Stewarts decision to retire as host of the satirical news show after 16 years has left liberal America in mourning. So why is he leaving just before an election and what will happen when he steps out from behind the desk?
Honestly, it was a combination of the limitations of my brain and a format that is geared towards following an increasingly redundant process, which is our political process. I was just thinking, Are there other ways to skin this cat? And, beyond that, it would be nice to be home when my little elves get home from school, occasionally.
He has a 10-year-old son, Nathan, and a nine-year-old daughter, Maggie; Stewart and his wife, Tracey, have been married for almost as long as hes been doing the show, after Stewart proposed to her via a crossword puzzle.
If anything, it was the prospect of the upcoming US election that pushed him to leave the show. Id covered an election four times, and it didnt appear that there was going to be anything wildly different about this one, he says.
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Does he have any regrets? Stewart recounts one big disappointment an anodyne interview with Donald Rumsfeld in 2011 that failed to claim the former secretary of defences scalp. He just went into the general gobbledegook. Stewart puts on a pretty good imitation of Rumsfeld: Mnah mnah mnah, well, you have to remember, it was 9/11 mnah mnah. I should have pushed, but hes very adept at deflecting. He looks genuinely crushed for a moment, then rallies: That interview with Rumsfeld went shitty, but its still just an interview. Hes the one who has to live with the repercussions of what he really did, so theres nothing that could happen on my show that carries that same level of regret.
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Much as he might wince to hear it, for the past 16 years Stewart has occupied a place in Americas cultural and political life far greater than the small audience of his cable show would suggest. The Daily Shows simple format consists of a mix of reports from roving reporters (who have included Steve Carell, Stephen Colbert and John Oliver), monologues delivered by Stewart and an end-of-show interview. Over time, Stewart has evolved from a satirist to a broadcaster celebrated as the voice of US liberalism, the one who will give the definitive progressive take on a story.
More (very insightful):
http://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/apr/18/jon-stewart-why-i-quit-the-daily-show