| The Daily Show | |
|---|---|
| Also known as | TDS
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| Genre | |
| Created by | |
| Written by | Several writers |
| Directed by | David Paul Meyer (2018–present)
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| Presented by | |
| Starring | Several correspondents |
| Theme music composer | Bob Mould |
| Opening theme | "Dog on Fire", arranged by Vanacore Music[a] |
| Country of origin | United States |
| No. of episodes | 4,086(list of episodes) |
| Production | |
| Executive producer |
Other producers:
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| Production location | NEP Studio 52, New York City (2005–2020, 2022–present)
|
| Running time |
|
| Production companies |
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| Original release | |
| Network |
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| Release | July 22, 1996 (1996-07-22) – present |
| Related | |
The Daily Show is an Americanlate-night talk andnews satire television program. It airs each Monday through Thursday onComedy Central in the United States, with extended episodes released shortly after onParamount+.The Daily Show draws its comedy and satire from recent news stories, political figures, and media organizations. It often usesself-referential humor.[1]Jon Stewart hosts the Monday edition. The current team of hosting correspondents for Tuesdays through Thursdays areRonny Chieng,Michael Kosta,Jordan Klepper,Desi Lydic, andJosh Johnson.Troy Iwata andGrace Kuhlenschmidt are non-hosting correspondents.
The half-hour-long show premiered on July 22, 1996, and was first hosted byCraig Kilborn until December 17, 1998. Stewart then took over as the host from January 11, 1999, until August 6, 2015, making the show more strongly focused onpolitical and newssatire, in contrast with the pop culture focus during Kilborn's tenure. Stewart was succeeded byTrevor Noah, whose tenure began on September 28, 2015, and ended in December 2022.[2] Under the different hosts, the show has been formally known asThe Daily Show with Craig Kilborn from 1996 to 1998,The Daily Show with Jon Stewart from 1999 until 2015, andThe Daily Show with Trevor Noah from 2015 to 2022.The Daily Show is the longest-running program on Comedy Central (counting all three tenures), and has won 26Primetime Emmy Awards.[3][4][5]
The program has been popular among young audiences. ThePew Research Center suggested in 2010 that 74% of regular viewers were between 18 and 49, and that 10% of the audience watched the show for its news headlines, 2% for in-depth reporting, and 43% for entertainment; compared with respectively 64%, 10% and 4%, who said the same ofCNN.[6] In 2015,The Daily Show's median age of viewership was 36 years old.[7] Between 2014 and 2023, the show's ratings declined by 75%, and its average viewer age increased to 63. In 2023, the viewership for age range of 25–54 year olds was 158,000 and the viewership for 18–34 year olds was 30,000.[8]
Stewart was taken to task in 2004 – by one of the show's creators, and later byCrossfire host Tucker Carlson – for not conducting sufficiently hard-hitting interviews with his political guests, some of whom he may have lampooned in previous segments.[9] DuringStewart's appearance on the CNN showCrossfire, where he chastised the CNN production and hosts for not conducting informative and current interviews on a news network, Carlson turned Stewart's criticism back on his guest, suggesting thatDaily Show interviews were too uncritical. In rejecting Carlson's criticism, Stewart pointed to the differing roles of news media and comedy.[10][11] Stewart and otherDaily Show writers have generally responded to such criticism by saying that they do not have any journalistic responsibility and that as comedians, their only duty is to provide entertainment.[12]
As a new permanent host had not been chosen after Noah's tenure ended in 2022, the show featured a rotating cast of guest hosts, with Jon Stewart returning to host Monday night shows starting February 12, 2024, and through thefall elections, with the correspondents rotating hosting duties for other shows.[13][14] Stewart later extended his contract into 2026.[15]
During Trevor Noah's tenure as host, each episode began with announcer Drew Birns announcing the date and the introduction, "From Comedy Central's World News Headquarters in New York, this isThe Daily Show with Trevor Noah".[16][17] Previously, the introduction was "This isThe Daily Show, the most important television program, ever."[citation needed] The host then opens the show with a monologue drawing from current news stories and issues. Previously, the show had divided its news commentary into sections known as "Headlines", "Other News", and "This Just In"; these titles were dropped from regular use on October 28, 2002, and were last used on March 6, 2003. Some episodes will begin with a 1–3 minute intro on a small story (or small set of stories) before fully transitioning into the main story of the night. Currently, the segment is simply called "Headlines".
The monologue segment is often followed by a segment featuring an exchange with a correspondent, either at the anchor desk with the host or reporting from a false location in front of agreenscreen showing stock footage. They typically present absurd or humorously exaggerated takes on current events against the host'sstraight man. Some correspondent segments involve the show's members travelling to different locations to file comedic reports on current news stories and conduct interviews with people related to the featured issue.
Correspondents are typically introduced as the show's "senior" specialist in the story's subject, and can range from relatively general (such as Senior Political Analyst) to absurdly specific (such as Senior Religious Registry Correspondent). The cast of correspondents is quite diverse, and many often sarcastically portray extremestereotypes of themselves to poke fun at a news story, such as "Senior Latino Correspondent", "Senior Youth Correspondent" or "Senior Black Correspondent".

