,
but you never want too much.
We're at a multi-bell alert here.
Is there any chance of, I mean,
I know you've directed the movie or two,
you've had a kid or four, you've relaxed, I'm sure.
Can you get back on the stick and help us out?
Oh, I've been on it, baby.
And by the way, there's so much on it.
We're also used to the idea of that form now.
So it's, you know.
It's a lot of it.
It was time for me, as far as leaving the Daily Show,
like I just, I didn't leave because I didn't care anymore.
I left because I couldn't think of another interesting way
to evolve the show.
And I would imagine you guys feel this too,
is I don't feel public pressure.
I feel the pressure from the people that I work with.
Like when you're leading one of those shows,
you owe it to them to try and kind of inspire them
to come in with a certain amount of enthusiasm
and a certain amount of directionality
and a certain amount of, you know, leadership.
Sure.
So you don't feel like a weird responsibility
because you're so good at what you do.
And like we keep saying, you know,
there hasn't been anybody like you, nor has there been.
No, I think there's like 10 of them.
No, no.
But what I'm saying is.
I think we're in pretty good shape.
But your ability to deliver the news
and let the medicine go down easy
is just incredibly valuable.
But I wonder sometimes, if that's even a good thing,
you know, I got to a certain point where, you know,
if the medicine goes down so easy,
maybe you don't even realize you need medicine.
But if the only other option is that people simply
won't even seek out the medicine,
I'd rather it go down easy than them
just keep their head in the sand and, you know,
watch Judge Judy.
We've also, by the way, she has been on fire.
Come on.
On fire.
Incredible talent.
Can I tell you the other day, Judy,
I watch her enough to just call her Judy.
Sure.
There was a woman, she was rebutting the gentleman.
It was a rental issue.
And Judy, just with a simple,
didn't even finish the word don't.
Just, duh, duh, duh, just different forms of the letter D.
As long as you get the eyebrows up as high as possible,
all you need is the D.
At a certain point, didn't even hit the consonant.
Duh!
No, that's power.
Shut it down, verdict for the plaintiff.
That's ultimate power.
That is studied and learned in like,
yeah, no, I love Judge Judy to be clear.
And I see you're all eating Chinese food
all the, I used to anyway down around the corner.
So here's the thing, you know,
a lot of the times when you're on TV all the time
and people just assume that you live inside that box, right?
In the world.
And then when you, when years have gone
and you haven't been inside the box,
people are like, what happened?
Where did you go?
What are you doing?
And it's like, what do you mean, what am I doing?
I have a life outside of that box.
But I fall into that same dumb category
when you just came on the screen here right now.
I was like, oh my God, John Stuart, I love John Stuart.
And, but I fucking fell in that same thing.
I'm like, where's John Stuart been?
Now, I know you've been directing things
and I know you've been around,
but for those people, like myself,
I was like, like Jason was saying,
it's so important you're so missed in that arena that-
Well, there's also a nostalgia around that to some extent.
And I, listen, don't get me wrong, fellas.
I appreciate this and it's very kind of you,
but there is a nostalgia that grows around something
that you remember more fondly than perhaps at the time.
And at the time we were inconsistent at times.
We were controversial at times.
I took my fair share of shit,
not from you guys mostly, Jason, yes, but-
And by the way, you're one of the best interviewers,
maybe the best interviewer, full stop, you know,
we can get into that later, but that was also awesome.
Just as a guest and as a viewer.
But there is a certain golden glow
that nobody remembers you more fondly.
But remember, there's also the reverse of that,
which is nothing turns to disappointment and anger
faster than love.
And when people fall in love with a program
or they fall in love with what you do.
Yes, that's so true.
There's, I mean, for God's sakes,
they're going after Ted Lasso.
Yeah, are they really?
Oh yeah.
Oh really?
So I guess my point is I try really hard
to insulate and isolate myself from external commentary.
I really rely on a moral barometer that is developed
with the people that work with you on the show
to discern whether or not we're doing good work,
where we can improve it, always examine it.
But I really try and block out the...
Yeah, my question was just what the hell
have you been doing?
Oh, what have I been doing?
That was my only question.
Sean's just like, where have you been?
He's been advocating for fucking people
who don't have a voice, you asshole.
