Jon Stewart questions fate of The Daily Show
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Jon Stewart didn't disappoint with his views on the multi-million-dollar settlement between Paramount Global, which owns The Daily Show network Comedy Central, and President Donald Trump. Five days after the company paid Trump $16M to settle the lawsuit that the President brought against it for its handling of a 60 Minutes interview with Presidential candidate
Curious if The Daily Show is getting canceled and how Jon Stewart is reacting to the uncertainty? As Skydance moves to acquire Paramount Global, questions have emerged about the future of Comedy Central’s longest-running late-night program and its place in the new corporate landscape.
Marc Maron addressed his long-standing beef with The Daily Show host Jon Stewart on Friday, calling Stewart his “nemesis.” Maron appeared on NPR’s Wild Card with Rachel Martin podcast, where he said he was “consumed” with “jealousy” over Stewart’s success “for most of my professional life.
Jon Stewart confronted Elmo during Monday night's "The Daily Show" over the "Sesame Street" puppet's X hack and antisemitic tweets.
Show’s Jon Stewart has flamed his parent company Paramount Global’s decision to settle President Donald Trump’s $20 billion lawsuit—and now he’s well aware that his job might be on the line. Stewart said on Thursday’s The Weekly Show,
The “shitty establishment” Stewart is referencing seems to be Paramount as a whole, though he doesn’t spare Comedy Central either. “I’d like to believe that without The Daily Show… I don’t know. Comedy Central is kind of like muzak at this point,
Show just scored its biggest quarterly share in ten years – since Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band sent him off.
Elmo was radicalized by the manosphere,” the Sesame Street character explained, admitting that he had not actually been hacked