While correspondents stated to be reporting abroad are usually performing in-studio in front of a greenscreen background, on rare occasions, cast members have recorded pieces on location. For instance, during the week of August 20, 2007, the show aired a series of segments called "Operation Silent Thunder: The Daily Show in Iraq" in which correspondentRob Riggle reported from Iraq.[18] In August 2008, Riggle traveled to China for a series of segments titled "Rob Riggle:Chasing the Dragon", which focused on the2008 Beijing Olympics.[19]
Jason Jones traveled toIran in early June 2009 to report on the Iranian elections, andJohn Oliver traveled to South Africa for the series of segments "Into Africa" to report on the2010 FIFA World Cup. In March 2012, Oliver traveled toGabon, on the west African coast, to report on the Gabonese government's decision to donate $2 million toUNESCO after the United States cut its funding for UNESCO earlier that year. On July 19, 2016,Roy Wood Jr. reported live from theRepublican National Convention and talked aboutDonald Trump's African-American support.[20][21]
Topics have varied widely; during the early years of the show, they tended toward character-driven human interest stories such asBigfoot enthusiasts. Since Stewart began hosting in 1999, the focus of the show has become more political and the field pieces have come to more closely reflect current issues and debates.[22] Under Kilborn and the early years of Stewart, most interviewees were either unaware or not entirely aware of the comedic nature ofThe Daily Show. However, as the show began to gain popularity — particularly following its coverage of the2000 and2004 presidential elections — most of the subjects now interviewed are aware of the comedic element.[23]
Some segments have recurred periodically throughout different tenures, such as "Back in Black" (segments hosted by comedianLewis Black) & "Your Moment of Zen". Since the2003 invasion of Iraq, a common segment of the show has been dubbed "Mess O' Potamia", focusing on the United States' policies in the Middle East, especially Iraq.[24] Elections in the United States were a prominent focus in the show's "Indecision" coverage throughout Stewart & Noah's time as host (the title "InDecision" is a parody ofNBC News' "Decision" segment). Since 2000, under Stewart's tenure, the show went on the road to record week-long specials from the cities hosting theDemocratic andRepublican national conventions.[25] For the2006 U.S. midterm elections, a week of episodes was recorded in the contested state ofOhio.[26] The "Indecision" & "Democalypse" coverage of the 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2014, 2016 elections all culminated in liveElection Night specials.[27]
With Noah as host, one new recurring segment has been "What the Actual Fact", with correspondentDesi Lydic examining statements made by political figures during speeches or events. Under Noah, the continuation of "Democalypse" and "Indecision" also took place with live shows after theRepublican National Convention andDemocratic National Convention.[28] For the first time, under Noah, the show also went live after all threeU.S. presidential debates in 2016.[29]
In the show's third act, the host conducts an interview with a celebrity guest. Guests come from a wide range of cultural sources, and include actors, musicians, authors, athletes, pundits, policy experts and political figures.[30] During Stewart's tenure, the show's guests tended away from celebrities and more towards non-fiction authors and political pundits, as well as many prominent elected officials.[24] In the show's earlier years it struggled to book high-profile politicians. (In 1999, for anIndecision 2000 segment,Steve Carell struggled to talk his way off Republican candidateJohn McCain's press overflow bus and onto theStraight Talk Express).[citation needed]However its rise in popularity, particularly following the show's coverage of the 2000 and 2004 elections, made Stewart according to aRolling Stone (2006) article, "the hot destination for anyone who wants to sell books or seem hip, from presidential candidates to military dictators".Newsweek labeled it "the coolest pit stop on television".[31][32]
Prominent political guests have included former U.S. PresidentsJoe Biden,[33]Jimmy Carter,Bill Clinton andBarack Obama,[34] former British Prime MinistersTony Blair andGordon Brown, former Pakistani PresidentPervez Musharraf, former Liberian PresidentEllen Johnson Sirleaf, former Bolivian PresidentEvo Morales, Jordanian KingAbdullah II, former Estonian Prime MinisterTaavi Roivas, Canadian Prime MinisterJustin Trudeau and former Mexican PresidentVicente Fox.[35]
The show has played host to former and current members of the administration and Cabinet as well as members of Congress. Numerous presidential candidates have appeared on the show during their campaigns, including John McCain,John Kerry, Barack Obama andHillary Clinton.[36]
In a closing segment, there is a brief segue to the closing credits in the form of the host introducing "Your Moment of Zen", a humorous piece of video footage without commentary that has been part of the show's wrap-up since the series began in 1996.[37] The segment often relates to a story covered earlier in the episode, but occasionally is merely a humorous or ridiculous clip. Occasionally, the segment is used as a tribute to someone who has died.[38]
Sometimes, before the "Your Moment of Zen", this segment is used for quick promotions. The host might promote the show that follows right after their broadcast, such as promoting the show@midnight. This time has also been used to promote films, books or stand-up specials that are affiliated with the host.[39][40][41]
In October 2005, followingThe Colbert Report's premiere, a new feature (sometimes referred to as the toss) was added to the closing segment in which Stewart would have a short exchange with "our good friend,Stephen Colbert atThe Colbert Report", which aired immediately after. The two would have a scripted comedic exchange via split-screen from their respective sets. In 2007, the "toss" was cut back to twice per week, and by 2009 was once a week before gradually being phased out. It was used on the 2014 mid-term election night and again just before thefinal episode ofThe Colbert Report on December 18, 2014, and returned upon the premiere ofThe Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore. Stewart then regularly tossed to Wilmore at the end of his Monday night episodes. Under Noah, the "toss" has been used forThe Opposition with Jordan Klepper andLights Out with David Spade.
The host sits at his desk on theelevated island stage in the style of a traditional news show. The show initially used New YorkPBS stationWNET's facilities until late 1998, when it moved a few blocks toNEP Studio 54.The Colbert Report would claim NEP Studio 54 in 2005.[42][43] On July 11, 2005, the show premiered in its new studio, NEP Studio 52, at 733 11th Avenue, a few blocks west of its former location.[44]The set of the new studio was given a sleeker, more formal look, including a backdrop of three large projection screens. The traditional guests' couch, which had been a part of the set since the show's premiere, was done away with in favor of simple upright chairs. The change was initially not well-received, spawning a backlash among some fans and prompting a "Bring Back the Couch" campaign. The campaign was mentioned on subsequent shows by Stewart and supported byDaily Show contributorBob Wiltfong.[45][46] The couch was eventually featured in a sweepstakes in which the winner received the couch, round-trip tickets to New York, tickets to the show, and a small sum of money.[47]

On April 9, 2007, the show debuted a new set. The projection screens were revamped (with one large screen behind Stewart, while the smaller one behind the interview subject remained the same), a large, global map directly behind Stewart, a more open studio floor, and a J-shaped desk supported at one end by a globe. The intro was also updated; the graphics, display names, dates, and logos were all changed.[48]


On September 28, 2015, the show debuted a new set alongside the debut ofTrevor Noah's tenure. According to Larry Hartman, Noah took a lot of inspiration from Stewart's set.[49] A second on-stage 'jumbo-tron' was added and the colours of the set were made lighter. The graphics, intro, theme music, lower thirds, logo, etc. were also all revamped.[50] On July 19, 2016, the set and graphics were given another change to reflect Democalypse 2016 and denoteThe Daily Show'sRNC andDNC coverage (which was taped in the conventions' respective cities).[51] The new temporary sets had aWashington theme, and was meant to show that Washington is "a little broke" and needs "repair".[52] Though the studio was reverted to its former self after the election week in 2016, the changes to the graphics were kept.
