Times Colonist

John Oliver to return with more Last Week

- DAVID BAUDER

NEW YORK — HBO’s John Oliver says he likes the idea of keeping as much as possible about his show a secret until it airs each week, a philosophy he took to the extreme last spring when he travelled to Moscow to interview Edward Snowden.

Oliver, who begins a new round of his Last Week Tonight comedy show on Feb. 14, did not tell his network until he had returned that he had spoken to the fugitive, who leaked NSA documents to journalist­s in 2013 and faces prison time if he returns to the United States.

He pleaded with HBO not to tell anyone that he had interviewe­d Snowden, in part because it would spoil a segment where he makes viewers wonder if Snowden would even show up.

He even asked the studio audience at the episode’s taping to keep quiet about it online.

“I really appreciate­d the fact that HBO would let us do it that way,” Oliver said, “because we thought it was the best way to actually present it, even though commercial­ly it was the worst way you could present it.”

Oliver said HBO has kept its promise not to interfere creatively in the making of Last Week Tonight.

“It’s like your parents saying, ‘You can do whatever you’d like, but don’t touch that cabinet,’ ” he said. “I presumed that HBO was lying” the way other networks often do, he said.

With his philosophy in mind, Oliver is not revealing much about the topics Last Week Tonight will be covering in the upcoming months.

It’s difficult to reveal much because some stories may fall through, he said. Each week’s show has a centrepiec­e story that is discussed in a mixture of comedy and reporting.

He will, however, be ending a moratorium about discussion of the presidenti­al campaign.

The show wants to look almost forensical­ly at how the process of democracy works, rather than be caught in daily stories about what candidates are saying that he said can be handled better comically elsewhere.

“Otherwise, you get lost in the general campaign ephemera where nothing really significan­t happens of any consequenc­e,” he said.

He hopes for more longgestat­ing stories, such as his examinatio­n of religious fundraisin­g, after which he and actor Rachel Dratch posed as televangel­ists asking viewers to send them one dollar.

Joke or not, Last Week Tonight received some $70,000 in single dollar bills — along with five vials of semen, at least three of which Oliver is convinced were fake.

The money was donated to Doctors Without Borders.

Oliver and his staff work at what must be one of the most interestin­g office buildings in New York, one floor below CBS’ 60 Minutes staff and a few floors away from where Samantha Bee, fellow alumnus of The Daily Show, is making her upcoming TBS show.

“An elevator ride with Charlie Rose is time well spent,” Oliver said.

 ??  ?? John Oliver begins a new round of his comedy show Last Week Tonight with John Oliver on Feb. 14.
John Oliver begins a new round of his comedy show Last Week Tonight with John Oliver on Feb. 14.

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