Posted on 04/30/2005 12:54:29 PM PDT by billorites
To say Jon Stewart enjoys an adoring press is like saying Bill Gates has a few bucks. In story after glowing story, the boyish 42-year-old host of Comedy Centrals hit fake newscast, The Daily Show, and author of the best-selling fake history text America (The Book) comes off as a lighthearted, twenty-first-century Diogenes: a fearless truth teller in an age of shameless pandering.
As Newsweek had it in a typically rapturous cover story, Stewart is a man bravely battling pomposity and misinformation, his TV show a fearless social satire and a work of genius. When future historians come to write the political story of our times, intoned Bill Moyers on his recently ended PBS show, they will first have to review hundreds of hours of a cable television program called The Daily Show. You simply cant understand American politics in the new millennium without The Daily Show. Mr. Stewart has turned his parodistic TV news show into a cultural force significantly larger than any mere satire of media idiocies, chimed in the New York Timess Frank Rich in a column entitled jon stewarts perfect pitch, one ofcount em 16 hes written lauding the comedian. Along with such over-the-top encomia, The Daily Show has won multiple Emmys and even several prestigious journalism prizes, including a Peabody Award and the Television Critics Association Award for Outstanding Achievement in News and Information (beating out real news shows).
While all this is certainly heady for Stewart and his fans, what does it mean? After all, the fair-minded viewer might find the half-hour show intermittently humorous, but he wont detect anything fearless or even especially original in it. In truth, Stewarts elevation to near-iconic status says more about those doing the elevating than about the comedian himself. His bravery and much-vaunted grasp of political nuance consists mostly of his embrace of every reflexive assumption shared by every litmus-tested liberal holding forth at every chic Manhattan dinner party.
Those assumptions cover everything from the Religious Right (scary) to easy sex (yummy), but Stewarts Number One obsession, like that of many of his fans, is President George W. Bush. Almost every major event Stewart deals with, foreign or domestic, is an excuse for Bush derision. Depending on the story at hand, the president is a reckless cowboy or a devious schemer, an inept fool or an immoral knave. Pressed, Stewart would probably be comfortable with all of the above. Often, Stewart will simply show a brief clip of the president speaking, then silently react, his look showing bewilderment or dismay, as his audience, their own contempt for all things Bush once again confirmed, erupts in laughter.
Certainly Stewarts timing could not have been better. When the former stand-up comic and MTV host took over The Daily Show in 1999, ditching its broader focus in favor of its now-famous ersatz news format, liberals were primed for a new comic hero.
As Laura Miller of the left-leaning webzine Salon explains, traditional political humor had long been the province of the Left, but that all changed in the 1990s, when the priggishness of political correctitude injected new vitality into a segment of the population that had been shut out of comedys pantheon: assholesby which she means conservatives. Suddenly, Miller added sourly, a guy could flaunt his most petty and vindictive prejudices and still get to feel like a champion of truth and freedom. You could rail against victimology when, say, sexually harassed workers dared to resort to it, and then turn around and avail yourself of the same trend by claiming that a pack of censorious puritans was trying to shut you up.
For Miller and those like her, Stewart, with his smart and smirky persona, was an answer to all thata legitimate champion of truth. When Bush was elected in 2000or selected, as so many on the Left insistStewart had his Great White Whale and surefire laugh machine all rolled into one. Angry and increasingly impotent, Stewarts fans, futilely seeking a sense of purpose, found in him at least a voice and an attitude. If liberals could do nothing about John Ashcroft and the Patriot Act, they could damn well hoot along with the studio audience at Jon Stewarts every derisive mention. The Daily Shows ratings soared, especially among younger viewers, and media praise snowballed.
The press routinely portrays Stewart not merely as a gifted entertainer and social commentator but as an influential ideological player, a political pied piper for countless college kids and recent grads. The oft-cited evidence: a Pew Research Center survey, released during last years bruising campaign, that showed 21 percent of Americans aged 18 to 29 naming The Daily Show and Saturday Night Live as their primary information sources on the presidential race. These numbers, not surprisingly, proved of great interest to liberal pols. John Edwards, for one, actually announced his presidential candidacy on The Daily Show, prompting Stewart to warn: We are a fake show, so you might have to do this again somewhere.
