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List of The Daily Show recurring segments

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2310:, the sequence usually consisted of either a "sneak preview" of Colbert's show or a brief discussion about something that occurred on Stewart's. Ultimately, however, the sequence often ended with Colbert's egotistical character insulting Stewart. Usually, both Colbert and especially Stewart were prone to breaking character and laughing. Once a feature of virtually every episode, the frequency of The Toss was cut back to the point where the Toss happened only once every couple of weeks. The Toss did not appear from February 2011 to November 2014, due to scheduling conflicts between the two shows. The segment reappeared for the first time in nearly four years on November 4, 2014, when both shows aired live coverage of the 1884:. Humor was also derived from Carell's extremely degrading comments about his own (very exaggerated, if even existent) weight problems, such as, "I've been trying to slim down through diet and exercise, but I still feel like 190 pounds of crap in a 175-pound bag!"–announced with a cheery smile. The segment ran five times in 2001 and featured a cheesy opening sequence with a song whose lyrics, sung by Carell, consisted only of "Slimmin' down with Steve, slimmin' down with Steve!" repeated over and over. 3125:; 'You', signified with a mirror surface on the cover. When clips are played showing an individual highlighting the behaviour of 'you' (the common people/American voter), Stewart has begun dropping quips about the Time Magazine choice. If the comment made was positive, the joke involves the notion that this is the next big thing for 'you' after Time Magazine. If the comment was negative, the joke is based on the idea things have gone downhill for 'you' after the Time Magazine highlight. 4694: 889:, the correspondents over-hyped the results and bracket changes poking fun at March Madness commentators. The official description from thirdmonthmania.com; "Third Month Mania looks at all the important (and trivial) things that make you angry, then pits them against each other in a bracket where your vote actually matters. This single-elimination tournament takes place mostly in the month after February and is in no way connected to college athletics". 2195:, and the second segment explored celebrities who utter offensive statements. The third looked into a Republican debate at a primarily African-American college which none of the major candidates showed up to; this segment was repeated on January 24, 2008. Most of the humor in the segment is drawn from the differences between British correspondent Oliver and African-American correspondent Wilmore. The segment debuted on March 28, 2007. 3098:, mentions of the governor on the show are proceeded with a duck quacking his name as "Vil-sack!". When Vilsack appeared as a guest on the show in December 2006, the joke was again used with the duck initially respectfully stating Vilsack's full name and title before being urged by Stewart to return to the standard joke. Vilsack himself later in the same show made light of the joke by presenting Stewart with a talking 1748:" segment for the first four years of his stint as host. In the segment, Stewart would focus on the less important stories of the day, which would provide a comedic contrast to the segment "Headlines". The segment was abruptly dropped around 2003, and no reason was given. This was one of the three divisions of the show under Stewart's first few years; the others being "Headlines" and " 220:'s "Decision" segment which airs during election years. Following a second series of specials in 1996 titled "InDecision '96", "InDecision" became a recurring feature on The Daily Show starting with "InDecision 2000". The segment focuses on election-year topics, from state primaries, the party conventions, the campaign trail, the debates and election night. 3150:". Williams appears in the giant projection screen behind Jon Stewart and occasionally insults and demeans Stewart in regards to his journalistic skills on the show, including pointing out that Stewart "needs a teleprompter to read the fake news". Also, when Stewart mocked Brian Williams' service as a moderator in a 2848:, meet me at camera three", at which point the shot switches to a camera situated at the right of the regular camera. Stewart turns on spot to face the camera, and sends his message to the subject, possibly beginning his speech with a relevant greeting, and then the shot is switched back to its regular camera. 2010:
themed images on a screen behind the host, while making a sound of a high-pitched voice (recorded by Colbert) saying "Beepboopboop beepboopboop boopboop. Beepboopboop beepboopboop boopboop. Beep. Boop. Boop". The images and the sound slowed down toward the end, with humorous or ironic last few images (such as
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The God Machine normally took the form of a black post with a single large bright red button on its top, surrounded by yellow lining. It had previously appeared as the "God Lever" or the "God Rod." The host would smack the button, and it started flashing an apparently random succession of religiously
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is a segment that occurs at the end of every show. The segment was introduced when the show began. In it, the host would end the show and a random selection of humorous videos would be shown, usually a clip that relates to one of the topics that was discussed in the episode. Hosts generally introduce
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and his oft-ridiculed haircut. If the audience laughs particularly long at a joke, Stewart will often mock them with a comment to the effect of, "Really? We kinda thought we phoned that one in;" if they groan or snicker at it, he will say something defensive like, "You think it's easy coming up with
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appear superimposed on top of each other in the segment's opening graphic). The segment's debut, on September 20, 1999, is the source of the two soundbites used in the most frequent incarnation of the segment's opening graphic: Carell's "You just made me vomit in my own mouth!" and Colbert's "What's
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is a segment that was featured on the show throughout 2006, to celebrate the show's tenth anniversary. The segment usually features host Jon Stewart offering a nostalgic look back at the show's past segments (normally spanning Stewart's run as host), usually focusing on a specific theme. The segment
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people explaining why they want a rich businessman to be in office and even shows a clip of Trump saying that he loves poor people. They then contrast that notion with Trump saying, in 1999, that "My entire life, I've watched politicians bragging about how poor they are, how they came from nothing,
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news shows. In the segment, the correspondent normally travelled around in a large van with the words "Are You Prepared?!?" on its side, often knocking on doors of unsuspecting residents and "testing their preparedness" in the given scenario. Bee performed the segment two times, with her husband,
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was the segment that always opened the show for the first four years that Jon Stewart hosted the show. In the segment, Stewart would focus on the big stories of the day. The segment was abruptly dropped around 2003, and no reason was given. This was one of the three divisions of the show under
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was the voice over announcer for the segment's introduction. In each segment, a question appeared on-screen and Hodgman addressed the subject, often using doctored-up photos and other humorous visual aides. Hodgman ended each segment by saying "I'm John Hodgman, and you're welcome." While the
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was a segment chronicling Carell's character's misguided attempts to lose weight. Among the methods suggested were eating vegetable shortening as a healthier alternative to ice cream (which Carell did in front of Stewart and the audience, to their obvious disgust) and undergoing surgery that
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Noah checks financial ties, history, scandals, accomplishments, etc. of the people Trump has appointed. He often looks at what Trump has previously said about that person and checks whether or not Trump has been consistent with his attitude towards them. He also analyses their performance at
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is a common phrase coined by Stewart, which began in 2006, to initiate what is intended to be a direct address to the person or group with which the current topic is concerned. Typically after expressing his distaste for the subject's actions, Stewart will then request that (for example)
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was a segment in which the segment's host, Dave Gorman, credited as the show's Statistical Analyst, presents satirical views of polls and statistics pertaining to current events. In each segment, Gorman pretends not to notice the double-meaning of his segment's title (a reference to
1935: 1802:) and makes several accidental jokes involving the title, until the October 5, 2006 segment when Gorman "found out" the meaning of the segment's title and "decided" to go along with it. This segment first appeared on April 27, 2006 and last appeared on October 5, 2006. 2653:
host from using it in their interviews. However, in Jon Stewart's first week as host, he slowly phased out the "Five Questions", doing "Four Questions" on Monday, "Three Questions" on Tuesday, "Two Questions" on Wednesday, ending with "The One Question" on Thursday.
