The Daily Show
US late-night satirical television program / From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Daily Show (known currently as The Daily Show with Trevor Noah (Jon Stewart was the host from 1999-2015 and Craig Kilborn from 1996-1998) is an Emmy Award winning news parody television program. It airs each Monday through Thursday on Comedy Central in the United States. The half-hour long program was first shown on Monday, July 22, 1996. It was first hosted by Craig Kilborn. Kilborn acted as its anchorman until December 1998. Jon Stewart took over as host in January 1999. Many changes were made to the program at that time. Stewart retired in 2015. The show will be hosted by South African comedian Trevor Noah in September 2015.
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The Daily Show | |
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Genre | Comedy Satire News parody late night talk show |
Created by | Madeleine Smithberg Lizz Winstead |
Directed by | Chuck O'Neil |
Presented by | Craig Kilborn (1996–1998) Jon Stewart (1999–2015) Trevor Noah (2015-present) |
Starring | Correspondents Guests |
Opening theme | Bob Mould, "Dog On Fire" (performed by They Might Be Giants) |
Country of origin | United States |
No. of episodes | 3,681 (as of June 1, 2022) |
Production | |
Executive producers | David Javerbaum Jon Stewart Rory Albanese Kahane Corn Josh Lieb |
Running time | 22 minutes |
Original release | |
Network | Comedy Central |
Release | July 22, 1996 – present |
Related | |
The Colbert Report |
Under Stewart, The Daily Show has become more strongly focused around politics and the national media. It is much different to the more character-driven comedy which was shown more during Kilborn's time on the program. Stewart's final broadcast aired on August 6, 2015.
There have been many other on-air contributors to The Daily Show with some called "correspondents", including Dave Attell, Stephen Colbert, Steve Carell, Ed Helms, Rob Corddry, Susie Essman, Olivia Munn, Buck Henry, Lewis Black, Kristen Schaal, Larry Wilmore, and John Oliver.