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21 out of 21 people found the following review useful:
Stewy's Evolutionary Leap, 16 August 2005
Author:
buxsu21 from United States
I followed Stewy from SAST to MTV to ABC. After a very funny show
called You Wrote It, You Watch It, MTV gave him his own talk show,
which eventually made the jump to the late-night major network slot.
His show had some genius writing and comedy bits, along with some hip
guests (his was the first show to have Dave Grohl drumming after
Nirvana, in a band with barely-seen Eddie Vedder, Mike Watt, and Pat
Smear in one of the greatest rock performances ever on late-night).
Though, it failed to find an audience, competing against a young Conan
O'Brien, it did give Stewy the chance to be seen outside of basic
cable. It also showed how much he needed to improve his interviewing
skills, as his neurotic, quick humor often left his slower-witted
guests confused and smiling awkwardly. Stewy once had Cindy Crawford on
and he was commenting on her soft skin, and she told him about this
special skin cream she liked. She proceeded to open her purse and put
some on the outside of his hand. She then asked " doesn't feel good?"
and Stewart responded by saying " I don't know Cindy, when I have cream
on my hands, its usually on the other side."
Stewy was almost too funny for the show and it was at its best when the
audience wasn't laughing, as his humor was so subtle and out of tune
with the mainstream that his spontaneous sarcasm and non-sequiturs
would elicit muffled chuckles from one, maybe two of his crew
off-stage. Jon's self-depreciating humor is his best asset and he
actually dubbed the last week of his show "The Countdown to
Cancellation," even appearing unshaven and seemingly half-drunk. But,
this was the show that launched Stewy as a viable personality, and soon
he was playing the very same role on Larry Sandersan up-and-comer
touted as the future of talk. Perhaps, his inability to truly dumb it
down is why Jimmy Kimmel has a slot in late-night and Stewy is
relegated to basic cable, though he brought it respectability. Watching
the Daily Show today, you can see the same quick wit, great writing,
and even his continued awkwardness with some of the guests (his
interview with Andre 3000). But, for those lucky enough to have caught
some of The Jon Stewart Show when it was on (mainly on late-night, not
MTV), they had the pleasure of seeing some of the funniest and hippest
TV of the mid-nineties.
19 out of 26 people found the following review useful:
pre daily show, 2 July 1999
Author:
beatles7
"The Jon Stewart Show" was one of the funniest things on MTV in 1993, so of course it was canceled. This show was the beginning of Jon Stewart's career on televison. It looked like the budget was five dollars yet the show was still witty and smart. It's a lot better than the daily show since the interviews with the celebrities lasted a lot longer . In my opinion The Jon Stewart Show was the best thing that came out of 1993
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