Regina Leader-Post

Oliver relishes ‘addictive’ freedom

Late-night comic enjoys doing show with few restrictio­ns

- DAVID BAUDER

HBO’s John Oliver so relished being able to trash AT&T’s cellphone service that he can’t imagine doing Last Week Tonight under corporate restrictio­ns.

His network’s corporate parent, Time Warner, is waiting to see whether a proposed takeover by AT&T will be approved. Oliver’s show, which begins its fifth season on Sunday, has been able to operate with freedom in part because HBO’s business depends on subscriber­s instead of advertiser­s, and he’s become quite accustomed to it.

“We were drawing a line in the sand,” Oliver said, referring to an episode last season that discussed corporate mergers, including Time Warner’s. “I don’t anticipate the ground underneath us shifting and if it does, that is going to be a problem. We’ll go down screaming.”

He said he realizes his show is lucky to have the ability to do the lengthy, journalism-style exploratio­ns of issues and the jokes it gets to do along the way.

“Being able to point out that this product is (lousy) and that it tastes terrible, it’s really great to have that kind of freedom,” he said. “It’s addictive.”

Besides some topical jokes, the show’s centrepiec­e is one lengthy exploratio­n of an issue each week. Oliver tackles topics that would seem television-unfriendly, like net neutrality or health-care financing, and teaching an audience while having some laughs along the way.

He’s reluctant to talk about any topics the show will cover during a new season, both to preserve the element of surprise and because they probably wouldn’t sound appetizing.

“If we say to people, ‘Look, we’re going to talk about Sinclair Broadcasti­ng,’ you’ll think ‘good, that’s a half-hour extra sleep I’ll have,’” he said.

The show constantly has to weigh how much of the day-to-day actions of the Trump administra­tion to address, both because he doesn’t want to change its formula and since many topics are picked clean by daily topical comedy shows. News, and the humour pulled out of it, moves so fast that programs like the Late Show had to go live after Trump’s State of the Union address because the jokes would seem stale 24 hours later, he said.

But there are some topics — like when Trump commented upon the demonstrat­ions in Charlottes­ville, Va. — where not talking about it would be like an editorial decision in itself, he said.

Despite starting its fifth season, Oliver said the show still feels new. He’s contracted to do two more and an HBO executive sitting near him at a news conference indicated the network would like more.

“I still feel there is a lot of room to get better,” Oliver said. “I don’t feel like we’re at cruising altitude yet.”

Oliver attracted attention during the show ’s hiatus for being on a panel discussion with Dustin Hoffman in December that sparked an uncomforta­ble discussion about women who had made sexual misconduct allegation­s against Hoffman. Hoffman should have been expecting that he would be questioned about it, Oliver said.

“The first person that he talked to (publicly) was going to have to ask him questions about it,” Oliver said. “Unfortunat­ely, that was me.”

The discussion continued largely because Hoffman’s answers “were pretty bad,” Oliver said.

“I wanted to try and get him to a point of self-reflection and to try and get something out of the conversati­on,” Oliver said. “But that didn’t happen.”

 ?? BRENT N. CLARKE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? “I still feel there is a lot of room to get better,” John Oliver says as he enters his fifth season of Last Week Tonight. “I don’t feel like we’re at cruising altitude yet.”
BRENT N. CLARKE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS “I still feel there is a lot of room to get better,” John Oliver says as he enters his fifth season of Last Week Tonight. “I don’t feel like we’re at cruising altitude yet.”

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