Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - July 26, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A14
A 14 WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, SUNDAY, JULY 26, 2015 ENTERTAINMENT winnipegfreepress. com
N EW YORK - There was a time not so long
ago when it would have been inconceivable
for a sitting U. S. president to visit
any late- night talk show, much less one on basic
cable. But Barack Obama did just that Tuesday
night - for the third time as chief executive - to
bid farewell to Jon Stewart, who leaves The Daily
Show next month.
In their years on the air, Stewart and his peers
David Letterman, Jay Leno and Stephen Colbert
have mined the campaign trail for countless
punchlines and transformed late- night comedy
into a critical arbiter in the political conversation.
In stark contrast to the Johnny Carson era,
it is now routine for D. C. players to appear in the
guest chair.
But late night is in the midst of a massive
transition of power. The incoming generation of
hosts is generally less political than the one it is
replacing, a shift that could have repercussions
far beyond the office water cooler.
Late- night shows act as both a " thermometer"
and a " thermostat," said Jon Macks, a Democratic
campaign consultant who also spent 22 years
writing jokes about politicians on both sides of
the aisle on The Tonight Show with Jay Leno .
" They're taking the temperature of the public,
but... they can also reset things a bit," he said.
Indeed, a 2012 Pew Research Center survey
found more Americans turned to Saturday Night
Live , The Daily Show and The Tonight Show than
to national newspapers for campaign news.
That's why political operatives from both parties
have long kept a weather eye on late- night
TV. Lee Atwater, president George H. W. Bush's
famously shrewd 1988 campaign manager,
checked in with Carson's monologues to see
how the candidates were faring with ordinary
Americans. In 2000, Al Gore's advisers referred
to Darrell Hammond's impression of him on
Saturday Night Live to make him aware of how
humourless and wooden he seemed to many voters.
" Late- night humour has become a part of
campaign discourse," said S. Robert Lichter, a
professor at George Mason University who has
studied late- night humour and politics. " It's not
just the news politicians have to worry about -
it's the jokes."
That adds significance to the generational
handover that began last year, when Jay Leno
stepped down as host of NBC's Tonight Show .
A political junkie, Leno used his average Joe
perspective to make light of D. C. dysfunction,
solidifying his ratings lead over Letterman in the
Monica Lewinsky era.
His bipartisan sensibility - an exception to
the rule in left- leaning late night, according to
research by Lichter - made him a favourite of
Republicans. Indeed, actor Arnold Schwarzenegger
used The Tonight Show to announce he would
seek the Republican nomination for governor of
California in 2003.
" If Leno poked fun of something, it got our
attention as Republicans because he's so incredibly
fair- minded," said Nicolle Wallace, co- host of
The View and a campaign adviser for Republican
candidate John McCain and George W. Bush.
" From where I sat on the ideological spectrum,
he was incredibly important."
Not so much Leno's CBS rival Letterman, who
on The Late Show was a scathing critic of George
W. Bush and Dick Cheney and relentlessly ridiculed
McCain for cancelling an appearance on
his show during the 2008 financial crisis.
Leno was succeeded by Jimmy Fallon, who so
far seems reluctant to allow partisan rancour to
spoil the funhouse atmosphere of his show. His
emphasis on games and musical parodies means
fewer punchlines drawn from the headlines.
Lichter found that, while at Late Night , Fallon
had about half as many political jokes as Letterman
or Leno - a trend that appears to have
continued since he moved to Tonight last year. As
an interviewer, he seems averse to confrontation.
Perhaps the most controversial subject to come
up in his recent conversation with Jeb Bush was
the use of peas in guacamole ( Fallon is for; Bush
against).
This September, two more big changes are in
the offing that could reduce the Beltway chatter
in late night.
On Sept. 8, Colbert will take over for Letterman,
leaving behind his highly political Colbert
Report persona.
At Comedy Central, Colbert engineered a
new form of participatory satire with his Bill
O'Reilly- esque character, running for president
twice, forming a super- PAC to educate viewers
about the Supreme Court's Citizens United
decision and even testifying on Capitol Hill - in
character, naturally - about migrant workers.
" Colbert's the most overtly political talk- show
host," Lichter said, " and he's walking into a show
that is the most different from what he's done
before."
