Biography
With a reputation for being a funnyman even in school, Jon Stewart moved
to New York City in 1986 to try his hand at the comedy club circuit. In
1989, he began hosting Comedy Central's Short Attention Span Theater,
and in 1993, due in large part to the support of his friend David
Letterman, Stewart started hosting The Jon Stewart Show on MTV, the
first talk show on that network. Also in 1993, he was a finalist to
replace David Letterman on Late Night, but the position ultimately went
to Conan O'Brien. In 1994, Paramount pulled the plug on The Arsenio Hall
Show and, with MTV, launched an hour-long syndicated late-night version
of The Jon Stewart Show. The show, broadcast in 2:00 or 3:00 AM
timeslots by some local stations, was a ratings flop, and it was
cancelled in June 1995. Stewart had also previously hosted the
unsuccessful You Wrote It, You Watch It on MTV, which invited viewers to
send in their stories to be acted out.
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In 1999, Jon Stewart began hosting The Daily Show on Comedy Central when
Craig Kilborn left the show. Since that time, he has hosted all airings
of the program, save for a scant handful where correspondents such as
Stephen Colbert have filled in at the anchor desk. In 2005, The Daily
Show and Jon Stewart received two Emmy Awards and a Best Comedy Album
Grammy Award for the audio book edition of America (The Book).
Jon Stewart also hosted the
Grammies twice, in 2001 and 2002. In the middle
of the 2001 broadcast, after laying a number of comedic duds, Stewart
did what he encourages most public officials to do, and owned up to his
bad hosting: he said, "Ladies and gentlemen, I just want to say I feel
your scorn and accept it". When Stewart returned to host the next year,
his comedy was more successful. Joking about the performance of the song
"Lady Marmalade," he said, "Our next performance is from the movie
Moulin Rouge!, a film about a time when the whorehouses were about the
music!" When the O Brother, Where Art Thou? soundtrack won Album of the
Year and an immense number of people walked up on stage, Stewart
quipped, "I don't know what you may have heard, but you were only
supposed to go on stage if you worked on the O Brother, Where Art Thou?
soundtrack, not if you heard it."
In the middle of 2002, amid rumors that David Letterman was going to
make a jump from CBS to ABC when his contract ran out with CBS, Stewart
was rumored to be the person who would take over Letterman's show on
CBS. Ultimately, Letterman renewed his contract with CBS, and ABC gave
another Comedy Central figure, Jimmy Kimmel, his own show following
Nightline. In a 2002 episode of Saturday Night Live that Stewart was
hosting, a "Weekend Update" sketch poked fun at the situation. In the
middle of the sketch, "Weekend Update" host Jimmy Fallon said that he
couldn't continue doing the broadcast, and he brought Stewart in to
replace him. Stewart glowed with excitement and chattered to himself
about his chance to prove himself on network television. His pep talk
went on too long, however, and before Stewart could deliver any
headlines, Fallon returned and said he would be able to finish out the
broadcast himself.
Still, many people believe that when Letterman does retire, Stewart (a
fellow Viacom employee) will replace him to continue the Late Show
franchise and compete with Conan O'Brien. At a London appearance on
December 11, 2005, when asked if he would replace Letterman, Stewart
said it would be unlikely, because on Comedy Central he has creative
independence that CBS would probably not give him. In reference to
Letterman's wealth, he stated, "Really, who needs all that money?"
Although best known for his work on The Daily Show, Stewart has also had
roles in several television series and movies. He often makes fun of his
film appearances, as they have largely been in movies considered to be
flops. He usually singles out the high-profile bomb Death to Smoochy, in
which he played a treacherous television executive. He also appeared in
the cult favorite Half Baked, and he played a romantic lead in the film
Playing by Heart. Other movie appearances include Big Daddy as Adam
Sandler's best friend and The Faculty, and small part as a news
correspondent in Jay and Silent Bob Strike Back. He has guest-starred on
such television shows as The Nanny, Spin City, and NewsRadio, in
addition to the Saturday Night Live episode he hosted in March 2002.
Jon Stewart attracted much attention as a result of an unusual, awkward,
and heated television exchange with CNN's Tucker Carlson on Crossfire in
October 2004. Stewart decried the state of television journalism and
pleaded with the show's hosts to "stop hurting America", and referred to
both Carlson and co-host Paul Begala as "partisan hacks". He also
asserted that Crossfire had failed in its responsibility to inform and
educate viewers about politics as a serious topic. When Carlson told
Stewart he wasn't as funny in person as he was on his show, Stewart
retorted, "You're as big a dick on your show as you are on any show"
(transcript). This exchange became one of the most widely viewed
Internet videos to date (both publicly on iFilm and from other sources)
and a topic of much media discussion. In January 2005, CNN announced
that it was cancelling Crossfire. When asked about the cancellations,
CNN's incoming CEO, Jonathan Klein, stated that although he made the
decision six months before Stewart's appearance on the show, he
"wholeheartedly agrees" with Stewart's "overall premise."
Jon Stewart has received the prestigious Peabody Award twice for the
coverage of the 2000 and 2004 U.S. presidential elections on The Daily
Show. He was also named one of the 2005 Time 100, an annual list of 100
of the most influential people of the year by Time Magazine. In the
magazine article, Tom Brokaw described Stewart as one of the few people
who represent true Athenian democratic values.
The Daily Show recently premiered on UK television at the end of 2005 on
new digital channel More4. The mix of satire and comedy has had a good
response from the British public and a growing fanbase across the
Atlantic is now starting to build up.
On January 5, 2006, Jon Stewart was officially announced as the host of the
78th Academy Awards (Oscars), which will be held at the Kodak Theatre in
Hollywood on March 5, 2006.
This Jon Stewart Biography Page is Copyright The Planets © 2004 - 2006 Chuck Ayoub