The tradition of liberal topical comedy that Salons Miller alludes to goes back at least to Lenny Bruce, but Stewarts most obvious model is the faux news anchor created by Chevy Chase in Saturday Night Lives first season. Sitting behind his anchor deskhis soon-to-be-famous opening lines, Im Chevy Chase, and youre not, mocking the self-importance of real anchorsChase created a character that has since become a cliché: the hip, ironic, ever-so-knowing newsman, offering a deadpan take on actual events, dropping coy references to sex, drugs, and rock n roll as he amiably skewers the close-minded, the hypocritical, and the obtuse.
Stewart has smartly elaborated on the form. Shot four times a week before a wildly enthusiastic audience and broadcast twice a day, The Daily Show opens with its star at his anchor desk, giving his bemused take on the days headlines, and it closes with Stewart engaging in traditional talk-show chitchat, sometimes with a newsmaker or serious thinker, just as often with a mid-level movie star. The shows middle segment, often the funniest part, usually features one of Stewarts correspondents reporting from the field (while actually standing mere feet away in the studio in front of a cheesy graphic) or bantering with the host as straight man.
When Stewart eschews knee-jerk partisanship, even many conservatives find his comic persona immensely appealing: a quick-witted, understated everyman, given to self-deprecation and let-the-chips-fall-where-they-may candor. This persona was much in evi- dence, for instance, in the 2004 commencement address he gave at William and Mary, his alma mater. I am honored to be here and to receive this honorary doctorate, he told the graduates. When I think back to the people that have been in this position before me, from Benjamin Franklin to Queen Noor of Jordan, I cant help but wonder what has happened to this place. Seriously, it saddens me, he continued. As a person, I am honored to get it; as an alumnus, I have to say I believe we can do better. . . . But today isnt about how my presence here devalues this fine institution. It is about you, the graduates.
Stewart also effectively mobilizes this mock-serious tone in America (The Book). Mimicking a typical high school history text, right down to the laminated cover and the discussion questions at the end of chapterssample question for the media chapter: What are the top 100 TV shows you would rather watch instead of the nightly news?the book is frequently laugh-out-loud funny. Among other riffs on convention, it features an introduction by Thomas Jefferson and a standings table, sports-page style, of European nations war records. Named Publishers Weeklys Book of the Year, it topped the New York Times nonfiction bestseller list for 15 weeks, greatly expanding Stewarts reach.
At its best, The Daily Show takes the same poker-faced, out-of-left-field approach to subjects the real news takes seriously. Not long ago, for example, when the blogospheres exposure of the biases of mainstream media figures had suddenly become the hot topic, correspondent Stephen Colbert weighed in. Tall, bespectacled, and impeccably groomed, full of the voice-of-God assurance we associate with generations of network reporters, Colbert wears any number of hats on the show: Senior Political Correspondent, Senior European Bureau Chief, Senior Religion Correspondent, and evenwhen waxing eloquent with academic fraudulence on Christos installation The GatesSenior Conceptual Art Correspondent. This time, as Senior Media Correspondent, he began his back-and-forth with Stewart with a shocking admission:
Colbert: Jon, before we start, Id like to get something off my chest, before I get outed by the bloggers. My real name isnt Stephen Colbert, its Ted Hitler. No relation. [pause] Well, distant relation. . . . Im Adolf Hitlers grandson. Anyway, its out there, its no longer news.
Stewart: Uh . . . Thank you for your honesty, Stephen.
Colbert: Its Ted. Ted Hitler. The vast majority of bloggers out there are responsible. . . . Where I draw the line is with these attack bloggersjust someone with a computer who gathers, collates, and publishes accurate information that is then read by the general public. They have no credibility, all they have is facts. Spare me!
Stewart: As long as the blogs fact-check, why would you even object to this kind of political coverage?
Colbert: Because its not political coverage, Jon. Theyre reporting on reporters. First rule of journalism is: dont talk about journalism. Nobody likes a snitch.
