The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Jon Stewart to sign off his fake newscast for real

Comic Trevor Noah will step in as host of nightly reality check.

- By Frazier Moore

NEW YORK — After more than 16 years and nearly 2,600 telecasts, Jon Stewart can feel proud of his scads of Emmys and his pair of Peabody Awards, his cultural gravitas (he hung with the prez, both on and off the air!), even his reprobate status at Fox News.

Who could blame him for wanting to depart “The Daily Show” on this high note?

Besides, maybe it had gotten too easy. By June, when Donald Trump jumped into the presidenti­al race, a giddy Stewart framed this jest-alluring candidacy as Trump’s going-away gift to him, “putting me in some sort of comedy hospice where all I’m getting is straight morphine.”

Or maybe it had gotten too difficult.

When he took over “The Daily Show” in January 1999, Stewart’s simple mission was to host a program that would lampoon “real” newscasts and newsmakers they enabled.

“I like keeping up with the news,” he said at the time, “even though I think it’s gotten so out of control. But that’s what I like about ‘The Daily Show’: It’s like checks and balances.”

But in an interview a few months ago, Stewart put a bit more dismally the task of finding the funny in the news.

“I think of us as turd miners,” he said. “I put on my helmet, I go and mine turds.”

‘We are absolutely fake’

A famous definition of news: “What those in power don’t want you to know.”

Meanwhile, the illuminati­ve

mockery of Stewart’s “fake news” might be defined as “What those in power don’t want you to think.”

Always questionin­g authority — whether politician­s, corporate titans, media barons or, of course, puffed-up journalist­s — Stewart did what satirists have done for centuries: He seized on the absurdity embedded in accepted truth.

But as “The Daily Show” aped the bombast and blizzard of graphics employed, without irony, by “legitimate” newscasts, Stewart never copped to grandiose claims for what he was up to.

“Our meeting every morning is an explicit discussion of what’s going on in the world,” he declared in a 2004 interview. “But then the rest of the day is spent trying to hide that under layers of fart jokes.”

While Stewart is undeniably left-leaning, his show, he said, “doesn’t honor the distinctio­n between left wing and right wing, or liberal and conservati­ve, or in some respects between Democrat and Republican. “We only honor the distinctio­n between real and absurdly fake,” he said, then grinned. “And WE are absurdly fake.”

“The Daily Show” under Stewart thus made a credible argument that, for both journalism and public affairs, bogus is the new real. “The Daily Show” prevailed as a bit of daylight in between, a privileged space that granted Stewart almost limitless freedom.

A half-hour of silliness

Some (even Stewart) would say “The Daily Show” is a half-hour of silliness meant to call out politician­s and other power brokers with no higher purpose than amusing its audience.

Still, he was sharply attuned to America’s many wrong turns, how its leadership and media routinely let the country down. In 2010, he and fellow Comedy Central fakenews host Stephen Colbert even organized a rollicking “Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear” that drew tens of thousands to Washington’s National Mall.

Americans, said Stewart in one of the telecast’s more serious moments, do “impossible things every day that are only made possible through the little, reasonable compromise­s we all make.”

Americans do work together to get things done, insisted Stewart. “The only place we don’t is here,” he said, pointing behind him at the Capitol, “or on cable TV.”

In search of sanity

There has been little sign of sanity restored.

“Wouldn’t it be nice if people who jumped to conclusion­s and peddled a false, divisive, angerstoki­ng narrative had to apologize for misleading America?” mused Stewart last March in reference to a certain cable-news network.

On Thursday, Stewart, now 52, will step aside, making way for Trevor Noah, a 31-year-old standup comic from South Africa, to manage this nightly reality check as the nation dives headlong into the 2016 presidenti­al election cycle. Maybe Stewart has concluded things are crazier than ever. And, after all, how much crazy can one man comb through night after night, and retain his own sanity?

Are things crazier than ever?

Or maybe do we recognize the crazy more? Are we more painfully aware?

If that’s the case, his fans can thank Stewart for his abiding and soon-tobe-missed role in bringing us the crazy with insight, clarity and, of course, loads of laughs. Whatever he’s been mining for his more than 16 years, he made the most of it.

 ??  ?? Jon Stewart will sign off as host of “The Daily Show” on Thursday after nearly 17 years on Comedy Central.
Jon Stewart will sign off as host of “The Daily Show” on Thursday after nearly 17 years on Comedy Central.
 ?? EVAN VUCCI / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? President Barack Obama chats with Jon Stewart, host of “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart,” during a taping in New York.
EVAN VUCCI / ASSOCIATED PRESS President Barack Obama chats with Jon Stewart, host of “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart,” during a taping in New York.

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