And I'm so sorry that he's not on your fucking TikTok.
No, I know that.
I want, that was a leading question.
So you could inform our listeners of what you've been up to.
And you're wondering why he's not dancing with his kids
on fucking TikTok and dabbing.
I mean, what is your fucking problem?
Stupid ass.
I have been dabbing a few years too late.
I love bringing up dabbing
because my 13 year old literally,
if I mentioned the word dabbing, he looks at me like,
don't fucking say another word.
Why are you talking?
Let's ask Sean's three minute question in 30 seconds.
What have you been doing?
And if it's been raising children
and prepping another movie, let's hear about that, please.
Good question, Jason.
I have been raising children.
Oh, it's okay when Jason asks.
Yeah, cause I did it in about 10 seconds.
Hey, Will, Will, can we start,
I know you love hockey,
guys have like a two minute penalty box thing.
Maybe start implementing that for 20 seconds, let's say.
I like that.
Okay, so just know that's dangling there, hey.
Will Arnett, do you still play hot?
Are you still, is it something
that you will still go out and play?
No, the last time I went out and actually played,
I was so, I left the rink, I remember,
with my bag and kind of smiling at some,
just pick up and I left like, yeah, also great.
And I went home and I iced my legs for 24 hours.
And I know I didn't want anybody to know.
And I was like, fuck, I'm done.
Right, done.
You still have that nice high shelf ass though on you,
don't you?
Well, no, yeah.
Does he have sort of a shelf?
Yeah, real skater ass.
That's nice.
No, I've got, what we referred to in the NH,
I got a pro dumper, John.
And John, do you play hockey?
I know you're a soccer guy.
I'm a big soccer guy too.
I did not play hockey.
And unfortunately, my shelf collapsed
about three years ago, my shelf ass, yeah.
Same thing happened at Jason,
where actually we just opened an investigation
into the guy who stole his ass
because we're trying to find it.
Jason, I don't know if this happened to you,
but my ass was there one day and then gone the next,
almost like if you've ever seen an ice flow calf,
like it was there and it was hanging on a threat.
And then suddenly the ass began to slowly,
and it hit the water and kind of a spectacular splash.
And that was-
The investigation was probably less horrific than mine
because I didn't find out mine had dropped
until I saw it on national television,
going away there on Laura Lenny, poor thing.
Oh no, that's not true.
Well, look, there's a little bit of a hang there.
There's a crease that I didn't use to have
at the bottom of my right buttock.
That scene, quite honestly,
I remember turning to my wife and saying,
that's gotta be stunt cheeks,
because that can't be Bateman.
I know Bateman isn't that robust.
You're in a stunt cheeks.
That's a stage name.
Yeah, that's the name I dance under.
As we get into sports and stuff,
and I mentioned soccer,
so I know that you did play soccer,
you played soccer in college.
What I like to refer to as football.
The beautiful game.
You're talking about the beautiful game.
I'm a fucking nut for it.
The last 10 years I've just gone crazy.
Do you watch a lot?
I watch quite, mostly Premier League.
I don't watch much of it.
I'm not so nuts that it's like,
Siri, ah, La Liga.
But I'll watch Premier League.
I'll follow Liverpool.
Same.
I'm a big Liverpool supporter.
Take it easy.
Yes.
He's calm now.
Yeah, no, it's so good.
Okay, what about kids?
I see a sippy cup in the background.
Is that yours or a child's?
That's actually, I think it's a candle
that my wife put in here.
She likes to make things look nice in my office
because she knows that I don't look nice in my office.
It's a nice contrast.
But my children, my son just got his driver's license.
Wow.
He's seven.
What?
So good.
He just turned 17.
My daughter is gonna be 16.
So we're sort of enjoying our last couple of years.
Wait, are you doing the college tours and stuff like that?
We're getting ready to do that.
We're gonna do it pandemic style.
So it's a lot of, you know,
I don't know how that's gonna fly more.
I imagine private.
Listen.
Why are you just backwards?
I just took my, are almost 13 year old to his first,
he just went to his first day of middle school
and I can tell you that was rough watching my baby
go into the world like a quasi adult.
It was a very scary moment.
Middle school is sixth grade, seventh grade, eighth grade.