Of course, The Daily Show talks about journalismand journalistsall the time, another reason that media types swoon over it. Though much of what Stewart and his cronies say about the press is acidly contemptuous, even this plays to the bottomless narcissism of many journalists: if nothing else, Stewart reassures them that they remain at the center of the world.
More to the point, many reporters agree with the comics harsh critique of the media, at least when it comes to coverage of the Bush administration and the Iraq War. Thus, startling as the charge may be to conservatives, media types delight when Stewart regularly accuses the press of giving the president a free pass. The exchange with Colbert about bloggers, for instance, works in the following:
Stewart: What bloggers do, as you describe it, is in many respects what journalists do.
Colbert [with rich contempt]: What journalists do, Jon? As a journalist, I think I know what I do. Im not sitting at home in front of my computer. Im out here busting my hump at the White House, transcribing their press releases, repeating their talking pointsthats how you earn your nickname from President Bush!
Our show is obviously at a disadvantage with any of the other news shows were competing against, Stewart mused in another broadcast. For one thing, were fake. They are not. So in terms of credibility, we are . . . a beat, a patented Stewart blank lookwell, oddly enough, were about even.
To Stewart and his crew, Iraq has long been Mess O Potamia, with even the best news spun as potentially disastrous. Immediately following the historic Iraqi elections, Stewart showed a chart of the incoming National Assembly, broken down by party. The Shiites took 140 seats for their United Iraqi Alliance ticket, he explained, followed by the Kurdistan An explosion blows up a good bit of the chart. I guess, deadpanned Stewart, there are still some bugs to work out in the electoral system. For those who viewed the Iraqi elections as a triumph of hope and humanity over evil, this reaction failed to amuse.
Stewarts profound cynicism about America as a bastion of freedom and democracy is at the core of America (The Book). For all the genuine laughs, notes Megan Basham on NationalReviewOnline, the book makes abundantly clear what a knuckle-dragging Philistine you are if you reflect on America the Beautiful with any sort of warm sentiment. . . . No aspect of our patriotic pride is too sacred to be sacrificed on the altar of irony. Whats more, she continues, If a conservative writing team ever penned a joke about a Democratic black leader like the one made by Stewarts team about Clarence Thomas (a mocking classroom activity in the book instructs children, Using felt and yarn, make a hand puppet of Clarence Thomas. Ta-da! Youre Antonin Scalia!), there would be p.r. hell to pay.
It speaks volumes about contemporary liberalism that in progressive circles, such stuff passes for brilliant satire.
Since Stewarts adamant- ly liberal worldviewwhich includes, among many, many other easy hits, regular slams of Fox News and mockery of traditionalist beliefsis so central to his comedy, its a bit odd to see his media fans always asserting that hes an equal-opportunity basher. The New York Timess Rich, for example, writes, The Daily Show has fulfilled its mission without being particularly ideological. Similarly, Newsweek presented a harmless gibe Stewart made at Democratic fringe presidential candidate Dennis Kucinichs expense as evidence of his supposed nonpartisanship. Jon Stewart is allergic to liars, spinners, and boasters, the magazine gushed, even pint-sized ones from Ohio. It then relates Stewarts joke: I heard Dennis Kucinich in the last Democratic debate say, When Im president . . . and I just wanted to stop him and say, Dude.
Doubtless Kucinich was trading in unreality, but so do journalists who portray Stewart as ideologically neutral. While this might be construed as merely another case (as lyricist Lorenz Hart so deftly had it) of the self-delusion that believes the liea common enough tendency among todays media eliteits surely also an effort to justify journalists wild enthusiasm for the comedian. The truth, after all, plays less well: they love Jon Stewart not only because hes smart and fearless but because he shares their jaundiced views of America.
Theres no more striking example of how big a part ideology plays in the mainstream medias taste in comedy than its about-face on Stewarts fellow comedian Dennis Miller. Making his bones as one of Chevy Chases successors behind the Saturday Night Live Weekend Update anchor desk, Miller was long a media darling, praised like Stewart for inventiveness and daring, especially when he became host of his long-running HBO show, Dennis Miller Live. As the New York Timess Caryn James wrote in 1996, Miller is as scabrous and funny a political satirist as anyone around, given to irreverent comments on the news.
