I’m not saying Trevor Noah isn’t funny, or that he hasn’t been funny. I’m saying that he sounds like an asshole. A mean-spirited, petty, misogynistic, racist asshole.
Those tweets weren’t written by a gaggle of writers. Noah wrote them. That is his idea of funny.
I honestly don’t find him that funny. I watched some videos and I saw him on TDS. These tweets are for sure not representative of his act but I found him kind of tiresome regardless.
Since jokes are not punches then what is the problem? The problem with this type of outrage is it buys into the destructive idea of comedy as not as something to bring joy but as a weapon. This is why the descent of Jon Stewart from great young comedian to mugging smarmy tv host is so sad.
The problem is the Daily Show type of humor where jokes are not thought of as trying to get laughs but as a type of assault. Thus instead of satire, it became showing an out of context clip of a Republican politician or like minded person, then John Stewart making faces and making a cheap snarky quip while the audience of mind numbed robots bray their approval. Take someone from a group you don’t like and use editing to make them look stupid so you can hold them up as an object of ridicule.
I’m sure no one thinks Noah hates fat girls or Jewish girls but rather are mad because those groups do not fall into the category of people I hate so they can not be joked about. Such attitudes are the death of comedy.
I disagree that Jon Stewart was remotely as deceptive as you suggest. Yes there was a lot of “clapture” going on but he wasn’t taking a bunch of stuff out of context to get it.
That is the worst part of the Daily Show— all that unfair camera trickery they use to make it appear that a Republican said something really crass, sexist, racist or mean-spirited (which in context would’ve been completely flattering), or said something about Obama after having said the complete opposite about Bush, or when they imply (via rapid-fire clips of a dozen Republicans all using exactly the same phrase) that they may have been following a shared set of talking points, when it was actually just a pure coincidence.
They have not already getting his input on correspondents or creative direction like you assumed, Exapno. From that link you put up a couple pages ago:
You don’t know what you’re talking about. Networks do this on a regular basis for potential talk show hosts. I’m not talking about sitting in as a guest host. I’m talking about running an unaired test show, to see if the guy has the chops for the job.
In fact, Louis CK dramatized such an event in Season 3, Episode 12 of Louie.
Well I would cut him some slack on his first appearance. I hope it taught him that you have to be a little less ham handed criticising American issues as a foreigner. Don’t think even the most liberal TDS viewer likes America being unfavorably compared to Apartheid South Africa.
This is really a de gustibus case. I love his timing and his demeanor here: he comes across as cool and collected, quietly devastating, and funny as hell. The audience whoops for him at some point. I like his delivery in this sketch better than Stewart’s. I don’t find it awkward or poorly timed or poorly met.
Oh dear. You haven’t read up on figurative speech yet, have you? I don’t even know how to answer this question if you’re not familiar with this concept.
As I’ve said, I hope I am wrong. But we won’t have to guess about that. The guy has the gig now, so we’ll see how he does. If I am mistaken about his talents, I will happily eat crow.