Yeah, yes.
So he was going to seventh grade
and it was, I was so scary.
It changes quickly.
So I'll give you a little,
this is a little story of how like,
and I noticed it.
Cause when they're teenagers,
they really become people quickly.
My daughter, when she used to get sick
and you need an antibiotic,
you remember you'd go to the pharmacy
and they don't give you pills.
They can't swallow pills.
So they would make those concoctions
like banana, chocolate, erythromycin, you know,
and you'd shake it up and...
I have one of those every morning.
Oh, they're delicious.
Yeah.
So I would give it to her
and she used to be,
she would take it like this.
Stink face.
And it would take 45 minutes.
Yeah.
To get her to do one.
So about six months ago,
she has strep.
So we get her,
or what's this?
She had a terrible cold
and I got her Nyquil.
That's what it was.
So I give her the Nyquil.
I pour it, I hand it to her.
She does this.
It's like a shot.
Right.
And I go, oh, you're drinking now.
Yeah.
So that's what I'm saying.
Like, you learn, life comes at you fast.
I had a couple more questions, John,
just cause I find you interesting.
Yes, Sean.
Who, I've always wondered,
because when you've done your show for so long.
Please ask him his favorite color.
Please ask him his favorite color.
When you've done your show,
I look at you and I go,
what is your favorite color?
I wonder what that guy's favorite color is.
No, I wonder how,
because I think millions of people looked at you
as the guy who had the answers.
You were such a leader, right?
In your lane.
And so who did you admire?
Who do you admire now?
Who do you look up to kind of in your same field?
Who's a game changer in world issues
that you maybe commiserate with?
Or who is that person or people?
Fareed Zakaria.
Jesus.
I look to anyone on the MSNBC weekend slate.
Okay, very good, very good.
I don't, and I, you know, it's interesting.
I think, where are you getting your info?
Well, like, I think like most people,
I'm getting it through a fucking fire hose up my ass
like everybody else.
I mean, it's, this world is nothing but info.
It brings up a good point, Jason.
You are convinced that there is a secret source of info
out there that people have access to,
because he asks people a lot of stuff.
There's a funnel of information
that the media outlets have access to,
and then the fire hose.
Yes, and so I'm assuming that those
in privileged places like yourself
might still have contacts, leads, sources
that you might be warm, yeah.
I do, I do.
There's something called, I have it, Apple News.
Oh God.
And what I'll do is I'll click on it,
and then a variety of stories will come up,
places that I follow.
Do you do the thing that I found myself doing recently,
which is when I'm about to like having a moment
like, oh, I'm gonna check the news,
or I'm gonna check Twitter and stuff.
And I now have this moment where I go,
how frustrated do I wanna be right now?
Do I wanna ruin my mood, you know?
You know, and that leads to this issue
we started talking about, which is,
you know, how do you balance, certainly you,
how did you balance, and how do you continue to balance,
how much you allow yourself to be exposed to,
weighed against your ability to affect change?
When you had the Daily Show, I would imagine
you could risk exposing yourself
to something that might upset you
because you had an outlet for that,
and you could possibly affect change at five o'clock,
or whenever you guys would start to,
because you could share that information to the masses,
and maybe some change would come.
I don't think that was, though,
it's not purposeful like that, you know?
I think, you know, the amount of change you can affect
is really, I have one kind of monkey trick,
and that is that you can turn,
if you have the ability to conduct light,
in other words, like if what you do will attract attention,
then the only real trick you have is,
you can deflect that light or attention
onto something you think is interesting,
worthwhile, funny, whatever.
But what I learned about all this is,
I think sometimes we confuse cultural power with power,
and having a mouthpiece with
being an effective agent of change,
and the truth is that change takes place
incrementally over time through the concerted,
it's manual labor.
It's true, but there is now more than ever
a pressure that is generated through media, through social,
but it's not, so I used to,
I was raised on the ethos of the emperor's new clothes, right?
That was the fable, you know, the emperor,
he says he's got a beautiful new coat,
and he walks on the street and the little boy says,
oh, he's naked, and that breaks the spell.
And by pointing out absurdity or hypocrisy,
the spell is broken.
And that was kind of the way that I was raised,
that I thought the world worked.