After a stretch of episodes filmed from Trevor Noah's apartment due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, the show returned to a smaller studio atOne Astor Plaza, the corporate headquarters of ViacomCBS inTimes Square. The new studio had no audience, and a smaller, more intimate atmosphere with muted colors. In April 2022,The Daily Show returned to NEP Studio 52 with a revamped set, combining elements of the Times Square studio with a revamped version of its previous layout.[53]
The show's writers begin each day with a morning meeting where they review material that researchers have gathered from major newspapers, theAssociated Press,cable news television channels and websites, and discuss headline material for the lead news segment. Throughout the morning they work on writing deadline pieces inspired by recent news, as well as longer-term projects. By lunchtime, Noah — who describes his role as that of the captain of a team[54] — has begun to review headline jokes. The script is submitted by 3 pm, and at 4:15 there is a rehearsal. An hour is left for rewrites before a 6 pm taping in front of a live studio audience.[16][32]
The Daily Show typically tapes four new episodes a week, Monday through Thursday, forty-two weeks a year.[55] The show is broadcast at 11 PMEastern/10 PMCentral, a time when local television stations show their news reports and about half an hour before most other late-night comedy programs begin to go on the air. The program used to be rerun several times the next day, including a 7:30 PM Eastern/6:30 PM Central prime time broadcast.[56]
From 2007 to 2024, full archive clips from the show under Jon Stewart's tenure were available on the Comedy Central website.[57][58] In June 2024, the Comedy Central website was shut down in favor of theParamount+ streaming service, where full episodes going back to Jon Stewart's return in February 2024 are available.[58][59] Clips dating from the beginning of Trevor Noah's tenure to the present are available on the show's YouTube channel.[60]
The Daily Show was created byLizz Winstead and Madeleine Smithberg[61] and premiered on Comedy Central on July 22, 1996, having been marketed as a replacement forPolitically Incorrect (a successful Comedy Central program that had moved toABC earlier that year).[62] Madeleine Smithberg was co-creator ofThe Daily Show as well as the formerexecutive producer. A graduate ofBinghamton University, she was an executive producer ofSteve Harvey's Big Time and atalent coordinator forLate Night with David Letterman.[61]
Aiming to parody conventional newscasts, it featured a comedic monologue of the day's headlines from anchorCraig Kilborn (a well-known co-anchor ofESPN'sSportsCenter), as well asmockumentary style on-location reports, in-studio segments and debates from regular correspondents Winstead,Brian Unger,Beth Littleford, andA. Whitney Brown.[63]
Common segments included "This Day inHasselhoff History" and "Last Weekend's Top-Grossing Films, Converted intoLira", in parody of entertainment news shows and their tendency to lead out to commercials with trivia such as celebrity birthdays.[64] Another commercial lead-out featured Winstead's parents, on her answering machine, reading that day's "Final Jeopardy!" question and answer.[65] In each show, Kilborn would conduct celebrity interviews, ending with a segment called "Five Questions" in which the guest was made to answer a series of questions that were typically a combination of obscure fact and subjective opinion.[66] These are highlighted in a 1998 book titledThe Daily Show: Five Questions, which contains transcripts of Kilborn's best interviews.[67] Each episode concluded with a segment called "Your Moment of Zen" that showed random video clips of humorous and sometimes morbid interest such as visitors at a Chinese zoo feeding baby chickens to the alligators.[68] Originally the show was recorded without a studio audience, featuring only the laughter of its own off-camera staff members. A studio audience was incorporated into the show for its second season, and has remained since.[69]
The show was much less politically focused than it later became under Jon Stewart, having what Stephen Colbert described as a local news feel and involving more character-driven humor as opposed to news-driven humor.[22] Winstead recalls that when the show was first launched there was constant debate regarding what the show's focus should be. While she wanted a more news-driven focus, the network was concerned that this would not appeal to viewers and pushed for "a little more of a hybrid of entertainment and politics".[70] The show was slammed by some reviewers as being too mean-spirited, particularly towards the interview subjects of field pieces; a criticism acknowledged by some of the show's cast. Describing his time as a correspondent under Kilborn, Colbert says, "You wanted to take your soul off, put it on a wire hanger, and leave it in the closet before you got on the plane to do one of these pieces."[71] One reviewer fromThe New York Times criticized the show for being too cruel and for lacking a central editorial vision or ideology, describing it as "bereft of an ideological or artistic center ... precocious but empty."[72]
There were reports of backstage friction between Kilborn and head writerLizz Winstead. Winstead had not been involved in the hiring of Kilborn, and disagreed with him over what direction the show should take. "I spent eight months developing and staffing a show and seeking a tone with producers and writers. Somebody else put him in place. There were bound to be problems. I viewed the show as content-driven; he viewed it as host-driven", she said.[73] In a 1997Esquire magazine interview, Kilborn made a sexually explicit joke about Winstead.Comedy Central responded by suspending Kilborn without pay for one week, and Winstead quit soon after.[74]
In 1998, Kilborn leftThe Daily Show to replaceTom Snyder on CBS'sThe Late Late Show. He claimed the "Five Questions" interview segment as intellectual property, disallowing any futureDaily Show hosts from using it in their interviews.[75] Correspondents Brian Unger and A. Whitney Brown left the show shortly before him, but the majority of the show's crew and writing staff stayed on.[76] Kilborn's last show as host aired on December 17, 1998, ending a 386-episode tenure. Reruns were shown until Jon Stewart's debut four weeks later.[77] Kilborn made a short appearance on Jon Stewart's final edition of theDaily Show saying "I knew you were going to run this thing into the ground."[78]

ComedianJon Stewart took over as host of the show, which was retitledThe Daily Show with Jon Stewart, on January 11, 1999.[79][80] Stewart had previously hostedShort Attention Span Theater onComedy Central,[81] two shows onMTV (You Wrote It, You Watch It andThe Jon Stewart Show), as well as a syndicated late-night talk show, and had been cast in films and television.[82] In taking over hosting from Kilborn, Stewart initially retained much of the same staff and on-air talent, allowing many pieces to transition without much trouble, while other features like "God Stuff", withJohn Bloom presenting an assortment of actual clips from various televangelists, and "Backfire", an in-studio debate between Brian Unger and A. Whitney Brown, evolved into the similar pieces of "This Week in God" andStephen Colbert andSteve Carell's "Even Stevphen". After the change, a number of new features were developed. The ending segment "Your Moment of Zen", previously consisting of a random selection of humorous videos, was diversified to sometimes include recaps or extended versions of news clips shown earlier in the show.[37] The show's theme music, "Dog on Fire" byBob Mould, was re-recorded byThey Might Be Giants after Stewart joined the show.[83][84]
Stewart served not only as host but also as a writer and executive producer of the series. He recalls that he initially struggled with the Kilborn holdover writers to gain control of the show and put his own imprint on the show's voice, a struggle that led to the departure of a number of the holdover writers.[85] Instrumental in shaping the voice of the show under Stewart was former editor ofThe OnionBen Karlin who, along with fellowOnion contributorDavid Javerbaum, joined the staff in 1999 as head writer and was later promoted to executive producer. Their experience in writing for the satirical newspaper, which uses fake stories to mock real print journalism and current events, would influence the comedic direction of the show; Stewart recalls the hiring of Karlin as the point at which things "[started] to take shape". Describing his approach to the show, Karlin said, "The main thing, for me, is seeing hypocrisy. People who know better saying things that you know they don't believe."[23]

