Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Jon Stewart is still fighting for middle ground with ‘Irresistib­le’

- Jake Coyle

NEW YORK – When Jon Stewart signed off from the “The Daily Show” five years ago, he didn’t say goodbye. “The conversati­on isn’t ending,” Stewart said.

Stewart is now picking it back up with “Irresistib­le,” his second film as writer-director, following 2014’s “Rosewater,” and an extension of many of the things that Stewart talked about, satirized and debated in his 16 years hosting “The Daily Show.”

Focus Features will release the movie on-demand Friday, and it also opens at Fox-Bay Cinema Grill in Whitefish Bay. The film is about a mayoral election in small-town Wisconsin that draws big-time strategist­s of each party (Steve Carell, Rose Byrne) along with enormous amounts of money and a media circus. A satire in the mold of Preston Sturges, it’s American politics in microcosm.

But a lot has changed since Stewart ceased being such a regular public presence. In an interview from the home in New Jersey that Stewart shares with his wife and two children, the 57-year-old reflected on some of the turbulence in politics that has followed his nightly engagement.

But he mostly stuck true to his familiar principles: that the country is less right vs. left than it seems, that the electoral industrial complex is a destructiv­e force and that America is stronger than some give it credit for. Said Stewart of President Donald Trump: “The idea that this is the guy that takes us down is something I cannot comprehend.” Stewart recently answered questions from the AP.

Question: You regularly tried to bridge the divisions of the country through sanity and common sense on “The Daily Show.” Those divisions have only grown during the Trump administra­tion, some might say perilously so. Do you still believe in a middle ground?

We certainly did a couple of things that pointed to: Look, it doesn’t seem like we’re as divided as they say we are . ... That’s not to suggest that those divisions are real or don’t exist. But the permanence of it means there’s no time for make-up sex. The next election starts the next day. There’s just too much money. You’re in this permanent cycle that just entrenches and solidifies whatever those very real differences of opinion may be.

Question: Do you wonder if we’re outside of that cycle right now? Some see the future of the country riding on the election in November.

It always feels that way to some extent because it’s correct. The future of the country is riding on every election. But I don’t think it’s as black and white, that if it goes this way, the country survives, and this way it doesn’t. I still believe in resilience . ... I feel like at this point the country is a child alternatin­g between parents who hate each other. We’re spending time at dad’s or mom’s house right now but at some point we’ll get to go to the other parent’s house. At a certain point, the fever will break. That’s my hope. You see throughout history the pendulum swinging.

Question: I know you don’t miss having a show, but does something like the turnout at Trump’s recent rally in Tulsa make you want to tell a few jokes about it?

Uh, I told a lot of jokes . ... One of the things that made me want to do this movie was the redundancy of the absurdity. I mean, for God’s sake, Eric Trump was out there in Tulsa the day after Juneteenth in the city that was one of the worst racist massacres in the history of the country, and he’s yelling about: “We’re going to be able to say Merry Christmas again.” The absurdity of that.

Question: You see that kind of noise as the problem.

We’re allowing the absurdity of all this to consume what could actually begin to solve these problems. Sometimes you look at geopolitic­al situations and it doesn’t seem that insane to be able to solve it. You realize it’s because solving it doesn’t benefit the powers that be. Nothing sells like an enemy. The point of this movie isn’t to say Democrats and Republican­s are the same. They’re not the same. But they’re both playing on a Super Fund site. Whatever reindeer games are going on are held on a Super Fund site, and if we don’t clean up the Super Fund site, we don’t have much of a chance to see the distinctio­ns between the two things.

Question: Is Citizens United the turning point to you?

It was an escalation in an already running battle. But it’s really about this system that has its own gravitatio­nal force that begins to grow larger. It’s like if there’s a tropical depression forming in the Gulf and you follow it until you realize it’s going to consume everything in its path. It’s about that system that has only grown larger, more powerful and, I think, destructiv­e.

Question: This is the second film you’ve written and directed. Are you enjoying it?

When you spend so much time doing something that’s more ephemeral, the ability to work on something over a period of time and craft it a little more distinctly is more satisfying. It’s also a little more nerve-wracking, too. It’s sort of the difference between being a short-order cook and preparing for a gala.

 ?? VICTORIA WILL/INVISION/AP ?? Jon Stewart directed the comedy “Irresistib­le,” starring Rose Byrne and fellow “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” alum Steve Carell.
VICTORIA WILL/INVISION/AP Jon Stewart directed the comedy “Irresistib­le,” starring Rose Byrne and fellow “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” alum Steve Carell.

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