Jon Stewart the Most Trusted Man in America is ‘Just’ a Comedian


Jon Stewart is an entertaining and trustworthy source of political, social and cultural commentary. Every night he’s smart and funny without playing games or focusing on creating short clippable segments, and he has something to say that people want to hear. Everyone knows this, except maybe for Jon. He still thinks he’s just a comedian. But in reality, to so many American’s he’s become a trustworthy source of political, social and cultural commentary every week night. He’s someone who says what he thinks, with comedy and without bullshit.
Here’s a quick and fun exercise. Google the words “Jon Stewart” and “respected”. It won’t take very long, but you will learn quite a lot. Because aside from your eyes glazing over from all of the articles about Stewart’s swan song this Thursday as host and producer of Comedy Central’s The Daily Show, you will be able to piece together a picture. It will be a snapshot of a charming wiseass who many Americans trust to tell them the truth about the world’s events. What’s interesting, though, is how different this picture is than the one Stewart sees when he looks in the mirror. That picture is probably more like the one you would have seen had you Googled those same words in 1990.
Back then, if Googling was a “thing” yet, you would have gathered a picture of a young stand-up comic beginning his first hosting gig, showing clips of other comedians and films on Short Attention Span Theater on The Comedy Channel (one half of the companies that would merge to become Comedy Central a few years later.) Stewart already had the elements that would serve him well throughout his career. His intelligent humor, aforementioned charm, and a likeable cheekiness, all of which allow him to say almost anything without having everyone want to punch him in the face. Stewart has always evoked feelings reminiscent of the mischievous dog who tore up the couch while you were out, but whom you can’t stay mad at because he’s just too damn fun and adorable.
Slowly, and without fanfare, he became the person college kids watched to not only find out what was happening in the world, but how to feel about it.
By the time he took over The Daily Show in 1999, Stewart had a reputation as a smart, funny and well-liked comedian. The first few years of the show demonstrated how deft he was with political humor, easily able to tread the tone of being truthful and opinionated without being preachy. But he was still a comedian. Just one who focused on current events. Slowly, and without fanfare, he became the person college kids watched to not only find out what was happening in the world, but how to feel about it.
A 2008 article in the New York Times sought to answer the question, “Is Jon Stewart the Most Trusted Man in America?” And while he continued to defer to the fact that his show aired on a channel with the word “comedy” in it, and that he was only a comedian, viewers and his monologues begged to differ.
There was a palpable shift in the way Stewart was perceived after this appearance, which went viral. A few months later, Crossfire was canceled by CNN, and it was seen as in no small part due to Jon’s appearance. He spoke the truth, he said what people were thinking, and he did it in a way everyone related to and enjoyed. With humor.
He spoke the truth, he said what people were thinking, and he did it in a way everyone related to and enjoyed.
Still and always, Stewart would say he himself was not a journalist even though he occasionally won awards for journalism. Although most of the world has come to see Jon Stewart as the person they respect most with the handling of their news, even if they don’t always agree with him, unfortunately that feeling has not trickled down to Jon himself. It was revealed last year that Stewart was courted to host Meet the Press, one of the most respected news and political dialogue shows in the country. Stewart declined, of course.
And now, Jon’s vision of himself as a comedian and not a journalist is is going to be a reality. He’s saying goodbye to explaining the world to us each night on The Daily Show and going back to stand-up. Those of us who were hoping for a last-minute reprieve realized it wasn’t happening last week when he performed a surprise set at The Comedy Cellar, alongside Louis CK. Jon has already started his new old life, choosing to be the comedian he’s never stopped seeing himself as. But whatever he is– comedian or respected voice or both, Jon Stewart changed the game, changed comedy and changed journalism, even if he hasn’t taken that in himself.
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