Under Stewart and KarlinThe Daily Show developed a markedly different style, bringing a sharper political focus to the humor than the show previously exhibited. Then-correspondent Stephen Colbert recalls that Stewart specifically asked him to have a political viewpoint, and to allow his passion for issues to carry through into his comedy.[86] Colbert says that whereas under Kilborn the focus was on "human interest-y" pieces, with Stewart as host the show's content became more "issues and news driven", particularly after the beginning of the2000 election campaign with which the show dealt in its "Indecision 2000" coverage.[22][87] Stewart himself describes the show's coverage of the2000 election recount as the point at which the show found its editorial voice. "That's when I think we tapped into the emotional angle of the news for us and found our editorial footing," he says.[88] Following theSeptember 11th attacks,The Daily Show went off the air for nine days. Upon its return, Stewart opened the show with a somber monologue, that, according to Jeremy Gillick and Nonna Gorilovskaya, addressed both the absurdity and importance of his role as a comedian. Commented Stewart:
They said to get back to work, and there were no jobs available for a man in the fetal position. ...We sit in the back and we throw spitballs – never forgetting the fact that it is a luxury in this country that allows us to do that. ...The view from my apartment was the World Trade Center. Now it's gone. They attacked it. This symbol of American ingenuity and strength and labor and imagination and commerce and it is gone. But you know what the view is now? The Statue of Liberty. The view from the south of Manhattan is now the Statue of Liberty. You can't beat that.[89]
— Jon Stewart,The Daily Show, September 20, 2001
Gillick and Gorilovskaya point to the September 11 attacks and the beginning of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq as the point at which Stewart emerged as a trusted national figure. Robert Thompson, the director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University, recalled of this period, "When all the news guys were walking on eggshells, Jon was hammering those questions about WMDs."[89]
During Stewart's tenure, the role of the correspondent broadened to encompass not only field segments but also frequent in-studio exchanges. Under Kilborn, Colbert says that his work as a correspondent initially involved "character driven [field] pieces—like, you know, guys who believe in Bigfoot." However, as the focus of the show has become more news-driven, correspondents have increasingly been used in studio pieces, either as experts discussing issues at the anchor desk or as field journalists reporting from false locations in front of a green screen. Colbert says that this change has allowed correspondents to be more involved with the show, as it has permitted them to work more closely with the host and writers.[22]
The show's 2000 and 2004 election coverage, combined with a new satirical edge, helped to catapult Stewart andThe Daily Show to new levels of popularity and critical respect.[90] Since Stewart became host, the show has won 23Primetime Emmy Awards and threePeabody Awards, and its ratings steadily increased. In 2003, the show was averaging nearly a million viewers, an increase of nearly threefold since the show's inception as Comedy Central became available in more households.[91] By September 2008, the show averaged nearly two million viewers per night.[92]Senator Barack Obama's interview on October 29, 2008, pulled in 3.6 million viewers.[93]
The move towards greater involvement in political issues and the increasing popularity of the show in certain key demographics have led to examinations of where the views of the show fit in the political spectrum.Adam Clymer, among many others, argued in 2004 thatThe Daily Show was more critical of Republicans than Democrats under Stewart.[94] Stewart, who voted Democratic in the 2004 presidential election,[95] acknowledged that the show had a more liberal point of view, but that it was not "a liberal organization" with a political agenda and its duty first and foremost was to be funny. He acknowledged that the show is not necessarily an "equal opportunity offender", explaining that Republicans tended to provide more comedic fodder because "I think we consider those with power and influence targets and those without it, not."[96] In an interview in 2005, when asked how he responded to critics claiming thatThe Daily Show is overly liberal, Stephen Colbert, also a self-proclaimed Democrat,[97] said in an interview during the Bush administration, when the Republicans held a majority in the House and Senate: "We are liberal, but Jon's very respectful of the Republican guests, and, listen, if liberals were in power it would be easier to attack them, but Republicans have the executive, legislative and judicial branches, so making fun of Democrats is like kicking a child, so it's just not worth it."[98]
Stewart was critical ofDemocratic politicians for being weak, timid, or ineffective. He said in an interview with Larry King, prior to the 2006 elections, "I honestly don't feel that [the Democrats] make an impact. They have forty-nine percent of the vote and three percent of the power. At a certain point you go, 'Guys, pick up your game.'"[99] He has targeted them for failing to effectively stand on some issues, such as the war in Iraq, describing them as "incompetent" and "unable... to locate their asses, even when presented with two hands and a special ass map."[100]
Karlin, then the show's executive producer, said in a 2004 interview that while there is a collective sensibility among the staff which, "when filtered through Jon and the correspondents, feels uniform," the principal goal of the show is comedy. "If you have a legitimately funny joke in support of the notion that gay people are an affront to God, we'll put that motherfucker on!"[101]
On September 15, 2003, SenatorJohn Edwards became the first candidate to announce that they were running for president on the show, causing Stewart to jokingly inform him that their show was "fake" and he might have to re-announce elsewhere.[102] On November 17, 2009, Vice President Joe Biden appeared on the show, making him the first sitting vice president to do so.[103] On October 27, 2010, President Barack Obama became the first sitting U.S. president to be interviewed on the show, wherein Obama commented he "loved" the show.[104] Obama took issue with Stewart's suggestion that his health care program was "timid."[105]
On December 16, 2010, after theUnited States Senate failed to pass and the media failed to cover theJames Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act, which would provide health monitoring and financial aid to sick first responders of theSeptember 11 attacks, Stewart dedicated the entireDaily Show broadcast that day to the issue. During the next week, a revived version of the bill gained new life, with the potential of being passed before the winter recess.[106][107] Stewart was praised by both politicians and affected first responders for the bill's passage. According to Robert J. Thompson,Syracuse University professor of television, radio and film, "Without him, it's unlikely it would've passed. I don't thinkBrian Williams,Katie Couric orDiane Sawyer would've been allowed to do this."[108]
Due to the2007–08 Writers Guild of America strike, the show went onhiatus on November 5, 2007. Although the strike continued until February 2008, the show returned to air on January 7, 2008, without its staff of writers. In solidarity with the writers, the show was referred to asA Daily Show with Jon Stewart rather thanThe Daily Show with Jon Stewart, until the end of the strike.[109] As a member of theWriters Guild of America, Stewart was barred from writing any material for the show himself which he or his writers would ordinarily write.[110] As a result, Stewart and the correspondents largelyad-libbed the show around planned topics.[111]
In an effort to fill time while keeping to the strike-related restrictions, the show aired or re-aired some previously recorded segments, and Stewart engaged ina briefly recurring mock feud with fellow late-night hostsStephen Colbert andConan O'Brien.[112] The strike officially ended on February 12, 2008, with the show's writers returning to work the following day, at which point the title ofThe Daily Show was restored.[113]
Starting in June 2013, Jon Stewart took a twelve-week break to directRosewater, a drama about a journalist jailed by Iran for four months. CorrespondentJohn Oliver replaced Stewart at the anchor desk for two months, to be followed by one month of reruns.[114] Oliver received positive reviews for his hosting,[115][116] leading to his departure from the show in December 2013[117] for his own showLast Week Tonight with John Oliver, which debuted April 27, 2014, onHBO.[118]