Based on a spoof of GOP candidate Donald
Trump Colbert released online in June, his appetite
for political satire appears to remain strong,
but simply by virtue of hosting an hour- long
network show, he'll probably have to diversify.
On Sept. 28, Trevor Noah - a relatively unknown
comic from South Africa whose standup
draws from his experiences as a mixed- race
child raised during apartheid - picks up the
mantle of The Daily Show from Stewart. He will
bring a unique take on race and cultural identity,
if not an exhaustive understanding of American
electoral politics, to the job.
When Stewart took over from Craig Kilborn
in 1999, few could have predicted the host of the
short- lived Jon Stewart Show would make The
Daily Show essential election- year viewing. And
perhaps even fewer might have guessed he'd
become " a thought leader for this generation,"
said Michael Steele, former chairman of the Republican
National Committee and once a frequent
target of Stewart's mockery.
Though Stewart has continually balked at
the idea he is anything more than a comedian,
as host of The Daily Show , he has gained such
stature the New York Times likened him to a
" modern- day equivalent of Edward R. Murrow."
In 2010, Stewart attracted a crowd of 200,000 to
the Rally to Restore Sanity and/ or Fear on the
National Mall.
Stewart's absence is going to be felt acutely in
2016, particularly by those on the left who saw
him as a galvanizing figure and helped many
of his segments - including, most recently, his
heartfelt lament over the church shootings in
Charleston, S. C. - go viral.
" The truth is that the loss of the existing Daily
Show and The Colbert Report has taken away a
big, one- two politics- centric punch in late night,"
said Frank Rich, a columnist for New York magazine
and executive producer of the White House
satire Veep .
" No one else is as politically attuned as those
two shows."
Still, it's not as if Stewart became a hugely
influential figure overnight. Among late night's
new class, there are already several worthy contenders
for his throne.
On Late Night , Seth Meyers peppers his monologue
with topical wisecracks influenced by his
years as anchor of Weekend Update on SNL . He's
also turned the show into something of a political
salon, with guests including Vice- President Joe
Biden and presidential contenders Ted Cruz,
Carly Fiorina and Bernie Sanders. Stewart protege
John Oliver has earned raves for his HBO
show, Last Week Tonight , which specializes in
deep- dive investigations of news topics.
Another open question is how much candidates
will be willing to visit late- night shows - something
Obama, to the dismay of his critics, has
done with unusual frequency. In March 2009, he
became the first sitting president to go on a latenight
program, and has since visited nearly every
couch on broadcast, cable and even online outlets
such as Between Two Ferns . By doing so, Obama
has " expanded the reach of the bully pulpit," said
Democratic strategist Donna Brazile.
Late- night television provides an opportunity
for buttoned- up candidates to show a " softer side"
of themselves to a mass audience, said Steele.
" One appearance on The Tonight Show will reach
more people than your biggest mass mailing. It
is smart politics to sit in the chair for six or 10
minutes."
Though Jeb Bush bravely slow- jammed the
news with Fallon in his Tonight Show appearance
in June, it's unclear whether his image- conscious
GOP rivals - or the famously controlled Hillary
Rodham Clinton - will be as willing to yuk it up
with late night's less- established talents.
Noting most politicians are pretty clueless
when it comes to pop culture - " They have their
aides to tell them what to put on their iPhones" -
Rich predicts 2016' s candidates will be even more
wary. " The fact that there's going to be a new
cast of characters in late night, they're not going
to want to go on those shows."
They are, however, certain to provide plenty
of fodder - especially Trump, whose campaign
has already been such a comedy gold mine
Letterman was briefly lured out of retirement to
deliver a Trump- themed Top 10 list in a surprise
appearance this month. (" I have made the biggest
mistake of my life," he said of leaving The Late
Show before the real estate tycoon entered the
race.)
" Here's the bottom line," said Macks, " there's
not going to be a shortage of material."
- Los Angeles Times
By Meredith Blake
' It's not just the news politicians have to worry about - it's the jokes'
Late night getting
LESS POLITICAL
New cast of characters not as partisan
EVAN VUCCI / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
U. S. President Barack Obama talks with host Jon Stewart on The Daily Show last week.
DOUGLAS GORENSTEIN / NBC
Former Florida governor Jeb Bush ( left), a Republican presidential candidate, appears on
The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon earlier this month.
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