What I didn't realize is, you know,
that you don't ever follow the story,
and how it is now is, he's not wearing any clothes,
and then the crowd turns, and rather than laughing,
they turn and go, you're running a pedophile ring,
and you're fake news, and then they cast the boy out,
and then everybody takes off their clothes,
and they all just pretend that that's how that it was.
So my point about that is,
shining a light on things can be weighted out.
I think what those in power have realized is,
the attention span, especially in a modern media environment,
has the circadian rhythms of Twitter,
in that it's ephemeral, it's ubiquitous,
and it's meaningless.
And so if you're going to bring shame,
you better be ready to bring it over time,
and it has to be concerted.
So I always view what we do as,
these people that are bringing the real effort,
you know, let's just amplify them in a way
that makes it clear that we're not going to go away,
because unless they feel that there's consequence
to their shame, nothing gets done,
and the only way they'll feel like there's consequence
to their shame is if the shame will be unceasing.
We'll be right back.
All right, back to the show.
It occurs to me that potentially there was a time,
you know, there's that stat that technology increases
30 times, every 10 years it's 30 times greater
than the previous 10 years, and that's astonishing.
And I think that we always, you know,
when we had the Jetsons, we always thought like,
this is what the future is going to be,
it's all going to be about technology.
And truthfully, I think the thing that nobody ever saw was,
the thing that was going to be the most important thing
was information, and the way that it's delivered,
and the volume, the sheer volume of it,
and the way that it can be really wielded as a weapon
and be weaponized in a way that we couldn't imagine.
We thought that the, for instance,
the Nazis had manipulated information to a way
that we couldn't fucking believe,
and that was, you know, almost 100 years ago.
Now we have people who have perfected it,
and have found channels to, you know,
vessels to do that in ways that are so incredibly harmful.
But don't you think that we should have known that?
Because it's-
Of course we should have.
The one thing that is consistent in people
is that whatever progress we make will be perverted,
that everything has that dual, you know,
so when you think about the algorithm, right,
so artificial intelligence, we're working to create,
you know, this kind of intelligence
that is far beyond the capacity that what we could do.
And we will use it to advance the cause of longevity
and the health and welfare of all the people.
And what have we decided to use it for?
A way to keep you watching YouTube longer.
Like, that's what we use the app.
Everything that we do gets perverted
because, you know, if I may quote MC Hammer.
Yeah, please.
Sean does it all the time.
It was daily.
Fucking time.
He went, he was on somewhere,
and I can't remember where it was,
but he said, you cannot consider the measure of something
without considering the measure.
And the point is like, all these things are tools,
but they are tools that are wielded by people.
And people are flawed and are always looking for advantage.
So, you know, think about every bit of progress
we've ever made through science, let's say,
like whether it's chemical or biological or sonic
or anything, any progress we make
somewhere someone has tried to weaponize it.
Yes.
And that's, we always have to take that into account.
Everything that we get,
what's better than the combustion engine
to create progress and to lift people out of poverty
and what creates global warming?
Like, everything, it's all a fucking balance.
And we just have to try and do it without falling over.
The wheel led to, you know, car deaths.
Think about it that way, okay?
So.
Where are you going to flush all the,
you know so much that is so unsettling.
Where do you go to flush all that out?
Is it the bottom of a bong
or are you watching a nice cartoon?
Or do you meditate?
What do you, what do you, what do you do?
I play, I try and play the drums.
That's it.
I am not musical.
I took it up when I left the show
and I always wanted to interact with music
and I'm terrible at it.
So I was going to learn how to play guitar.
I don't know if you guys have ever played anything,
but like I sat down with a guitar and I was like,
oh, this is fucking hard.
It hurts my fingers.
And it's going to take me three years
before I can even just play blackbirds slowly.
But I know how to bang on shit.
Yeah, sure.
And so I could interact with music really quickly.
But I didn't realize this.
As long as it was sticks.
No, no, no, with, with sticks, maybe right there.
Let's hear a little something, John.
I keep, in my office, I have a little pad.
Oh, that's right.
Paradiddle, paradiddle, paradiddle, paradiddle.
So I bang around all the time,
but the thing that's incredible about it is,
so it's all about like limb independence
and creating these rhythmic connections
that didn't exist before.