On February 10, 2015, Stewart announced that he would be leaving the show later in the year. Comedy Central indicated in a statement thatThe Daily Show would continue without Stewart, saying it would "endure for years to come".[119]
Stewart's final episode aired on August 6 as an hour-long special in three segments. The first featured a reunion of a majority of the correspondents and contributors from throughout the show's history as well as a pre-recorded "anti-tribute" (mocking Stewart) from several frequent guests and "friends" of the show. This includedBill O'Reilly,Hillary Clinton,John McCain,Lindsey Graham,Chris Christie,John Kerry, andChuck Schumer.[120] The second segment featured a pre-recorded tour of the Daily Show production facility and studio introducing all of the show's staff and crew. The final segment featured a short farewell speech from Stewart followed by the final "Moment of Zen" (being 'his own' moment of zen): a performance of "Land of Hope and Dreams" and "Born to Run" byBruce Springsteen and theE Street Band.[121]


On March 30, 2015, it was announced that South African comedianTrevor Noah would replace Stewart as host ofThe Daily Show.[123] Shortly after his announcement, it was revealed thatAmy Schumer,Louis C.K.,Amy Poehler, andChris Rock were all considered for the job.[124][125] His first show was on September 28, 2015,[126] with comedianKevin Hart as his first guest. Noah's premiere episode was simulcast byViacom on Comedy Central, theNick at Nite block onNickelodeon,Spike,MTV,MTV2,mtvU,VH1,VH1 Classic,BET,Centric,CMT,TV Land,Logo TV, and theNickMom block (last program to air) on theNick Jr. Channel.[127][128]
On September 14, 2017, it was announced that Comedy Central had extended Noah's contract as host ofThe Daily Show for five years, through 2022.[129]
Ratings declined by about 37 percent at the beginning of Noah's tenure. They gradually increased from there, only to fall to the lowest ratings in 15 years in 2020.[130] Some of the musicians that have been on the shows as guests performed their music as well.[131] Starting in 2020 until the end of Noah's tenure, the show expanded to a 45-minute time slot.[132]
On September 29, 2022, during a taping of the show, Noah announced that he would step down as the host ofThe Daily Show so he could focus on his stand-up career and touring.[2] On October 2, 2022, it was confirmed that the show would continue on Comedy Central following Noah's departure.[133] On October 12, 2022, it was announced that Noah's final episode would air on December 8.[134] On October 18, 2022, it was announced that Comedy Central may replace Noah with more than one comedian.[135]
In addition to changes in the tone of the show, Noah also implemented stylistic changes to the show, with an updated set,[136] new graphics[137] and his monologue sometimes taking place while standing in front of a screen as opposed to sitting at the desk. Noah also increased the usage of more Millennial-based references, impersonations and characterizations for his comedy on the show, due to his younger demographic and his ability to speak in different accents and eight languages.[138]
The debut ofThe Daily Show with Trevor Noah brought along three new correspondents:Roy Wood Jr.,Desi Lydic andRonny Chieng.[139]
Additional correspondents were added in 2017.Michael Kosta became the Senior Constitutional Correspondent and Senior American Correspondent on July 11, 2017.[140]Dulcé Sloan became the Senior Fashion Correspondent on September 7, 2017.[141]
In January 2016,The Daily Show with Trevor Noah started to use a modified version of the show's previous theme, remixed byTimbaland and King Logan.[142]
Noah also avoided talking enough aboutFox News, as Stewart was previously known for. "The Daily Show was based on an emerging 24 hour news cycle, that's everything it was, that's what inspiredThe Daily Show. Now you look at news and it's changed. It's no longer predicated around 24 hour news. There are so many different choices. Half of it is online now. Now you've got theGawkers, theBuzzFeeds. The way people are drawing their news is soundbites and headlines and click-bait links has changed everything. The biggest challenge is going to be an exciting one I'm sure is how are we going to bring all of that together looking at it from a bigger lens as opposed to just going after one source—which was historically Fox News," Noah said at a press conference before the show's debut.[143]
On December 8, 2015, former host Jon Stewart returned toThe Daily Show for the first time in an extended-length show to return attention to extending theJames Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act, otherwise referred to as 9/11 First Responders Bill, which Stewart explained had been blocked byPaul Ryan andMitch McConnell for political reasons.[144][145] On October 20, 2016, Noah was unable to host a scheduled taping ofThe Daily Show due to illness,[146] so correspondentJordan Klepper guest hosted.
On November 16, 2017, Stewart once again returned toThe Daily Show, in part as a parody of the robocalls of fakeWashington Post reporter "Bernie Bernstein" and to promoteNight of Too Many Stars onHBO.
In March 2020 due to theCOVID-19 pandemic, the show suspended production. On March 18, 2020, Comedy Central began to releasewebisodes ofThe Daily Show produced remotely from Noah's home, entitledThe DailySocial Distancing Show. This format moved to television beginning March 23.[147][148] Following the cancellation ofLights Out with David Spade, theDaily Show expanded into a 45-minute format beginning April 27, 2020.[149] In July 2020, Comedy Central head Chris McCarthy toldVulture that there were plans to possibly extend the show to an hour-long format by the end of the year.[150]
In May 2020,The Daily Show won the 2020 Webby Award for Humor in the category Social.[151]

The at-home format continued until June 2021, when the show went on an extended hiatus for the summer.The Daily Show returned on September 13, 2021, with the show re-located to studios atViacomCBS's headquarters atOne Astor Plaza inTimes Square (its existing studio was being occupied by fellow Comedy Central programTha God's Honest Truth).[152] Comedy Central stated that the show planned to preserve the "intimacy and creative elements" of the home-based episodes.[153][154] The program continued to be filmed with no studio audience; while there were plans to reinstate an audience,[152] this was delayed due to concerns regardingOmicron variant.[152]
In March 2022, it was announced thatThe Daily Show would go on a hiatus from March 18 to accommodate Noah's hosting of theGrammy Awards on April 3. On April 11, the show returned to Studio 52 with an audience and a redesigned studio.[155][53]
On December 6, 2022, Comedy Central announced that until the next iteration of the show,The Daily Show would feature weekly celebrity guest hosts includingAl Franken,Wanda Sykes,Leslie Jones,Hasan Minhaj,Sarah Silverman,Chelsea Handler,John Leguizamo,Marlon Wayans,Kal Penn, andD.L. Hughley, as well as both current and former correspondents.[156] The show returned from hiatus on January 17 with Leslie Jones guest hosting through January 19.[157][158] Jones was followed by Sykes, Hughley, Handler, and Silverman, each hosting a week through February 16.[159] Correspondent Dulcé Sloan had her first and last guest hosting gig of this era on May 1, 2023, when it was cut short by the2023 Writers Guild of America strike, bumping originally announced guest hosts Michael Kosta,Charlamagne tha God,Michelle Wolf,Ronny Chieng, Lewis Black, andDesus Nice.[160]
On August 1, 2023,Variety reported that Minhaj was the primary possibility of a permanent replacement host.[161] A day later,The Wrap reported that Penn was also a top candidate.[162]
On September 27, 2023, following the 148-day strike, Comedy Central announced the show would return on October 16 with guest hosts and would not name a permanent host until 2024.[163] The extension of the search for a permanent host has been attributed to theNew Yorker article alleging factual inaccuracies in Minhaj's comedy routines.[164]
On January 24, 2024, it was announced thatJon Stewart would return as host for Monday night shows, while the remainder of the week would be hosted by the senior correspondents, beginning on February 12. Stewart accepted the single day a week contract deal as his initial run left him feeling exhausted.[165] The producers of the show hope that Stewart will serve to cultivate and attract new talent to fill a full host role.[166] In May 2024, it was announced that Stewart would additionally begin hostingThe Weekly Show, an original podcast from Comedy Central.[167] The senior correspondents began to regularly rotate as hosts. However, althoughDulcé Sloan was a senior correspondent, she only hosted one week in this duty, and no longer lived in New York.