3013:"You know, it's ironic. Now that we're 10-years-old, we're exactly the right age to draw the attention of NAMBLA. However, for the record, The Daily Show has absolutely no affiliation with the North American Man Boy Love Association, or, as it's called, UNICEF." 2807:
only a short distance from Stewart's desk. This is sometimes brought up if the picture on the screen contradicts reality–for example, if it shows a nighttime view of the city where the correspondent claims to be. Other references are scripted, such as when
3157:, Williams appeared behind him, intimidating and correcting Jon, before threatening that he found a way to appear at Stewart's home. Jon typically responds that he's surprised that Brian Williams is such a dick to him. In later shows, the giant heads of 2742:'s long-standing title, "Senior Black Correspondent." (When Wilmore first appeared on the show, his title appeared in the caption as simply "Black Correspondent," but he refused to begin his report until it was changed to "Senior Black Correspondent.") 2730:, the caption of his or her title will say "Senior ______ Correspondent," with an absurd subject in which he or she is supposedly expert and therefore qualified to cover the story at hand. Some of the more ridiculous examples have included "Senior 1478:
was a segment that occurred twice, as "Diagnosis: Mystery" and "Diagnosis: Science." "Mystery" was hosted by Jason Jones in the guise of a medical interest piece, exploring cures for homosexuality. "Science" was hosted by Rob Riggle, exploring how
3005:, Stephen Colbert was asked who he was representing and quickly answered, "Oh, I'm with NAMBLA." Unaware of the context, she replied, "Well, have fun tonight." (Incidentally, the woman he said this to turned out to be a friend of his sister.) 2244:) was a segment that castigated politicians' responses to disasters. Its most famous airing occurred in 2010, when Stewart brought in first responders Kenny Specht, John Devlin, Ken George and Chris Bowman in an attempt to urge passage of the 800:
talks about the struggles that black journalists have when discussing race issues on television. It talks about how and why they have to keep calm, and shows examples of non-black anchors making racist remarks towards these black journalists.
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Arby's CEO Paul Brown made an appearance on Jon Stewart's final episode on August 6, 2015. Arby's also made a 'Goodbye Jon Stewart' video for Stewart's last show, which was a small compilation of all the jokes that Stewart's made about them.
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where he parodies 'Wall Street Executives' & financial commercials and talks about money, stocks & economy. Hasan plays a character who gives technically viable yet crazy-sounding advice, who also has financial & family problems.
558:) and involves her standing in-front of a screen. A clip/soundbite is shown where a politician is making a statement that is false (or is misleading in some way). Desi then deconstructs the lie and gives it a humorous rating on a joke scale. 3137:, another unusual food item, was first mentioned on February 25, 2009 and has likewise been brought out as a recurring joke. Jon Stewart combined the two foods, dipping a blueberry-pancake-and-sausage stick into a jar of Baconnaise Lite. 718:
Sometimes it was used to make fun of the 'mental gymnastics' that politicians & pundits used in order to spin certain stories. Notably, it mocked Donald Trump supporters of constantly flip-flopping on their defence of their candidate.
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hosts this segment while wearing a fake grey mustache and horn-rimmed glasses. This segment is dedicated to African-American history. The motto of the segment is, "Remember, we're for the culture." The title is a reference to the slang
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When the set was changed for the second time on April 9, 2007, the stagehands, according to Jon Stewart, made "one glitch ... a classic mistake that people make when they first break in a new set" and "installed the giant head of
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talks about issues through an African-American perspective. The segments consist of short, quick interviews with African-Americans who have knowledge on the issue, as well as examples of how that certain issue affects black Americans.
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how poor their parents and grandparents were. And I said to myself, if they can stay so poor for so many generations, maybe this isn't the kind of person we want to be electing to higher office. How smart can they be? They're morons."
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persisted, the clip was entitled "Mess O'Potamia – The Iraq War Is Over". However, on June 12, 2014, Jon Stewart announced, "Looks like we're going to have to return to our old coverage" and resurrected the old Mess O'Potamia segment.
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After some time, the coverage went through different names, such as "Democalypse 2012/2016", in reference to the outstanding amount of Democratic nominees at the time. During Noah's tenure, the coverage was given the name "Votegasm".
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was the show's host. The segment would always come at the very end of Kilborn's informal celebrity interviews. In the segment, Kilborn would ask a sequence of five absurd questions that often had even more irrelevant answers. Actor
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was a segment that was sometimes introduced during coverage of news stories that Stewart claimed to find particularly bewildering, such as the revelation that the Army was firing Arabic-speaking linguists for being gay, or that
1922:" segment for the first four years of his stint as host. In the segment, Stewart would focus on the breaking stories of the day. This was one of the three divisions of the show under Stewart's first few years, the others being " 1333:
co-star) as Colbert's debate partner, in which Helms deliberately demonstrated that he was incapable of grasping the premise of the segment. On September 19, 2006, a montage of the best of "Even Stevphen" was shown as part of
3106:) and "Mor-mon!". As a result of Tom Vilsack's withdrawal from the presidential race, the joke was retired during the February 27, 2007 episode, including a CGI render of the duck wailing "Villlllllllsaaaack!!" in anguish. 1851:
debuted on the show on September 13, 2006. The segment was featured during the guest interview; Stewart would ask the guest one question thought to be particularly tough to answer. (For example, during an interview with
1300:. They would often spend the time insulting each other instead, sometimes resulting in one of them breaking down in tears, due to painful childhood memories. It is very similar to the show's earlier segment, "Backfire". 3368: 2892:
As a comment on the crowded 2020 Democratic nominees, Noah would show a group shot of all the nominees, plus a joke nominee, such as the original design of the movie Sonic the Hedgehog, and the title character from
1347:, when Carell was the guest. They debated how uncomfortable the interview was for them, leading into both insulting each other for bad career decisions, and ending with both men crying and a surprise appearance by 3057:; in November 2007 when he was told by the South Carolina Democratic Council that he wasn't going to be on the primary ballot, he responded by saying "I assume you'll be donating my application fee to NAMBLA?" 3658: 3261: 1389:
pieces, this one would be divided by a commercial break to accentuate the anticlimactic aspect. The segment first appeared in or around 1999 and was discontinued when Vance DeGeneres left the show in 2001.