And you can't do them when you first try them,
but if you slow them down and you go through it
kind of mechanically and with purpose.
You can rewire.
Slowly you rewire.
And suddenly now you can do it at speed
and you're creating connections that never occurred.
And you can almost feel the synapses in your brain crap.
It's like the opposite of death.
And for me, I just like making shit, right?
And that's what gives me a feeling of wellbeing
or purpose or anything along those lines.
And so discovering that was only five years ago
was a real eye-opener.
Yeah, you hit, Sean loves that.
He likes making his housekeeper turn the channel
on direct TV and shit.
So he loves.
Well, I like the sound of the click.
I like the sound of the click.
Metronome is the best thing you know.
No, but it's like anything what you just described
as long as you want it,
as long as you want to learn something,
as long as you want to expand your hobbies, your brain,
your synapses, like you say,
and you take your time to do it
because you want to do it, you will get better at it.
John, do you want to direct another movie?
Yes, I do.
Did you love it?
I loved it.
Oh, bossing people around in different countries.
Oh, I mean, action, cuss.
I mean, it's just the dictatorial force
that flows through your cut again.
That sweater, no, no, put him in that sweater.
No, put him in that sweater.
I love it.
Speaking of which,
did you wear a fancy director outfit on your set days?
No way.
Do you think Egyptian silk is fancy?
Not if you're an Egyptian.
How do you define it?
If you shot in Egypt, it's not fancy.
We actually went there.
Yeah, yeah.
I actually went to, we shot in Jordan
and a friend of mine hosted a show in Cairo
right during the middle of the revolution
and he invited me to come on.
And I went to Cairo like a week before
they overthrew Mohammed Borsi.
Oh, God.
It was fucking chaos.
Wow, wow.
Is it safe to go there anymore?
Can we go to Egypt yet or no?
Oh, yeah.
No, it was safe then too.
I mean, it wasn't.
It wasn't fun.
He means him and Scotty.
They're bags of acting.
We want to go.
We want to see where the aliens built those pyramids.
Yes.
We went inside them and it's very weird.
It's like when you ever visit
where they built the Star Wars sets,
it's all hollow behind it.
The whole thing.
Don't tell us, don't tell us on that.
Oh, it's just a bunch of two by fours.
It's not, what do you mean it's not real?
I don't believe that it's not real.
When you get up close, you go, oh my God,
that's just magic marker.
They just drew that in.
John, I always considered you.
You always feel like you were like the senior
when we were freshmen in comedy.
And I still feel that way.
And I look up to you in that way.
And who, you're a sort of your class,
your grade, your contemporaries.
We had, well, obviously Colbert,
those close good buddy of yours
and you were instrumental in getting a show off the ground.
He came out of the Daily Show onto the Colbert Report.
Who else were your contemporaries?
Who were the people that you came up with
in stand up and in that time in New York
when you were doing stand up in the 80s?
So that was all like, the class before us
had just graduated and moved out to Los Angeles.
So my class was, down in the comedy cellar
was Colin Quinn, Ray Romano, Chappelle.
Rock and Sandler were more comic strip guys,
but they would come downtown.
But that was the same sort of era.
Leary, Laura Keilinger, that was kind of the David Tell.
What a great time for comedy.
What an incredible, like the golden era of stand up in a way.
And the best part was the money.
Yeah, sure, of course.
I mean, so much.
You know, you're working five nights a week
for a play to hummus and a couple of falafels.
That was rock.
But I will say you do.
We loved it.
But so you guys are there.
You're doing, yeah, you're going down to the comedy cellar.
You're making five bucks or whatever.
But back then too, the comedy cellar wasn't the comedy cellar.
It was, it did one show a night,
except on weekends they would do two shows a night.
But now you go down there on a Tuesday
and they're gonna do four shows and the houses are packed.
And I used to go on every night.
I worked, I was a day bartender at a Mexican restaurant
up the block, which is by the way, just,
I don't want to romanticize the day bartending
at a Mexican restaurant.
Unbleeker, unbleeker?
That's on McDougall, Pancitos.
Oh.
Can I tell you a great story about working at Pancitos?