On July 14, 2024, in the wake of theattempted assassination of Donald Trump, Comedy Central announced thatThe Daily Show would not air live fromMilwaukee, the host city for the2024 Republican National Convention, and would preempt the Monday evening broadcast for July 15. The show returned to air on July 16, 2024, from its New York studio.[168] In late October, it was announced that Stewart has extended his contract to host through 2025.[169] In November 2025, he again extended his contract to host through 2026.[15]
The show's correspondents have two principal roles: experts with satirical senior titles that the main host interviews about certain issues, or hosts of field reporting segments which often involve humorous commentary and interviews relating to a current issue. The current team of hosting correspondents collectively known as "The Best F**king News Team" (formerly known as "The World's Fakest News Team" and previously "The Best F#@king News Team Ever") areRonny Chieng,Michael Kosta,Jordan Klepper,Desi Lydic, andJosh Johnson.Troy Iwata andGrace Kuhlenschmidt are non-hosting correspondents.[170] Contributors appear on a less frequent basis, often with their own unique recurring segment or topic.[170] Current contributors includeLewis Black andCharlamagne tha God.[171] Ben Karlin says that the on-air talent contribute in many ways to the material they perform, playing an integral role in the creation of their field pieces as well as being involved with their scripted studio segments, either taking part early on in the writing process or adding improvised material during the rehearsal.[55]
The show has featured a number of well-known comedians throughout its run and is notable for boosting the careers of several of these. In 2006,The Onion editor-in-chiefScott Dikkers described it as a key launching pad for comedic talent, saying that "I don't know if there's a better show you could put on your resume right now."[172] Steve Carell, who was a correspondent between 1999 and 2005 before moving on to a movie career and starring television role inThe Office, credits Stewart andThe Daily Show with his success.[173] In 2005, the show's longest-serving correspondent, Stephen Colbert, became the host of the spin-offThe Colbert Report, earning critical and popular acclaim.[174] Colbert would host the program until he was chosen to replaceDavid Letterman as host ofCBS'sLate Show in 2015.[175]Ed Helms, a former correspondent from 2002 to 2006, also starred on NBC'sThe Office and was a main character in the 2009 hitThe Hangover.[176]
After filling in as host during Stewart's two-month absence in the summer of 2013,[177] John Oliver went on to host his own show on HBO,Last Week Tonight with John Oliver. In 2016, former correspondentSamantha Bee launched her own late-night talk showFull Frontal with Samantha Bee.[178] Bee's husbandJason Jones, also a former correspondent, serves as executive producer for the show.[179]Hasan Minhaj, the last correspondent hired during Stewart's tenure as host, left the show in 2018 to hostPatriot Act with Hasan Minhaj onNetflix.[180]
In June 2010, actress-comedianOlivia Munn began a tryout period on the show as a correspondent. Her credentials were questioned byIrin Carmon of the websiteJezebel, who suggested that Munn was better known as a sex symbol than as a comedian.[181] Carmon's column was denounced by Munn and theDaily Show's female writers, producers, and correspondents, 32 of whom posted a rebuttal on the show's website in which they asserted that the description of theDaily Show office given by the Jezebel piece was not accurate.[182][183] Munn appeared as aDaily Show correspondent in 16 episodes, from June 2010 to September 2011.[184]
Wyatt Cenac had a tumultuous tenure on the show, revealing in a July 2015 interview onWTF with Marc Maron, that his departure stemmed in part from a heated argument he had withJon Stewart in June 2011 over a bit about Republican presidential candidateHerman Cain.[185][186] However, Cenac did return for Stewart's final episode to bid him farewell and the two exchanged an intentionally awkward conversation.[187][188][189][190]
After Trevor Noah's departure fromThe Daily Show at the end of 2022, the program engaged a series of guest hosts beginning in January 2023, each of which hosted four episodes. A permanent replacement was not named as of March 2024[update] until the show transitioned to a format with a Monday show led by Jon Stewart and the News Team rotating hosting from Tuesday through Thursday.[14][191]
This section needs to beupdated. Please help update this article to reflect recent events or newly available information.(August 2021) |
| Season | Nielsen rank | Nielsen rating[195] | Tied with | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1995–96 | 7 | 0.1 | ||
| 1996–97 | 9 | 0.2 | ||
| 1997–98 | 0.3 | |||
| 1998–99 | 7 | 0.4 | ||
| 1999–2000 | 0.5 | |||
| 2000–01 | 0.6 | |||
| 2001–02 | 0.8 | |||
| 2002–03 | 0.9 | |||
| 2003–04 | 1.0 | |||
| 2004–05 | 1.3 | |||
| 2005–06 | 6 | 1.5 | Last Call with Carson Daly | |
| 2006–07 | ||||
| 2007–08 | 1.4 | |||
| 2008–09 | 5 | 1.7 | Jimmy Kimmel Live! | |
| 2009–10 | 1.5 | Late Night with Jimmy Fallon | The Colbert Report | |
| 2010–11 | 6 | |||
| 2011–12 | 4 | 1.7 | Late Night with Jimmy Fallon | |
| 2012–13 | 5 | 1.6 | ||
| 2013–14 | 1.5 | |||
| 2014–15 | 6 | 1.3 | ||
Television ratings from 2008 show that the program generally drew 1.45 to 1.6 million viewers nightly, a high figure for cable television.[196] By the end of 2013 The Daily Show's ratings hit 2.5 million viewers nightly.[197] Indemographic terms, the viewership is skewed to a relatively young and well-educated audience compared to traditional news shows. A 2004Nielsen Media Research study commissioned by Comedy Central put the median age at 35. During the2004 U.S. presidential election, the show received more male viewers in the 18- to 34-year-old age demographic thanNightline,Meet the Press,Hannity & Colmes and all of the evening news broadcasts.[198]
For this reason, commentators such asHoward Dean andTed Koppel posited that Stewart served as a real source of news for young people, regardless of his intentions.[199][200] In 2016, aNew York Times study of the 50 TV shows with the mostFacebook Likes found thatThe Daily Show was "most popular in cities and other more liberal-leaning areas along the coasts. Peak popularity is in San Francisco; it's least popular in Alabama".[201]
From January 2014 to January 2023,The Daily Show lost 75% of its audience, averaging 570,000 nightly viewers, down from 2.2 million. During the same period, the average age of its viewership increased from 48.2 to 63.3, with only 30,000 viewers in the coveted 18–34 demographic per broadcast.[8]
The show's writers reject the idea thatThe Daily Show has become a source of news for young people. Stewart argues that Americans are living in an "age of informationosmosis" in which it is close to impossible to gain one's news from any single source, and says that his show succeeds comedically because the viewers already have some knowledge about current events. "Our show would not be valuable to people who didn't understand the news because it wouldn't make sense," he argues. "We make assumptions about your level of knowledge that... if we were your only source of news, you would just watch our show and think, 'I don't know what's happening.'"[202]
A 2006 study published byIndiana University tried to compare the substantive amount of information ofThe Daily Show against prime time networknews broadcasts, and concluded that when it comes to substance, there is little difference betweenThe Daily Show and other news outlets. The study contended that, since both programs are more focused on the nature of "infotainment" and ratings than on the dissemination of information, both are broadly equal in terms of the amount of substantial news coverage they offer.[203]