2054:'s and Stephen Colbert's Meta-Free-Phor-All, a modified version of the "God Machine" sound was used to generate subjects. The "God Machine" made an additional appearance during the June 5, 2007 episode of 2036:
Colbert made the "God Machine" famous as an icon for irreverent and sometimes provocative examination of religious issues. When Rob Corddry first took over God Machine duties, he indicated that he is an
3531: 2705:-like segment shown during the last commercial break during Craig Kilborn's tenure as host. It was hosted by Creator/Producer Lizz Winstead's mother and father Ginny and Wilbur Winstead via telephone. 1536:
reporting from the stock exchange as a "Money Bunny". The "Money Bunny" was usually treated poorly by the two male hosts who would make jokes at her expense. After DeGeneres left, he was replaced by
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hand puppet with an added Islamic beard operated by Stewart in front of a greenscreen) who details his torture and eventual release from Guantanamo, having convinced the authorities he is in fact a
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the segment by saying, "Here it is, Your Moment of Zen". Sometimes, the Moment of Zen will be used a tribute to a celebrity or prominent figure who has recently died. Moments of Zen are replaced by
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As Trevor cued up Moment of Zen in his last sign-off as host on December 8, 2022, the camera turned to an applauding audience, who joined the show's staff in serenading Trevor with a rendition of
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Pennington, Gail (March 30, 1999). "KILBORN CAN'T WAIT TO UNCHAIN HIS HUMOR AS HOST OF 'LATE LATE' SUCCESSOR TO TOM SNYDER ON CBS SAYS HE'S MOVED BEYOND FRAT-BOY JOKES". St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
3500: 1856:: "Which member of your show will be the first to die and what will his scrotum be stapled to then?"). During the segment, the screen behind Stewart and his guest filled with images of flames. 2264:, in which he uses his "expertise" to permanently solve the country's most pressing problems. For instance, in the first segment, he proposed to save the struggling economy in part by making 1907:, which followed an unusually dull or trivial news event over the course of several hours. The segment was very short and was usually played before going to commercial, with no introduction. 186:
catches the stories that, according to his introduction, "fall through the cracks" and comments on them in a humorous rant. The segment, which starts with an opening riff in the style of the
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made an additional appearance on May 18, 2006. After a hiatus of two years, the segment was featured for the third and final on the June 19, 2008 episode, with an additional twist —
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of the Aflac Duck with a badge reading "#1 Vilsack Fan", and saying "I'm not going to duck the issue". On occasion, the duck has also blurted out similar words such as "Brown-back!" (for
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was a segment consisting of a previously aired segment featuring former correspondent Stephen Colbert. The segment first appeared on February 8, 2006, several months after Colbert left
1385:. Between pre-filmed portions, Vance would appear in the studio hiding behind various set-decorations or apparatuses, describing the events in greater frightful detail. Unlike other 1571:, debuting on August 24, 2006. The segment was pre-recorded and featured Hodgman, as the show's "Resident Expert", discussing a different topic each week from a room full of books. 3907: 3612: 3346: 2828:
segments from frame to frame (each of them being unwilling to deliver a report about the Middle East without wearing khaki). Another time, Jason Jones, having actually gone to
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report. In it, a trivial incident was reported as if it were quite dangerous and serious, such as the time the pork chop a man was preparing caught fire and distressed his pet
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s first ten years, a significant part of its airtime was devoted to different branded recurring segments, usually hosted by the show's correspondents. After the 2005 launch of
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On July 27, 2006, a segment of the show titled "10 F#@king Years" featured many clips referring to the NAMBLA jokes. Jon Stewart ended the recap with yet another NAMBLA joke:
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in the White House by 2016." NAMBLA's entry reads, "Stated agenda: The legalization of sexual relations between men and young boys. Hidden agenda: Dude, did you read the
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in the title and are often followed by something that, while related to the topic, can easily be misinterpreted as rude or unacceptable behavior. Such captions include
4213: 3589: 2914:, usually claiming the food is inedible or unhealthy. After the joke, Stewart would sometimes claim they are a fine restaurant and has no reason to make fun of them. 4326: 3666: 3269: 3479: 2341:
As with "Indecision" and "Mess-O-Potamia," other humorous titles have been used to indicate the subject matter of various segments. Recently, these have included:
1052: 976: 1811:. He was hired as a contributor four years later, making him the second contributor to be hired after appearing on the show as a guest to promote his book (after 826:
analyses White House characters who might even be more powerful than Trump himself. In this segment, Trevor has pondered if the real President is Senior Advisor
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In the segment, Noah summarizes news that should get significant media attention, but are overshadowed by other breaking news that constantly appear every day.
4038: 3528: 4097: 3975: 577:. In this segment, Lydic went through and satirically and sarcastically rated all of Trump's falsehoods as true, by justifying them with "alternative facts". 307: 2884:. After making a joke about them, similar to Stewart, Noah would turn to either Camera 1 or Camera 3 and make up a slogan about the poor quality of Spirit. 2783:
these?" or "You should've seen the ones we didn't go with." One recurring joke, often used to make fun of the audience and the viewers, is to make a pun at
1840:". The segment was discontinued when Carell left the show, though it did make a brief reappearance after Carell was "discovered" to have been lost in Iraq. 1257:
debuted on July 17, 2006, around the time of the show's actual anniversary. The segment continued on until the end of 2006, when the anniversary was over.
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and had 3 segments where the show would examine sound bites and videos of the statements made by Donald Trump that aren't getting too much media coverage.
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focused on financial and wealth issues. Hodgman portrays himself as an incredibly wealthy and successful author who looks down on those poorer than him.
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The third segment, airing on May 26, examines a 1994 interview where Donald Trump discusses how he didn't like that his former wife (Maples) worked.
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Jensen, Kurt (March 30, 1999). "Craig Kilborn takes his shot at late-night The former 'Daily Show' wiseacre brings his smarts and smirks to CBS".
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was a segment in which its host played various clips of television advertisements and then made fun of them. The original host of the segment was
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has declined. Normal commentary segments about ongoing news stories can also have recurring titles to help sort them and talk about continuation.
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First referenced on October 19, 2006, this food item has become a recurring joke with much humor derived from its strange mix of ingredients.
2438:'s various levels of secrecy. On the February 5, 2009 episode, Stewart officially changed the name of the segment to "Why Are You Such A Dick?" 1783:. The segment debuted in 1997 and was one of the show's longest running segments. It was discontinued when Frank DeCaro left the show in 2003. 942: 617: 4617: 3725: 2971: 1682:
was a segment in which its host went over highlights of the upcoming month. At one particular time, the segment was done on a monthly basis.
881:, viewers could vote on what made them the "maddest". Choices included "Slow WiFi" vs "No WiFi", "AntiVaxxers" vs "Hipsters", etc. Hosted by 613: 228: 4679: 3937: 3773: 3440: 1160: 1635:". All three were dropped in 2003. The term is still used on The Daily Show website to categorize videos of a night's leading news story. 1509:
was a segment where two hosts discuss economics and give financial advice. It ridiculed the format of financial news shows and included a
4184: 3915: 3795: 3338: 2990:"NAR-AMBLA". In the October 2005 debut of a segment called "Man vs. Nature: The War on Terra", which detailed the devastating effects of 2967: 154:
suggestions from the viewers with the social media hashtag #DailyShowZen. The first user submitted Moment of Zen aired on March 15, 2017.