So being a day bartender in a Mexican restaurant,
you are basically just like a laborer
that's preparing margaritas and fruit
for the night bartender to come in and fucking clean up.
And so you make, nobody tips you out
because there's nobody there,
but there was this guy Bob who ran the place, he owned it.
I left Pancitos probably in 1988, 1989,
and finally was making the $15 a night at the comedy cellar
and decided I'm just gonna focus on that.
Maybe 25 years later, I'm walking down a village street.
Now this is after the success of the Daily Show
and I'm the big man walking through the old neighborhood
pointing sights out that I had my first falafel sandwich
with it, I see the guy who owned Pancitos
walking towards me.
It's been 25 years as he gets closer to me,
he just goes, John, and just keeps.
Nice.
Just fucking, dude, that is-
John.
That at first of all is so New York, right?
Like, who gives a, yeah, you're the big man,
but also like, yeah, you're John, so how's it going?
That's right, by the way, I need you to pick up a shift.
Yeah, exactly.
So I was walking down 7th Avenue a few years ago,
walking by this bar that will remain McManus
at the corner of 19th and 7th.
Sure, McManus.
And I drank there every night for five.
I claimed that I could have gotten a law school
with the time and money I spent in there,
I could have easily.
So anyway, so I'm walking with my dad
and those drinking years are far behind me at that point
and I'm walking along and as we're coming,
we're moving from 20th Street right on 7th Avenue
and just getting closer, I say this place,
this is the place McManus where I spend every night
for about five, seven years, just six nights a week,
hammered, and I see one of the bartenders standing outside.
This guy, Mike, and he's smoking a cigarette
and I go, yeah, God, every night for five, six years,
I run around and I look up and I see Mike and I go,
isn't that right, Mike?
And he goes, you got it, Will.
We never broke stride.
I never stopped to say hi.
We just kept walking and fucking, it was incredible.
Yeah, great.
You could have had the best production,
you could never time that out that well.
Hey, John, so your kids on the doorstep of going to college
and you being an empty nester have you
and the Mrs. started the plans for empty nesting,
how you're gonna distract yourself from the sadness
or is it gonna be all euphoric?
Well, I mean, for us, it's just waiting for you, Schmucks,
to put out more TV.
We need to head just for you.
We sit at home and we just wait for it.
Yeah, when is that fucking?
Is there a new episode of Ozark?
Can we do anything here?
Yeah, when's that?
Ozark coming out.
I think January, that's what I'm, that's what I'm thinking.
Hurry it up.
Yeah.
We're making it right now.
And spin it off.
We're almost done.
Because I need content.
So it's just gonna be TV, that's what you're telling me.
That's what's gonna be the time for you.
We have a farm and it's like a rescue farm
for cows and pigs and goats and sheep and we work with,
we really, I lived in the city for so many years
and we moved out, I don't know, five, six years ago
and just quality of life, man.
It's good for you.
I spent so many years looking through the tube of the,
the paper towel holder.
The cardboard table holder doing the daily show,
like so focused.
And I was so worried about like, oh my God,
what am I gonna do when I don't have that anymore?
And then when I took it out, I was like, oh.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Oh, so you guys have been working in the whole world.
Yeah.
I've always been working in the, and so.
How old were you when you started the Daily Show?
How old were you?
Oh God, I was already like 35.
I started, the Daily Show was my,
if this doesn't work out,
Pancitos is looking for another Dave Arden.
Right, right, right.
It was one of those.
Right.
Hey, Jen.
Hey, Jen.
Hey, Jen.
Hey, Jen.
Great question.
What is everybody else's?
You guys have plans, like Sean,
what's your plan, your 10-year plan?
Work my balls off.
That's it?
I think I'm gonna be done at 60,
between 1665, I'm really gonna be done.
Yeah, but then what?
Like what are you gonna do?
Are you gonna stay in LA or are you gonna?
I don't know.
What is that?
I gotta tell you, with your skin, Sean,
I keep going.
Look at him.
It's beautiful.
It is beautiful.
Thanks, thanks.
I keep going.
I don't see the sun.
John, we've taken up way too much of your time.
We didn't even get to,
if you had any shit stories,
because Colbert was on here
and he told a 40-minute shit story about Conan,
which was, sounds like it was very true.