As the lines between comedy show and news show have blurred, Jon Stewart has come under pressure in some circles to engage in more serious journalism.Tucker Carlson andDaily Show co-creatorLizz Winstead have chastised Stewart for criticizing politicians and newspeople in his solo segments and then, in interviews with the same people, rarely taking them to task face-to-face. In 2004, Winstead expressed a desire for Stewart to ask harder satirical questions, saying, "When you are interviewing aRichard Perle or aKissinger, if you give them a pass, then you become what you are satirizing. You have a war criminal sitting on your couch—to just let him be a war criminal sitting on your couch means you are having to respect some kind of boundary."[9] She has argued thatThe Daily Show's success and access to the youth vote should allow Stewart to press political guests harder without fearing that they will not return to the show.[204] In 2010, Winstead had changed her views, commenting that since 2004, Stewart did some of the hardest-hitting interviews on TV.[205] Stewart said in 2003 that he does not think of himself as a social or media critic and rejects the idea that he has any journalistic role as an interviewer.[12]
During Stewart's appearance onCNN'sCrossfire, Stewart criticized that show and said that it was "hurting America" by sensationalizing debates and enabling politicalspin. When co-host Carlson argued that Stewart himself had not asked John Kerry substantial questions when Kerry appeared onThe Daily Show, Stewart countered that it was not his job to give hard-hitting interviews and that a "fake news" comedy program should not be held to the same standards as real journalism. "You're on CNN!" Stewart said, "The show that leads into me ispuppets making crank phone calls! What is wrong with you?"[206] Media critic Dan Kennedy says that Stewart came off as disingenuous in this exchange because "you can't interview Bill Clinton,Richard Clarke, Bill O'Reilly,Bob Dole, etc., etc., and still say you're just a comedian."[204]
A 2004 study into the effect ofThe Daily Show on viewers' attitudes found that participants had a more negative opinion of both President Bush and then Democratic presidential nominee John Kerry. Participants also expressed more cynical views of the electoral system and news media.[207] Political scientists Jody Baumgartner and Jonathan Morris, who conducted the study, state that it is not clear how such cynicism would affect the political behavior of the show's viewers. While disillusionment and negative perceptions of the presidential candidates could discourage watchers from voting, Baumgartner and Morris say it is also possible that discontent could prompt greater involvement and that by following the show, viewers may potentially become more engaged and informed voters, with a broader political knowledge.[208]
Rachel Larris, who has also conducted an academic study ofThe Daily Show, disputes the findings of Baumgartner and Morris. Larris argues that the study measured cynicism in overly broad terms, and that it would be extremely hard to find a causal link between viewingThe Daily Show and thinking or acting in a particular way.[209] Bloggers such as Marty Kaplan ofThe Huffington Post argue that so long as Stewart's comedy is grounded in truth, responsibility for increased cynicism belongs to the political and media figures themselves, not the comedian who satirizes them.[210]
Stewart himself says that he does not perceive his show as cynical. "It's so interesting to me that people talk about late-night comedy being cynical," he says. "What's more cynical than forming an ideological news network likeFox and calling it 'fair and balanced'? What we do, I almost think, is adorable in its idealism."[211] Stewart has said that he does not take any joy in the failings of American government, despite the comedic fodder they provide. "We're not the guys at thecraps table betting against the line," he said onLarry King Live. "If government suddenly became inspiring... we would be the happiest people in the world to turn our attention to idiots like, you know, media people, no offense."[99]
In July 2009,Time magazine held an online poll entitled "Now thatWalter Cronkite has passed on, who is America's most trusted newscaster?"[212] Jon Stewart won with 44% of the vote, 15 points ahead of Brian Williams in second place with 29%.[213] Stewart downplayed the results on the show stating "It was an Internet poll and I was the 'None of the above' option".[citation needed]
In June 2013, theWriters Guild of America rankedThe Daily Show with Jon Stewart #17 on their list of the 101 Best Written TV Series.[214]
In December 2013,TV Guide ranked it #53 on its list of the 60 Best Series of All Time.[215]
In late 2004, theNational Annenberg Election Survey at theUniversity of Pennsylvania ran a study of American television viewers and found that fans ofThe Daily Show had a more accurate idea of the facts behind the2004 presidential election than most others, including those who primarily got their news through the national network evening newscasts and through reading newspapers.[216] However, in a 2004 campaign survey conducted by the Pew Research Center those who cited comedy shows such asThe Daily Show as a source for news were among the least informed on campaign events and key aspects of the candidates' backgrounds while those who cited the Internet,National Public Radio, and news magazines were the most informed. Even when age and education were taken into account, the people who learned about the campaigns through the Internet were still found to be the most informed, while those who learned from comedy shows were the least informed.[217]
In a survey released by the Pew Research Center in April 2007, viewers who watchThe Daily Show tend to be more knowledgeable about news than audiences of other news sources. Approximately 54% ofThe Daily Show viewers scored in the high knowledge range, followed byJim Lehrer's program at 53% andBill O'Reilly's program at 51%, significantly higher than the 34% of network morning show viewers. The survey shows that changing news formats have not made much difference on how much the public knows about national and international affairs, but adds that there is no clear connection between news formats and what audiences know.[218] TheProject for Excellence in Journalism released a content analysis report suggesting thatThe Daily Show comes close to providing the complete daily news.[219]
Under host Jon Stewart,The Daily Show rose to critical acclaim. It has received twoPeabody Awards for its coverage of the2000[220] and2004 presidential elections.[221] Between 2001 and 2024, it has been awarded 26Primetime Emmy Awards in the categories ofOutstanding Variety, Music, or Comedy Series (winner for 10 consecutive years from 2003 to 2012) andOutstanding Writing for a Variety, Music, or Comedy Program, and a further seven nominations. The show has also been honored byGLAAD,[222] theTelevision Critics Association, and theSatellite Awards.America (The Book): A Citizen's Guide to Democracy Inaction, the 2004 bestseller written by Stewart and the writing staff ofThe Daily Show, was recognized byPublishers Weekly as its "Book of the Year", and its abridged audiobook edition received the 2005Grammy Award forBest Comedy Album.[223]
In September 2010,Time magazine selected the series as one of "The 100 Best TV Shows of All-TIME".[224] In 2015, the show received its thirdPeabody Award[225] for the show's "lasting impact on political satire, television comedy and even politics itself."[226]
The Daily Show airs on various networks worldwide; in addition, an edited version of the show calledThe Daily Show: Global Edition was produced each week specifically for overseas audiences until mid-2020. It used to air outside of the United States onCNN International and other overseas networks beginning in September 2002.[227][228] This edition ran for a half-hour and contained a selection of segments, including one guest interview from the preceding week's shows, usually from the Monday or Tuesday episode. Stewart provided an exclusive introductory monologue in front of an audience, usually about the week's prevalent international news story, and closing comments without an audience present.[229] When aired on CNN International, the broadcast was prefaced by a written disclaimer: "The show you are about to watch is a news parody. Its stories are not fact checked. Its reporters are not journalists. And its opinions are not fully thought through."[230]Since February 27, 2017,The Daily Show with Trevor Noah has been regularly simulcast onBlack Entertainment Television.
