Um… he’s arguably more meaningful now. More people watch him bash Trump than ever watched his persona go after Republicans - and besides, how many years do you really want to be ‘in character’. I think he did enough time there.
I voted Samantha Bee, as a buy in the buy/hold/sell spectrum. Colbert did genius work, but has moved on so I see him as a sell. Oliver is a hold for me, I think he has peaked. Whereas I see Bee as continuing to build, with more better things to come.
I don’t blame Colbert for leaving. It must have been exhausting to keep doing that persona night after night (almost 1500 episodes!), especially considering Colbert’s personal beliefs. He looks like he’s having way more fun now. I miss it, but I don’t blame him.
Still voted for Oliver. Last Week Tonight’s longer-form format lets them do some really impressive work that none of the other apprentices have even approached on their own shows. He was also really funny on *Community. *
I don’t really get John Hodgman being on this list - he first appeared on TDS to promote The Areas of My Expertise, a particularly wonderful book, and was never a regular contributor. His success isn’t really tied to Stewart in the same way most of these other folks are.
I debated on him, he was on fairly often for a stretch of time though. He is actually credited with 75 appearances so I think he counts. The Daily Show did launch his public presence like those Mac commercials.
I wanted to make a sympathy vote for Ed Helms, because his bits were often hilarious. But Colbert and Oliver brought both humor and depth, so it was a tossup between those two. I went with Colbert on a coin flip.
Steve Carell has become a huge star, but I don’t feel like what he does now has anything to do with what he did on The Daily Show. I doubt most people even remember he was on that show (I didn’t).
Since we’re talking about apprentices, formative experiences and what they learned, what is it that the best apprentices learned from their cooperation with Stewart? Did some learn different things? What did each come into the apprenticeship with?
That would take me a while to find the relevant parts in The Daily Show book, but many people in the book listed what they brought with them, what they learned and why they are better now because of it. Samantha Bee and John Oliver, I seem to recall, had particularly objective insights into their situations, careers and approach to comedy and how Jon Stewart had affected each of those things.
I think Oliver was doing just fine as a political comedian before The Daily Show and was doing a ton of good work on his podcast* The Bugle* aside from The Daily Show.
As for Colbert I kind of feel that he was a peer to Stewart, not a student.
I don’t know that Bee would have made it without her *TDS *cred (she is the longest-tenured correspondent) but for me she was the biggest surprise. I honestly did not care for her on *TDS *but now on her own show I want to have her babies.
Shout out to Larry Wilmore. I really did enjoy his show and don’t know why it didn’t succeed. It was extremely refreshing!
I don’t think it was him, it was the panel format that didn’t work. Jordan is basically doing a Colbert Report type show and it seems like a better format, especially following the Daily Show. Larry Wilmore was usually very good and then the panel would come out and I would fall asleep or get tired of it and turn it off.