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and focused on new technology. The segment began sometime around February 2003 and was discontinued sometime around the Summer of 2004.
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had managed to lose $ 99 billion in a single year. The device was used during 2002 and 2003 and was identified by Stewart's turning to
247: 3803: 3637: 1272:. Focusing on preparedness for a potential disaster or bad situation, the segment was styled as a parody of the scare tactics used by 969: 243: 1864:". However, this segment was short-lived. It was discontinued in November 2006, two days after Stewart jokingly complained to guest 239:"InDecision 2044", a segment in which Rob Riggle interviewed kindergarteners to see who was most likely to run for president in 2044 4251: 4118: 3681: 2820:
all claimed to be reporting from three different Middle Eastern cities; appearing on a split screen, they tossed the many-pocketed
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went off the air for three months due to Corddry's departure from the show. On October 19, 2006, "This Week in God" returned, with
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nomination. In other words, "How did Donald Trump go from being the guy who fake-fired people on TV to the orange-tinted terror?"
2947: 1012: 962: 3048:'s announcement regarding the Joint Committee on Accelerating the Transferring of Security Responsibility, dubbing it SCRAMBLA. 2684:
was a segment hosted by correspondent Rich Brown. The segment began in 1996 and was discontinued when he left the show in 1998.
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was only featured on the show three times, with its first appearance on April 19, 2006 (the day after Bush's use of the term).
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accused his opponent of getting support from NAMBLA. Jon Stewart stated "I knew I'd be right at some point with that acronym."
2575:", which were also in-studio debates between two correspondents. The segment's title is a parody of the political debate show, 2461:
and the governments of Middle Eastern countries. The segment is introduced by a melange of powerful music, a brief segment of
511:, which takes a look at and reviews technological trends. The first segment, airing on October 7, 2015, was Chieng's debut on 4306: 4298: 3833: 997: 853: 138: 4205: 3629: 2432:
You Don't Know Dick (later, "Even Dick Don't Know Dick" and "You Don't Know Richard Cheney" when Lynne Cheney was the guest)
657:). In the interview, Trump talks lewdly and sexually about his daughter (who was one year old at the time of the interview) 3581: 3291: 2366: 1090:
filled in for Wood) co-host this segment dedicated to sports news. The segment's title is a spoof of ESPN sports talk show
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On November 30, 2006, Jon Stewart played a clip from the joint news conference of President Bush and Iraqi Prime Minister
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usually did the sketch from 2003 to 2005, though occasionally it was done by other correspondents. Due to the spin-off of
4723: 4650: 4626: 4591: 4566: 4551: 3463: 3369:"Black Eye on America - The Struggles of African-American Journalists - The Daily Show with Trevor Noah - Comedy Central" 3197:. When the name of the segment is introduced, it is followed by Jon turning towards back stage and telling off the crew. 3002: 2329: 1360:. Carell is a guest for Colbert's 60th birthday and they both argue about advantages and disadvantages of getting older. 1145:, prompting the question "Is he racist?" Noah turns to "Trevor Noah: Racism Detective", which is Noah dressed as a 1930s 1005: 417:. Like "Indecision ####", the title is merely used to specify the topic of the jokes, which focus on the troubles in the 91: 2581:. The segment began in or around 1996 and was discontinued when A. Whitney Brown and Brian Unger left the show in 1998. 1540:. Eventually, other correspondents would appear in the rotating spots as "Host" and "Money Bunny" such as Miriam Tolan, 4599: 2979: 2641: 2547: 1356: 907:
tweet is the greatest. The bracket was broken up into 4 sections: "Celebs", "Enemies", "Government Affairs" and "WTF".
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Debate: The Squabble in Coral Gables", "Election Night 2004: Prelude to a Recount", and highlights from throughout the
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At the end of Stewart's final episode on August 6, 2015, he introduced his final Moment of Zen – a live performance by
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parody investigative journalism. The segment has been featured three times. The first installment explored the use of
3244: 2995: 2625: 1421: 649: 260: 202:. As of 2019, it is the longest-running recurring segment that still airs on the show, aside from the Moment of Zen. 4030: 4089: 3983: 3026: 2983: 2029:. Whenever this occurred, the host would make a side comment about the religion in an attempt to placate any angry 1945:
featured the "God Machine" and a satirical run-down of "everything God did this week", very similar to the earlier
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was a segment that debuted on the June 13, 2006 episode. The segment was a compilation of news clips, usually from
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Correspondent". Bee returned again for the segment's "Christmas Christacular" on December 18, 2006. Correspondent
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Noah, posing as his Australian cousin "Australian Trevor", would provide commentary on stories involving animals.
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is an annual segment that airs weekly segments throughout March and April. Voting happens on thirdmonthmania.com.
4561: 4556: 4336: 2669:, presented an assortment of actual clips from various televangelists. It is very similar to the later segment, " 2033:. These statements include, "Islam! About which there is nothing funny", or "Islam! Which I respect completely." 342: 330: 3109:
A similar joke was used to describe then-Presidential-candidate Barack Obama, where the duck said "half-black."
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or Colbert himself) appearing before the screen settled on an image that prompted the next item in the segment.
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references to the fact that their "live reports" are nearly always filmed from inside the studio in front of a
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During 2006 the show developed a running joke based on the name and relative obscurity of Democratic Governor
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There are several comedic themes and gags which have recurred through the series. This is an incomplete list.
2073:. In this segment, Martin provides viewers with a comedic look at new, youth-targeted trends. Topics included 3750: 3216: 3122: 2352:, the title referring to the large number of candidates (which at the time was 18) running for the position. 1604: 1576:"Exper-teasers" segment only appeared twice, Hodgman continues to appear on the show as the Resident Expert. 2323:
From January 2015 until Stewart's departure in August 2015, the segment aired every Monday with Stewart and
2314:. It appeared again on Thursday, December 18, 2014, when Stephen Colbert had his final episode of his show, 1303:
The segment's name is a composite of the two correspondents' homophonic first names, sometimes appearing as
4673: 4244: 3308: 2998:. Stewart will even refer to organizations that are already acronyms as NAMBLA ("...the AARP, or NAMBLA"). 2311: 292: 274: 254: 3881: 2541:
paused the show for a personal monologue with the audience. Kilborn carried the segment over when he left
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A brief segment where after a person that is the focus of the story does something very characteristic of
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was a segment that featured small children reading transcripts of contentious moments from programs like
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The Daily Show (The Book): An Oral History As Told by Jon Stewart, the Correspondents, Staff and Guests
3529:"The Daily Show's Trevor Noah quickly hits Brazil's presidential mess, Turkey's goons, and, yes, Trump" 2975: 555: 162: 2401:, referring to news outlets and other organization that have a seemingly irrational fear of President 1439:
was an animated segment done in the style of a comic book. The segment's main character was President
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within the group. One segment was dedicated to talking to the inhabitants of Dick Street, New Jersey.
