But even though some liberals may be sensitive to the idea that comparing Biden’s gaffes with Trump’s behavior is an unfair “both sides” balancing act, Stewart insisted supporters should do a better job showing the current president is vital and effective as they say he is.
“It’s the candidate’s job to assuage concerns,” Stewart said in a 20-minute segment that kicked off last night’s program. “Not the voter’s job not to mention them.”
Easily slipping back into the host chair
From the show’s opening moments, Stewart eased back into the host’s chair without missing a beat, firing off jokes with a familiar style that felt like he had left just a few weeks ago, rather than in 2015. He brought a confidence the program sorely needs; it’s been searching for a permanent host for more than a year since the departure of Trevor Noah, who succeeded Stewart as host.
Stewart returns in a unique arrangement, hosting The Daily Show on Monday nights and serving as an executive producer for all evenings — similar to an arrangement crafted by another cable TV star, Rachel Maddow on MSNBC. The new setup allows him to avoid the grind of daily hosting, ceding the rest of the week to the show’s correspondents, starting with Jordan Klepper, who hosts Tuesday through Thursday.
Even as he eased into familiar rhythms — poking fun at the idea that he’s an old guy returning to his old job, highlighting concerns about two other old guys competing to get their old job back — Stewart faced a new challenge: reminding everyone why he was such a venerated host in the first place.
In his first 16 years hosting The Daily Show, Stewart elevated the program into an incisive look at the hypocrisies of media, politics and society. Along the way, he helped birth a style of fact-based satire that has exploded all over television, from the work by Daily Show alums John Oliver on HBO’s Last Week Tonight and Stephen Colbert on CBS’ The Late Show to the sharper political tone of Late Night with Seth Meyers and Jimmy Kimmel Live.