Thats when Miller was a man of the Left. Then, after September 11, in a metamorphosis both startling and brave, given the world in which he made his living, Miller emerged as an outspoken defender of Bushs foreign policy. Instantly, he became the skunk at the media party. In 2004, hosting a new show on CNBC, he found himself dismissed by the very same Caryn James as one of the stand-up comics turned pontificating policy wonks. To her colleague Rich, he was simply formerly funny.
Jon Stewart is in no danger of such treatment anytime soon. Though to his credit, Stewart sometimes invites conservatives like Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol for the shows concluding interview segment (and treats them with good-humored civility), his warmest interviews are with guests whose liberal views mirror his own. The New Yorkers Seymour Hersh, arguably the mainstream medias most dogged anti-Bush reporter, is a particular favorite. On a recent Hersh appearance, promoting a piece that alleged, dubiously, that Bush is spoiling for war with Iran, the host introduced him with something approaching aweHe does a thing called real reportingand went on to embrace Hershs every sour observation and unsubstantiated conclusion.
Its hardly a coincidence that, as the Swift Boat Veterans attack threatened to sink John Kerrys campaign in the fall of 2004, raising questions about his Vietnam record and antiwar activities when he returned from combat, the candidate chose The Daily Show as the venue from which to respond. In what can only be described as a classic suck-up session, Stewart began: Now howhow are you holding up? This has been aits been a rough couple weeks. Ive been followingI watch a lot of the cable news shows. So I understand that apparently you were never in Vietnam [laughs].
Kerry: [laughs] Thats what I understand, too. But IIm trying to find out what happened.
Stewart: Now is it
Kerry: That part of my life. I dont know.
Stewart: Exactly. Its nice, though. I know35 years ago I have friends that have come forward and sayyou did have cooties. You know, that sort of thing [laughs]. Is itdo youdo youis it hard not to take it personally?
Responding later to criticism about a line of questioning so soft it hardly qualified as questioning at all, Stewart blithely noted, as he always does in such situations, that he is merely a comedian, not a journalist.
Fair enough, except that no one takes Stewartnor does he really take himselffor another Jay Leno. Citing the Pew numbers, many observers maintained he would deliver his young audience en masse to the Democrats, helping propel Kerry to victory. Fox Newss Bill OReilly, for instance, warned darkly of Stewarts hold on the vast, untapped stoned slacker vote.
The thinking here was understandable. It is safe to say that the vast majority of Stewarts young fans have no more a coherent political philosophy than they do a sense of history. What they do tend to have, in the contemporary vernacular, is attitude: a set of poses, ranging from an easy familiarity with drug culture to a bemused contempt for religion, that define one as hip. Jon Stewart confirms that view of themselves in every broadcast.
Still, its hard precisely to gauge what kind of influence, if any, Stewart ultimately had on the 2004 election. As it turned out, Bush did about as well with younger voters as he did in 2000winning about 45 percent of the totaland 18- to 29-year-olds made up the same percentage of the total turnout as they had four years earlier.
Whats beyond a doubt is how much emotion the comedian himself had invested in the elections outcome. The New York Daily News notes that Stewart was in a real bad mood on election night, cutting out after spending only a few minutes at The Daily Shows election party. His next show was uncharacteristically bitter. Typifying the half-hours tenor was a rant by Lewis Black, easily the nastiest of the shows regular crew: The electorate has spoken, he growled. I wont try to imitate out of respect for the mentally retarded.
Nor is there any doubt about Stewarts continuing influence on the elite media. Consider his height-of-the-election appearance on CNNs long-running political debate program, Crossfire. Stewart supposedly was there to hawk his book, and the segment began with conservative co-host Tucker Carlson amiably introducing the comedian as the most trusted name in fake news, a man with a one- of-a-kind take on politics, the press, and America. But a humorless Stewartin liberal high dudgeonalmost immediately launched into an attack on the program and its hosts for purported journalistic failures. With its heat-over- light confrontational format, Crossfire was hurting America, Stewart charged. Hosts Carlson and liberal Paul Begala were guilty of partisan hackery.