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is a popular segment on the show in which "America's foremost commentator on everything" and comedian
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includes a "stated agenda" and "hidden agenda" for each group; for example, the "hidden agenda" of
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and says things such as "Africa Jokes; where you thought I was joking but aren't so sure anymore".
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The segment was discontinued when Steve Carell left the show, after a brief one-off take featuring
1111: 394: 158: 143: 3717: 46:, which was largely made up of different recurring segments, the time devoted to such segments on 4718: 4697: 4237: 3765: 3421: 3402: 3262:"Jordan Klepper Fingers the Pulse – Streets Named Dick Edition – The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 2845: 1092: 926: 562: 523: 3935: 3436: 707:, Brazil. It also joked about issues that occurred at the 2016 Rio Summer Olympics, such as the 366: 2880:
In lieu of the Arby's jokes Stewart did on the show, Noah has since made a punching bag out of
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are accompanied by an image in the top left-hand corner of the screen and a caption that is a
2673:". The segment began around 1996 and was discontinued when John Bloom left the show in 1998. 458:" segment. Originally used in 2006, it focuses on problems in the Middle East. The title is a 3151: 2758:
connecting the story's subject with a familiar saying or pop-culture item. Examples include "
2199: 2140: 1964: 1807: 1698:, and Samantha Bee began hosting the segment in 2003. At one point, the segment was known as 1541: 1001: 1805:
Gorman had originally appeared on the show as a guest in December 2001, to promote his book
279:"InDecision 2008: Clusterf@#k to the White House", covering the early primary season of the 4016: 2272:(promising that he would "levitate the economy, make it disappear, then pull it out of the 2148:
attitude towards celebrities. After Walls' departure in 2002, other female correspondents (
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commentators. This segment was used to satirically portray the news that was coming out of
700: 191: 1192: 661:. This is in contrast to Trump's claim that "nobody has more respect for women than" him. 8: 4667: 2931: 2813: 2775: 2688:
segments from the past were still being shown in The Daily Show episodes up to mid 2000.
2384: 1278: 947: 708: 428:". Then, in December 2006, Stewart created a spin-off of the segment, this one entitled " 1292:
was a segment that was an in-studio debate about a current topic between correspondents
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The hosts and format varied somewhat. When it premiered in early 2000 it was hosted by
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On August 28, 2017, a special "Pardon Edition" of the segment looked into the recently
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in 2005. Said Colbert on the hand-off: "God has an exclusive licensing agreement with
896:, after 4.4 million votes, the winner for most maddening thing were Trump Supporters. 3829: 3471: 3464:"The Daily Show Looks at Newly Pardoned Joe Arpaio for a "Profile in Tremendousness"" 2784: 2731: 2628:), highlights many of the best interview moments from Craig Kilborn's stint as host. 2621: 2510: 2482: 2388: 2306:." Meant as a parody of major news shows bridging to one another on networks such as 2248:. Stewart revived the bit in 2015 on Noah's show to urge reauthorization of the Act. 1615:. Stewart voices Gitmo in a style similar to Elmo, but with a Middle Eastern accent. 1230: 1212: 570: 424:
In August 2006, Stewart announced that the Mess O' Potamia segment had been renamed "
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who play out the episode with an additional performance. The segment continued under
3882:"Arby's mocks itself in a good-humored goodbye ad to 'The Daily Show's' Jon Stewart" 3685: 1417:
began to take his place starting in 2002. The segment was discontinued around 2003.
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is a judge who listens to two attorneys argue about a certain issue, taken place in
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The second segment, airing on April 5, talks about Donald Trump's 1994 interview on
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The first segment, airing on March 10, took a look at a Donald Trump interview with
4656: 4639: 3501:"Trump vs. the Truth: The Russian Hacking Report – The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 3075: 2601:
gained notoriety for being the first and one of the few to answer all "correctly".
2564: 2448: 2241: 2134: 1926:" and "Other News." All three were abruptly dropped in 2003, with no reason given. 1853: 972: 769: 566: 3908:"Man vs. Planet - The War on Terra - The Daily Show with Jon Stewart (Video Clip)" 2910:
Jon Stewart would pull a fun yet insulting joke at the expense of fast food chain
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hosts this segment, providing commentary on ridiculous trends in the news such as
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Mess O' Potamia/Crisis in Israfghyianonanaq/The Futile Crescent (2003–2015, 2024)
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supporters at Trump rallies or events, he asks them questions that highlight the
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A running gag is the insertion of the phrase "...or NAMBLA" (an acronym for the
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film critic who can find gay subtext in any film. During his stint on the show,
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and a bug in the left corner saying "MSTDSFN", mimicking the names and logos of
813: 432:", to coincide with the release of the final report from the Iraq Study Group. 413:
has been a common part of the show since the early days of the 2003 invasion of
126:. This was in solidarity with those cities after terrorist attacks had occurred 4261: 3147: 3045: 2991: 2763: 2735: 2666: 2613: 2470: 2462: 2153: 2149: 2106: 2070: 2011: 1950: 1779:
ran yearly extended thirty-minute-long versions of "Out at the Movies" for the
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to report a story, shoved a passerby in order to "prove" he was really there.
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seeking to win the Democratic nomination to run against Donald Trump in 2020.
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had the dubious honor of only getting one, and that was with Kilborn's help.
2602: 2593: 2538: 2523: 2490: 2451:'s testimonies before Congress relating to the U.S. attorney firings scandal. 2324: 2289: 2280:
waitress"), and instituting an "emergency Christmas" to get people shopping.
2184: 2086: 1772: 1768: 1612: 1608: 1201:. Originally titled The Fantastic Absolutely Tremendous Road to Impeachment. 1136: 1106: 1079: 1075: 958: 835: 805: 669: 658: 544: 367:
Jordan Klepper Fingers the Pulse (July 21, 2016–March 21, 2017, 2019–present)
213: 195: 70: 3095: 2864:, started this running gag on the show in late 2016. Noah looks straight at 2552:
The segment was featured during Kilborn's stint as host, from 1996 to 1998.
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accepting valid points from both stances and dismissing any invalid points.
