Zaslow is an advice
columnist for the Chicago Sun-Times.
Issue date: Nov.
13-15, 1998
In this article:
Irreverence from Jon
Ask Stewart for advice
Jon Stewart: Consider the comic possibilities at the millennium with one of America's hottest
cutting-edge comedians.
ooking for a way to survive in the millennium? "Get a sense of
humor," says Jon Stewart. "If you don't, it'll be incredibly frustrating." The
35-year-old comedian will begin 1999 as the new host of Comedy Central's The Daily
Show, a smirking social review that has become the place for cutting-edge, often
over-the-edge, humor. His idea of funny? "Taking things in our culture to the
absolute extreme." Stewart amuses himself by picturing Bill Gates meeting the devil,
or vicious Christmas cards sent by those perky singing Hanson brothers. That sort
of absurdist riff defines Stewart's work. In the past year, while making HBO's
Larry Sanders Show and two movies, The Faculty and Dancing About
Architecture, he honed his topical irreverence by writing a book of comic essays,
Naked Pictures of Famous People. Stewart, the son of a physicist dad and
special ed teacher mom, grew up Jon Stuart Liebowitz in New Jersey - that's "outside
the Beltway" to the Washington politicos he now targets with his humor. He mocks
politicians' "condescension toward the rest of us. Washington is considered 'inside
the Beltway.' You know what the place outside the Beltway is called? The United
States!" For comic fuel, the one-time bartender and research lab assistant often
turns to the media, especially the Internet. He's aghast at chat rooms. "Imagine the
loneliest singles bar in the world, a singles bar for 15- to 18-year-olds with the
occasional 44-year-old accountant from Des Moines. Chatting online reduces
communication to grunts and giggles. They say chat rooms are bringing back literacy
because people communicate with the written word. It's bull." Stewart recently
entered a chat room and pretended to be an eloquent Vincent Van Gogh, befuddling
fellow cyber-chatters. As we turn the century, he says, the best comic possibilities
often will be found by way of just such "exercises in 'what if?' "
LIST OF STEWART'S MOST IRREVERENT QUOTES
On the media's obsession with lists: "You read
Hollywood's 30 most powerful people under age 30, or People's 50 Most
Beautiful People. What drivel! The extreme would be: 'Five People to Watch Under
5.' "
On hypocrisy in Washington: "How can Washington criticize
Hollywood when they use Hollywood principles to design campaigns? There are no
leaders anymore, only studio executives. Our country's chief executive runs focus
groups every four years and tries to make sure his movie opens bigger than the other
guy's."
On society's fascination with tall supermodels: "I
think of them as something of a genetic anomaly. Who knows? Next year the trend might
be models with gigantic chins. They don't really have an impact on people's
lives."
Go to top
ASK STEWART FOR ADVICE
Jon Stewart will write or call a reader who seeks advice. By Nov. 22, write to "Straight Talk," P.O. Box 3455, Chicago, Ill. 60654 (fax:
312-661-0375; e-mail: talk@usaweekend.com).
Photo Credit: NORMAN JEAN ROY FOR USA WEEKEND
|