The befuddled hosts at first tried to jolly Stewart into being the good-natured guest theyd expected. But finally, Carlson had enough, and brought up Stewarts toothless interview with Kerry. If you want to compare your show to a comedy show, shot back Stewart, youre more than welcome to.
The Crossfire audience cheered Stewart, but not nearly as much as the mainstream press did. Hosts of CNNs Crossfire had expected their Friday guest to be the zany and sophisticated satirist Jon Stewart, host of Comedy Centrals popular The Daily Show, as the Los Angeles Times spun it. Instead, they got Citizen Stewart, a passionate and earnest media watchdog who snarled and begged them to stop hurting America.
Yet even Stewart must have been surprised by what happened next. Incoming CNN president Jonathan Klein fired Carlson and announced that the network would cancel the near-moribund Crossfire.
I guess I come down more firmly in the Jon Stewart camp, he told the Associated Press.
Soon after, when the Memogate scandal forced CBS anchor Dan Rather into early retirement, there was actually speculation that the network would offer comic Stewart a prominent role in a revamped nightly news broadcast. Perhaps sensing that joining the CBS News team wouldnt be an upward career move, Stewart used his show to quash the rumors. Can this loser network ever pull itself out of the crapper? intoned one of its phony correspondents. Theyve floated all kinds of names to replace Dan Rather, from Katie Couric toas a photo of a mugging Stewart appeared on the screenDouchebag McJokenstein.
It is awfully hard in this age of celebrity preening to dislike a guy who so readily pokes fun at himself. Still, its hardly as if taking shots at CBS these days qualifies Stewart as a risk-taker.
He appeared to be making a far bolder move a couple of months later when, with the democratic tide rising in the Middle East, he acknowledged that maybe Bushs policy in the region hadnt been so loony after all. He admitted that such a thought left him full of cognitive dissonance, but when you see the Lebanese in the streets, you say, Oh my God, its working!
[P]retty soon, Republicans are gonna be like, Reagan was nothing compared to this guy, Stewart added, cradling his head in his hands. Like, my kids gonna go to a high school named after him, I just know it.
Well, comforted his guest, a die-hard former Clinton official, theres still Iran and North Korea, dont forget.
Iran and North Korea, echoed Stewart hopefully, as he thrust crossed fingers up in the air for luck. Thats true, that is true.
At least somewhat reassured, his audience roared.
"Stewart is a man bravely battling pomposity and misinformation,
I think not! That was enough for me, right there.
Who?
Yes, Stewart is a flaming liberal that puts even Dan Rather to shame. His show is still pretty funny, it's about the only television show I routinely watch. I can't stand it though when he "interviews" some liberal guest and they just bash conservatives for five minutes.
His bravery and much-vaunted grasp of political nuance consists mostly of his embrace of every reflexive assumption shared by every litmus-tested liberal holding forth at every chic Manhattan dinner party.
That pretty much sums it up for me... |
True, but at least he does have conservative guests on once in a while and is polite when they speak.
I have all but stopped watching news discussion shows because I only wan to hear one person speak at a time. on H&C, oftem 4 peple are talking at one time, each trying to out-talk the other. No thanks, I get enough of that at my dinner table.
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I got a kick a few months ago reading about Stewart's crying hissy fit he threw when he arrive to what was supposed to be a Kerry victory party.
They should show that on the Daily show.
Yeah! I don't often do "pay-per-view" but I'd darned sure pay to see that.
Stewart is a modern liberal who found a mask most people will buy into. It's marketing the same old message and bashing the guys who didbn;t makret it as well before him.
Whatever.
Stewart is a modern liberal who found a mask most people will buy into. It's marketing the same old message and bashing the guys who didbn;t makret it as well before him.
Whatever.
Nailed it.
The guy b-slapped Tucker Carlson. It's not as if it was anything out of the realm of possibility. Stewart is just the latest overrated blowhard to fill in for Bill Maher.
Me too. I don't watch any of the shout-o-matches on TV. Stewart is a big commie and I wouldn't waste five minutes on him.
Why Jon Stewart Is All the Rage
Way too long to read.
The Daily Show is Funny. That's why Stewart is popular.
(The same reason Stan and Kyle are popular)
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