3166: 2951: 2861: 2809: 2804: 2469:. A self-compounding instance that compounded U.S. weapons deals linked to 2466: 2417: 2402: 2273: 2257: 2169: 2165: 2125: 1995: 1829: 1824: 1812: 1764: 1711: 1572: 1568: 1525: 1510: 1447:. The segment originated when Bush made a comment referring to himself as " 1406: 1377: 1293: 1269: 1184: 1124: 1083: 929:
nominees. Trump is known for bragging about picking "the best people" and "
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Usually right before the start of an episode, this segment was a parody of
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filled in for a slightly altered "Political Trendspotting" segment on the
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This first segment was a focus of conversation when Wilmore appeared on
843: 747: 306:"Indecision 1776: Ye Cobblestone Road to the White House", covering the 4031:"It's mayo, it's bacon, it's Baconnaise — and sales are sizzling" 3162: 3134: 2632: 2522:
Here is a list of past recurring segments from mostly the era in which
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Here is a list of past recurring segments from mostly the era in which
1193:
The Magical, Wonderful Road to Impeachment (September 25, 2019–present)
1026: 979: 870:, with a bracket filled with other topics instead of basketball teams. 765: 712: 653:. In the clip, he's being interviewed alongside his first second wife ( 551: 435:
The final segment of Mess O'Potamia aired in March 2009, shortly after
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segment, usually analysing speeches from political figures or events.
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did not end with a Moment of Zen, as it immediately transitioned into
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The segment returned in late 2019 when Klepper returned to the show.
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goes out and talks to different crowds in public. Usually talking to
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who begged the two to answer how they were able to leave the show.
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in a black and white office simply confirming the person's racism.
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The segment returned as "The Futile Cresent" on February 26, 2024.
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10 F#@king Years - Even Stevphen | The Daily Show | Comedy Central
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was a segment that was an in-studio debate between correspondents
2358:, which features news about the worsening US and world economies. 1409:
was the host from 1999 to 2002, but when he left the show for his
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was termed "IAEA-BLA". An advocacy group concerned about alleged
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on the Israeli and Korean crises of late May and early June 2010.
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A series of segments detailing the treatment of prisoners at the
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was a segment that debuted on the show on May 16, 2006 featuring
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was the first regular segment during the guest interview since "
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2016 Daily Show Summer Games (August 8, 2016 – August 18, 2016)
463: 316:"A Spot Of InDecision: Clusterhag to 10 Downing", covering the 212:
Prior to the debut of The Daily Show, Comedy Central produced "
3399:"Third Month Mania - The Championship Matchup: The Daily Show" 1420:
It bears some resemblance to the "Ad Absurdum" segment on the
1071:
I Apologize for Talking While You Were Talking (January 2018–)
2821: 2443:¿Ay, Mami, Por Que es El Mentiroso Todavía a Cargo de la Ley? 2026: 1900: 1518: 1514: 1410: 1375:, in which he would present a feature done in the style of a 1229:
as an introductory segment showing some good news during the
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Who Is the Real President? (February 6, 2017 – April 4, 2017)
639:
from 1999. In this segment, Trevor shows a bunch of clips of
471: 187: 60: 3976:"Tom Vilsack - The Daily Show with Jon Stewart (Video Clip)" 2960:
American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees
2509:, when Stewart highlights a story which makes him upset and 2006:
has also filled in for the host of the segment on occasion.
601:
Tales from the Trump Archive (March 10, 2016 – May 26, 2016)
337:
box set on June 28, 2005. It includes all episodes from the
150:
On March 2, 2017, Trevor announced that they will be taking
3063:
America (The Book): A Citizen's Guide to Democracy Inaction
2994:, Stewart shivered as he said "NAMBLA" in reference to the 2074: 2069:
was a segment hosted by comedian and "Youth Correspondent"
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What the Actual Fact (November 11, 2015 – January 23, 2017)
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was termed "Anti-NAMBLA". In August 2005, Stewart renamed
2229:
and the appearance of a large blue logo reading, "Whaaa?"
1607:. It features an in-house correspondent named "Gitmo" (an 1137:
Trevor Noah: Racism Detective (January 2019–December 2022)
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review the previous year's biggest news story and trends.
670:
How the F**k We Got Here (March 21, 2016 – March 23, 2016)
610:
The Chronicles of Narcissism: Tales from the Trump Archive
3766:"The News Is Funny, as a Correspondent Gets His Own Show" 2921: 2755: 2636: 2445:(Mommy, Why is the Lying Man Still in Charge of the Law?) 2307: 2156:) hosted opposite Carell. When Carell was not available, 1896: 686: 334: 165:", a song associated with Trevor's favorite soccer club, 118:
On March 22, 2016, Trevor dedicated the Moment of Zen to
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On October 30, 2006, Jon Stewart played a clip from the
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was a segment that was conducted during each show, when
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Livin' on the Street (January 20, 2016 – April 21, 2016)
303:'s nickname for conservative mothers as "Mama Grizzlies" 2631:
When Kilborn left the show in 1998 in order to replace
2164:
also hosted twice during the summer of 2003, once with
2113:. (Ironically, Oliver is 5 years younger than Martin). 1868:
that "for some reason, we're married to this bit now."
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The segment was revived on the July 7, 2010 episode of
785:
Black Eye on America (October 20, 2016 – April 3, 2017)
3051:
Stephen Colbert carried the joke over to his program,
2835: 2517: 1236: 1220: 1168: 861: 233:"InDecision 2004: Prelude to a Recount", covering the 2926:
A recurring joke involving Stewart imitating Senator
2774:" for the end of Syria's occupation of Lebanon; and " 844:
The Yearly Show (December 17, 2015–December 18, 2018)
804:
The second segment looks at the phenomenon known as "
748:
Outrage Court (September 13, 2016 – October 12, 2016)
147:. This quick parody replaced the usual Moment of Zen. 3424:
from the original on 2021-12-14 – via YouTube.
3405:
from the original on 2021-12-14 – via YouTube.