Between 2001 and 2006,Westwood One broadcast small, ninety-second portions of the show to various radio stations across America.[231]
In Canada,The Daily Show was aired onCTV Comedy Channel in simulcast with the Comedy Central airing. However, it was dropped in 2023, leaving the program without a Canadian television home, and exclusive to Paramount+. In August 2024,Corus Entertainment acquired the linear television rights toThe Daily Show, with the program scheduled to move toSlice beginning on September 9, 2024.[232][233]
In the United Kingdom and Ireland, the digital television channelMore4 used to broadcast episodes ofThe Daily Show Tuesday through Friday evenings with theGlobal Edition, which is uncensored, airing on Mondays; regular episodes air the evening following their American airing. More4 was the first international broadcaster to syndicate entireDaily Show episodes, though they made edits to the program due to content, language, length or commercial references. The program was also available to watch via the internetvideo on demand service4oD. However, the "toss" toThe Colbert Report was usually included even though it was aired onFX, another channel.[234] In addition, the placement of commercial breaks followed the British format, with one break midway through the show rather than several short breaks at various points. WhenThe Daily Show was on hiatus, either re-runs or alternative content were aired. Since January 2011, only the Global Edition is broadcast.[235]In July 2012Comedy Central announced thatThe Daily Show would be shown onComedy Central Extra in the same format as previously on More4, with episodes shown 24 hours after airing in the United States.[236] The show aired on the channel from July 2012 to April 2015.
The Global Edition of the week of July 20, 2011, was not aired in the UK as it included a segment mockingRupert Murdoch's appearance before the House of Commons Culture, Media and Sport Committee in relation to theNews International phone hacking scandal.[237] Parliamentary rules ban parliamentary proceedings from being broadcast in a satirical context.[237] Stewart dedicated a segment of the show on August 2, 2011, to lampooning the censorship of the episode in Britain.[238] In May that year,The Daily Show mocked the ban on using footage of theRoyal Wedding in a satirical context with an animated video that showedPaddington Bear,Gollum andAdolf Hitler as guests at the wedding, and depicted its attendants engaging in various forms of violent and sexual behavior.[239] Stewart later discussed the ban with guestKeira Knightley.[240]
The Daily Show used to be aired inIndia onComedy Central India.[241]
The Daily Show aired on AustralianPay TV channel,The Comedy Channel, weeknights at 6:30pm.Free-to-air digital channelABC2 began broadcasting the show without commercial breaks in March 2010, but discontinued in January 2011 when The Comedy Channel obtained exclusive rights;[242] episodes were also available on the network's online serviceABC iView shortly after airing.[243] The Comedy Channel (as well as ABC2 during 2010) used to air the show together withThe Colbert Report, and air both theGlobal Edition on Mondays and the regular edition Tuesday through Friday. TheGlobal Edition was previously shown weekend late nights onSBS One before moving toNetwork TEN. The show now airs on10 Shake (owned by Comedy Central parentViacomCBS).
In North Africa and the Middle East, theDaily Show was broadcast onShowtime Arabia starting in 2008 and ending in 2015. When the show transitioned under Noah, OSN decided to wait a bit before airing the new show.[244] Now, the Global Edition of Noah's show is broadcast on OSN's Comedy Central HD channel.[245] Episodes are often edited if they contain topics deemed inappropriate for the region.
Episodes of the American version are also available online the next day at Comedy Central's officialDaily Show website, although this service is not available in all countries. However, clips for UK and Ireland viewers became available on the UK Comedy Central website in December 2011.[246]
An official Dutch version of the show calledThe Daily Show: Nederlandse Editie (The Daily Show: Dutch Edition) premiered on the Dutch Comedy Central on January 31, 2011. The program is similar to the original, except with Dutch news and a Dutch view on international news. The show is hosted by comedian Jan-Jaap van der Wal, who was a team captain onDit was het nieuws, the Dutch edition ofHave I Got News for You.[247] The first episode featured a guest appearance by Jon Stewart (recorded at the New York studio), who gave his official blessing for the show.[248] This is also the first and still only franchise ofThe Daily Show. The 'Dutch Edition' didn't make it past the test run of 12 episodes due to lack of viewers.
A spin-off,The Colbert Report, was announced in early May 2005. The show starred former correspondent Stephen Colbert, and served as Comedy Central's answer to the programs of media pundits such as Bill O'Reilly. Colbert, Stewart, and Ben Karlin developed the idea for the show based on a series of faux television commercials that had been created for an earlierDaily Show segment. They pitched the concept to Comedy Central chief Doug Herzog, who agreed to run the show for eight weeks without first creating a pilot.[249]The Colbert Report premiered on October 17, 2005, and aired followingThe Daily Show for nine years. Initial ratings satisfied Comedy Central and less than three weeks after its debut the show was renewed for a year.[250]The Colbert Report was produced by Jon Stewart's production company,Busboy Productions.
In 2014, it was announced that Colbert would leave Comedy Central to hostThe Late Show with Stephen Colbert onCBS in 2015, following the retirement ofDavid Letterman.[251]The final episode ofThe Colbert Report aired on December 18, 2014.
On May 9, 2014, it was announced thatLarry Wilmore had been selected to host a show on Comedy Central to serve as a replacement forThe Colbert Report. On January 19, 2015, Wilmore began hostingThe Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore, alate-nightpaneltalk show. It was produced by Busboy Productions. On August 15, 2016, Comedy Central announced that Wilmore's show had been cancelled. The show ended on August 18, 2016, with a total of 259 episodes.[252]
On April 4, 2017, Comedy Central announced a brand-new spinoff to occupy the 11:30 p.m. time slot which had not had an original show since the canceling ofThe Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore.The Daily Show's senior correspondentJordan Klepper was enlisted as host, with Klepper, Stuart Miller, and Trevor Noah serving as executive producers.[253] The show intends to "satirize the hyperbolic, conspiracy-laden noise machine that is the alternative-media landscape on both theright andleft."[254]
The show aired from September 25, 2017, to June 28, 2018. Comedy Central announced that Klepper would be hosting a new primetime weekly talk show,Klepper, which debuted in 2019.
In February 2018,The Daily Show: Ears Edition podcast was launched as companion piece to the main program, often featuring extended information and additional interviews.[255][256][257] In December 19, Comedy Central launched a 5-episode mini-series podcast calledThe Daily Show Podcast Universe.[258]
The Daily Show's satirical format has inspired international versions unaffiliated with Comedy Central.
There's no denying that the show is smart and often funny, but in an annoyingly self-conscious way that constantly sets out to reaffirm its own moral and intellectual superiority. It has about it the glib, tinny ring of a college lampoon in which the sophomore writer's cleverness is deployed in service of nothing grander than impressing the writer's freshman friends. Bereft of an ideological or artistic center, the show is precocious but empty.
In a quote that was labeled a joke in the article, but which had none of the female members of the show's staff laughing, Mr. Kilborn called Ms. Winstead and other women on the show a derogatory name and then suggested that she liked him and would perform a sex act on him if he wanted her to.
Obama's interview, which aired between 11pm and 11.30pm, EST, pulled in 3.6 million viewers in the US – beating the show's previous high when the Democrat presidential candidate's wife Michelle appeared on October 8 by 600,000 viewers.