But we've taken up way too much of your time.
We'll leave you on that up note.
Yeah.
Beauty.
John Stewart, man, you're a fucking legend.
It's a pleasure to see you guys.
Lots of love to you.
I've enjoyed this very much,
and thank you for making it easy and simple and lovely.
You've done the same for us
any time we were on your show, sir.
Thank you so, so much for this.
Rob Cordury did the same for me
when I was on your show.
Yeah.
By the way, Rob wasn't even,
I mean, we went through so many people just to see
who would do it.
Obviously.
I mean, at that point,
Colbert, Oliver, Sam B,
I mean, we went through everything.
Finally, Cordury was like short straw.
I'll just fucking jump in.
He was the only one left in the city.
There was a skeleton crew, too,
if I remember correctly.
I remember the quote was exactly this,
I'll take the hit.
That's fair enough.
Thank you, man.
Lots of love to you.
Great to talk to you guys.
Thank you, John.
See you soon.
Bye-bye.
Bye-bye-bye-bye.
You did it, Will.
You did it.
You did it again.
That was a good one.
You delivered the golden goose right there.
That's the man.
What's embarrassing is that Jason had asked him a few times,
and I guess he had said no.
No, that was Ryan Reynolds.
Oh, that was Ryan,
and then Ryan said yes to me.
Do you remember that?
He sure did.
He sure did.
Boy, you're not holding on to that, Jason.
Jason, you asked John Stewart to be on?
Do you know how mad Amanda is, by the way,
Amanda's mentioned to me,
I don't know, let's say a hundred times
that Jason got how many kids Ryan has wrong,
and she was like, he knows he's got three kids,
and we sent a fucking gift,
and I can't believe that I'm so mad at Jason for that.
So rude.
I'm sorry, I don't have fucking Daily Mail on my toolbar,
you know?
Jesus.
Nobody's a friend of yours, too.
That's rude.
You don't keep up with your friends on Daily Mail.
Oh my God, I know, that's true.
Jason was also really,
I noticed the other day, he said too,
I was drinking these waters that Jason has, and I go,
I got these, I was drinking Archie Go,
and then he said,
Well, what are they called?
What are they called?
Lemon Perfect.
Lemon Perfect.
It's the best drink in the world.
Fucking cool it,
and we don't need to mention Lemon Perfect,
just so you get a free case,
that's like $20 worth,
like if they want it.
I want a whole truck,
I want it on a schedule.
I give a lot of shit.
Lemon Perfect is incredible.
So anyway, Jason's drinking Lemon Perfect,
and he goes, oh, look at Jason,
he actually started to call Jason Bateman recently,
a couple of times,
and he goes, look at Bateman drinking,
you got that idea from my dad,
and I go, actually, you know what,
Archie, I gotta be fair,
Jason's one who introduced me to Lemon Perfect,
and Jason turns to him and goes,
so, would that really shitty look?
Look, and I go, did you just, to my 12 year old,
I go, did you just do the thing
that we've been doing to each other for 20 years,
to my 12 year old?
He's like, yeah.
Yeah, you mess with the ball,
you know what I mean?
So, anyway, let's get back to John Stewart.
John Stewart.
This guy, and even if he doesn't know
how to spell his first name,
I still love him more than most people on the planet.
Yeah, that's easy.
I just think he's a perfect combo
of smart and funny.
Yeah.
Guy, can we edit that out?
I think he's married, dude, so, you know,
I don't know if you're,
my memory of John Stewart also is just of all those,
just, I don't know, 10 years in a row of being at the Emmys,
and him just winning every, you know,
him going to the stage like three times in the night.
Yeah, with just a team of the really gifted writers.
It's just, that show stayed so good for so long.
It's so good.
They could, another 20 years, just as good.
I'm sure, I'm sure he could have, and I'm sure he could,
if he said today that he wanted,
not necessarily the other show,
because Trevor Noah is very good,
but like if he wanted to do whatever,
and he's doing this Apple show, which I'm excited about.
Yeah, I can't wait to see that Apple show.
I know.
He's so missed.
Did he say one that's coming out?
No, we can Google it.
I think he said end of September, or at least,
bye, October.
Bye.
Wow, all right, I guess, bye.
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