3339:"Trump: Nobody Has More Respect for Women Than I Do" 2958:
after mentioning a long or convoluted name, such as
2526:
hosted the show (1996–1998), in alphabetical order:
2381:
Gaywatch / We're Here, We're Queer, Get Newsed to It
1918:
was the segment that always followed Jon Stewart's "
1744:
was the segment that always followed Jon Stewart's "
1371:
was a segment that was always done by correspondent
1354:
It was revived again on the May 13, 2024 episode of
1119: 2721: 2251: 768:, who take a different position on topics such as " 500:
Today's Future Now (October 7, 2015 – May 16, 2017)
492: 2865: 2499:, which has appeared twice and chronicles current 2447:, which features highlights from Attorney General 2288:For a time, at the end of a show, just before the 1131:, luxurious doghouses, and adventure playgrounds. 3416:The Daily Show with Trevor Noah (14 March 2017). 3066:. A spread providing information about different 3018:The joke was used once again in reference to the 2649:with him to the new show, disallowing any future 1818: 1552:. Dollars and "Cents" was last seen in 2002 when 16:This is a list of recurring segments featured on 4710: 3397:The Daily Show with Trevor Noah (8 April 2016). 2025:A frequent subject chosen by the God Machine is 1786: 1501: 1178: 1039:A segment dedicated to the stories that involve 393:continued to hold campaign rallies all over the 4005:Study of 'Daily Show': It's a lot like O'Reilly 3699:"Going for the groan", The St. Petersburg Times 2383:, a segment focusing on issues relating to the 1987:. We're trying to get the Devil for our show." 1451:" during a press conference on April 18, 2006. 913:Profiles in Tremendousness (November 30, 2016–) 2799:Stewart and the correspondents sometimes make 2787:, using its text or making the segment's name 2175: 1154: 818:In the first months after Donald Trump became 561:On January 23, 2017, the segment reviewed the 141:re-created a post-credit scene from the movie 4245: 3684:. The Philadelphia City Paper. Archived from 2972:Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries 2900: 2824:vest typically worn by correspondents during 2477:, "flashback" segment introductions from the 1832:, in which he gave humorous advice regarding 1767:who provided the audience with a look at new 1627:Stewart's first few years; the others being " 1585:Great Moments in Punditry As Read By Children 1580:Great Moments in Punditry As Read By Children 229:2003 California gubernatorial recall election 175:Back in Black with Lewis Black (1996–present) 4680:The Rumble in the Air-Conditioned Auditorium 3189:, which was an intended name change for the 3129:Jimmy Dean Pancakes & Sausage On A Stick 2778:" in reference to corrupt Illinois governor 2762:," which was used when it was revealed that 2571:. It is very similar to the later segment, " 1281:hosting an installment on November 9, 2006. 1061:Ain't Nobody Got Time for That (March 2017–) 937:checks if his picks live up to his promise. 616:that took a deeper look into the history of 3823: 3185:, a look at recent technology advances, or 2968:Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences 2887: 2665:was a segment in which the segment's host, 2097:companies. On July 24, 2007, correspondent 1871: 711:, the swimming pools turning green and the 269:"InDecision/InDécision 2006", covering the 115:– by saying "Here it is, my Moment of Zen". 104:giving the Moment of Zen at the end of the 4252: 4238: 3851: 3290:Jon Stewart, Barack Obama (3 March 2009). 3211: 3209: 2457:, which highlights arms deals between the 2132:(who are now married). It was a parody of 1953:. The title "The God Machine" itself is a 1102:CP Time with Roy Wood Jr. (February 2018–) 1053:Russian interference in the 2016 elections 977:Secretary of Housing and Urban Development 752:A pre-recorded sketch-based segment where 248:December 2005 Iraqi parliamentary election 61:Your Moment of Zen (July 22, 1996–present) 3763: 3195:We're here, We're Queer, Get Newsed to it 2416:, covering the drawn-out contest between 1638: 216:", a series of comedy specials parodying 207: 2256:On February 12, 2009, "Resident Expert" 2172:. The segment was discontinued in 2003. 1933: 1725:was a commentary segment delivered in a 1245:hosted the show, in alphabetical order: 1207:Is This How We Die? (March 2, 2020–2022) 1199:impeachment inquiry against Donald Trump 848:On the show's last episode of the year, 455: 324:2024 United States presidential election 235:2004 United States presidential election 3764:Steinberg, Jacques (October 12, 2005). 3206: 2948:North American Man/Boy Love Association 2716: 2336: 2144:and similar shows; poking fun at their 1837: 1035:Moscow in the Meddle (January 9, 2017–) 4711: 4028: 3865: 3861: 3859: 3847: 3845: 3461: 3060:A reference to NAMBLA also appears in 2922:Mitch McConnell tortoise impersonation 2726:When a correspondent does a purported 2183:was a segment in which correspondents 1598: 1260: 954:The segments have profiled at Trump's 612:) was a segment that aired during the 518:The segment has reviewed tech such as 4233: 3888:from the original on October 21, 2016 3443:from the original on 30 November 2016 3434: 3349:from the original on October 30, 2016 3319:from the original on October 30, 2016 3293:Mess O'Potamia - The Iraq War Is Over 3121:'s much criticised/mocked choice for 3113:Time Magazine Person of the Year 2006 2905: 2691: 2670: 1674: 1413:and television career, correspondent 1363: 1187:'s petty Twitter feud at the moment. 1086:filled in for Kosta, and in another, 507:is a segment hosted by correspondent 3884:. Business Insider. August 6, 2015. 3435:Trump, Donald J. (31 October 2016). 3306: 2109:wig and attempting to adopt his hip 1755: 1646:was a segment about jobs, hosted by 738:) as commentators, sometimes with a 318:2010 United Kingdom general election 4651:Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear 4592:The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore 3856: 3842: 3679: 3307:Dowd, Maureen (November 28, 1999). 3003:2004 Republican National Convention 2518:Past recurring Kilborn-era segments 2232: 1929: 1861: 1843: 1752:". All three were dropped in 2003. 1320:the weather like up your own ass?" 1248: 1237:Past recurring Stewart-era segments 1221:A Ray of Sunshine (April 2020–2022) 1169:F**k These Animals (February 2019–) 1006:White House Communications Director 862:Third Month Mania (March 17, 2016–) 772:" and appropriate ways to protest. 53: 13: 4600:The Opposition with Jordan Klepper 4259: 3982:. 18 December 2006. Archived from 3776:from the original on June 17, 2012 3437:"Wow! I hear you Warren, Michigan" 3268:. 17 February 2017. Archived from 2980:International Atomic Energy Agency 2875: 2868:after making a joke pertaining to 2708: 2645:, he was able to take the segment 2572: 2529: 2434:, which chronicles Vice President 2116: 1998:taking over as the show's "Senior 1938:Colbert activating the God Machine 1653: 1556:was reporting from its news desk. 1483:animals will affect food choices. 