the job did take its toll.
He grew into his suit.
the job did take its toll.
the job did take its toll.
Did his eyes change color? Did he become a Spartan?
the job did take its toll.
lmao, he looked so awkward in his suits the first few yearsHe grew into his suit.
Next thing you'll tell me Mel Brooks is Jewish.Yep, his birth name is Jonathan Stuart Leibowitz
I think with the other two gone, Oliver will open up more on the political front.
the job did take its toll.
You mean a dude in his thirties look much younger than a dude in his fifties? Shocking!Well, he's been doing this for sixteen years and he is now 52.
Wait, Jon Stewart is Jewish?
Really? He talks about it all the time.
the job did take its toll.
Did his eyes change color? Did he become a Spartan?
I think they should retire The Daily Show. I know, I know, it sounds like a terrible business decision. In the short turn, it'd be more profitable to keep the brand. But in the long run, you'd never be able to have someone run it as successfully as Jon has and you'd only run the name into the ground. It would be a better investment to try to create a new IP and format for the future.
It won't happen, of course.
the job did take its toll.
Part of the reason that Stewart is so irreplaceable is because he's a master of the New York Jewish style of humor. A bit self depreciating, sarcastic to the core - it's perfect for what's essentially a society criticism show.
Seriously? Oh man, you've missed out so hard. He's incredible.I have yet to see a single episode of his show
Time to jump in?
Yup. Always gotta smile due to my Jewish side. *waves sheepishly at Jon Stewart*
I don't think the guy is particularly talented as a director from the work I've seen from him, so I hope whatever career path he follows is as effective as his Daily Show tenure and not, well, like his directing (or acting, frankly)
I woulda posted the eye stab gif but i dont wanna get banned.
I liked Rosewater a lot. It's not one of the best movies I've ever seen but, especially for a first effort, it's pretty good.you know, I didn't think Rosewater was terrible at all. In fact, I thought it was fairly good. But I agree - he's not a director. His talent is right where he's at now.
This got me lol. So serious and then
Just made the announcement on TV.
Damnit Jon! Thanks for all the years.
Oh great Larry Wilmore is on, TV off.
What happened to late night, fuck!
Just made the announcement on TV.
Damnit Jon! Thanks for all the years.
Oh great Larry Wilmore is on, TV off.
What happened to late night, fuck!
Just made the announcement on TV.
Damnit Jon! Thanks for all the years.
Oh great Larry Wilmore is on, TV off.
What happened to late night, fuck!
He's probably taking over for Larry Sanders.
There's that, and then there's just....almost a maturity to the weary exasperation with which he reacts to everything. That's whats going to be really irreplaceable for me.
BrokenEchelon said:Someone's about to turn into a political pundit.
Wilmore's show is actually kind of awesome. It's like bill maher but not totally insufferable
Someone's about to turn into a political pundit.
Few is the comedian who can make such light of many important policy discussions and yet can be rendered occasionally speechless due to his emotional authenticity on issues such as the Eric Garner case. As I've said in this topic, that's what made him especially effective... the rare comedian who could straddle historic moments with profound levity, or sometimes he would just break down altogether like a real human being. And those reactions on some level reflected on a very real level the genuine complicated emotions that people in this country face on a day to day basis as one with a very dark, complex and altogether morally ambiguous past, present and future.
That'd be stupid. Wouldn't make sense from a career perspective. The dude is highly influential already in the political spectrum and he has his own show with his name on it. And he's influential enough that he can challenge Bill O'Reilly to a debate, have it be accepted and win without batting an eye. What aspect of political punditry is going to pay him more or be a more effective outlet for issues he cares about?