1357:The Late Show with Stephen Colbert 1161:Democratic Presidential Candidates 998:Supreme Court Nominee Neil Gorsuch 287:2009 Iranian presidential election 285:"IranDecision 2009", covering the 14: 4735: 4206:"The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 4177:"The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 4148:"The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 4119:"The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 4090:"The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 4061:"The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 4041:from the original on June 4, 2011 3796:"The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 3718:"The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 3630:"The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 3582:"The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 3553:"The Daily Show with Trevor Noah" 3507:. 10 January 2017. Archived from 3375:. 21 October 2016. Archived from 3217:"Homepage - Comedy Central Press" 3172: 2996:National Snow and Ice Data Center 2938:-like appearance and mannerisms. 2584: 2465:speaking, and computer-generated 2410:The Long, Flat Seemingly Endless 2044:On the April 19, 2007 episode of 1990:After the July 31, 2006 episode, 1749: 1632: 1120:Everything Is Stupid (June 2018–) 650:Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous 618:Republican presidential candidate 565:first press briefing. Due to the 261:2006 Israeli legislative election 86:The December 18, 2014 episode of 24:The Daily Show with Craig Kilborn 4693: 4692: 3914:. 5 October 2005. Archived from 3044:. Jon Stewart made a joke about 2984:sexual abuse by Catholic priests 2974:was dubbed "NAMBL-OPEC" and the 2794: 2676: 2361:Variations on the theme include 2252:You're Welcome with John Hodgman 2061: 1887: 1710:A segment hosted by contributor 1559: 1486: 1284: 1227:The Daily Social Distancing Show 493:Past recurring Noah-era segments 454:is an alternative name for the " 385:The segment continued after the 322:"InDecision 2024", covering the 259:"Indecision 5766", covering the 250:dated using the Islamic calendar 242:"Indecision 1425", covering the 227:"ReDecision 2003", covering the 137:On November 8, 2016, Trevor and 4216:from the original on 2010-02-19 4198: 4187:from the original on 2010-02-19 4169: 4158:from the original on 2010-02-19 4140: 4129:from the original on 2010-02-19 4111: 4100:from the original on 2010-02-18 4082: 4071:from the original on 2010-02-19 4053: 4022: 3997: 3968: 3947: 3929: 3900: 3874: 3817: 3806:from the original on 2022-03-04 3788: 3757: 3747:"Comedy Central - Media Player" 3739: 3728:from the original on 2011-09-04 3710: 3692: 3673: 3651: 3640:from the original on 2022-03-04 3622: 3603: 3592:from the original on 2008-04-06 3574: 3563:from the original on 2008-03-07 3545: 3522: 3493: 3482:from the original on 2017-09-09 3455: 3428: 3227:from the original on 2006-11-04 3085: 2855: 2745: 1979:, the sketch was handed off to 1919: 1910: 1771:in-character as a flamboyantly 1686:originally hosted the segment, 1628: 343:Republican National Conventions 275:Canada's two official languages 81:List of special Moments of Zen: 28:The Daily Show with Jon Stewart 4029:Rahner, Mark (April 9, 2009). 3462:Dessem, Matthew (2017-08-29). 3409: 3390: 3361: 3331: 3300: 3283: 3254: 3238: 3183:Jon Stewart Looks at Kids junk 3169:have also made an appearance. 3140: 3117:A recurring joke has involved 2964:Republican National Convention 2950:) instead of stating a proper 2852:has continued this tradition. 2618:The Daily Show: Five Questions 2487:Soviet invasion of Afghanistan 2408:A variant on Indecision 2008, 2346:Clusterf**k to the White House 1923: 1819:Produce Pete with Steve Carell 1745: 1705: 1567:was hosted by resident expert 1431: 903:, viewers could vote on which 820:President of the United States 271:2006 Canadian federal election 180:Back in Black with Lewis Black 22:. This list is incomplete for 1: 3200: 3187:Jon Stewart's Big Gay Problem 2750:Most news stories covered on 2722:"Senior ______ Correspondent" 2367:2010 British general election 1787:Poll Smoking with Dave Gorman 1736: 1605:Guantanamo Bay detention camp 1393: 1179:Commander in Beef (May 2019–) 681:that looked at the causes of 333:was released on a three-disc 4674:The Problem with Jon Stewart 3682:"20 Questions: Frank DeCaro" 2657: 2537:was a segment in which host 2356:Clusterf**k to the Poorhouse 1618: 1470: 606:Tales from the Trump Archive 310:mocking the rhetoric of the 293:2010 United States elections 194:", originated in 1996, when 132:earlier that month in Ankara 128:earlier that day in Brussels 7: 4663:Stephen Colbert (character) 3309:"Liberties; Trump Shrugged" 3094:. In a joint parody of the 2555: 2371:Clusterf**k to the Warhouse 2283: 2260:began a new segment called 2181:Wilmore-Oliver Investigates 2176:Wilmore-Oliver Investigates 1717: 1155:World War D (January 2019–) 1049:Donald Trump-Russia dossier 462:of the names of (in order) 452:Crisis in Israfghyianonanaq 10: 4740: 4724:Television series segments 3177:These segments start with 2978:was dubbed "BLAMBLA." The 2976:National Rifle Association 2901:Running gags under Stewart 2772:Syria's Unfortunate Events 2350:2008 presidential election 2296:" in with our good friend 1197:A segment that covers the 854:The Best F#@king News Team 677:was a two-part segment by 626:The segment was hosted by 573:, the segment was renamed 355:2004 presidential election 281:2008 presidential election 139:The Best F#@king News Team 4688: 4646:The Daily Show (The Book) 4610: 4575: 4542: 4517: 4466: 4370: 4344: 4335: 4269: 3955:10 F#@king Years - NAMBLA 2941: 2836:"Meet Me at Camera Three" 2501:underwater archaeological 2363:Clustershag to 10 Downing 2327:bantering as a bridge to 2212: 1957:of the theatrical device 1949:segment "God Stuff" with 1880:apparently left him with 1159:A segment focused on the 1082:(though, in one segment, 970:National Security Advisor 963:Secretary of the Treasury 614:2016 Republican primaries 575:What The Alternative Fact 550:The segment is hosted by 329:An uncensored version of 77:with the same structure. 4019:. Published May 8, 2008. 3965:, Thursday July 27, 2006 2988:NARAL Pro-Choice America 2888:Look at all those faces! 2860:Trevor Noah, being from 2734:Correspondent," "Senior 2459:United States Government 2124:was a segment hosted by 1877:Slimming Down with Steve 1872:Slimming Down with Steve 1828:was a segment hosted by 1763:was a segment hosted by 1494:was a segment hosted by 1426:Royal Canadian Air Farce 742:cameo as a participant. 675:How The F**k We Got Here 395:United States of America 223:Variants have included: 159:Gerry and the Pacemakers 3123:Person of the Year 2006 3027:Ohio gubernatorial race 2934:, implying McConnell's 2841:Meet Me At Camera Three 2497:Maritime Salvage Update 1338:'s "10 F#@king Years". 1211:A segment covering the 1093:Pardon the Interruption 590:is a segment hosted by 524:artificial intelligence 387:2016 President Election 308:2012 Republican Debates 163:You'll Never Walk Alone 3193:segment, now known as 3016: 2776:Scum-dog Million-hairs 2545:to become the host of 2312:2014 midterm elections 1939: 1665:to host its spin-off, 1644:The Jobbing of America 1639:The Jobbing of America 1183:A segment focusing on 1041:President Donald Trump 984:Secretary of Education 927:Administration Cabinet 899:For the second annual 894:Third Month Mania 2016 834:or Trump's son-in-law 775:The segment ends with 208:InDecision/Democalypse 198:was still the host of 3010: 2766:'s family once owned 2455:America to the Rescue 2426:Democratic nomination 2393:Don't Ask, Don't Tell 2141:Entertainment Tonight 1965:theatrical production 1937: 1112:Colored people's time 943:confirmation hearings 877:For the first annual 796:The first segment of 563:Trump Administrations 4017:The Associated Press 3824:Chris Smith (2016). 3345:. October 19, 2016. 3221:Comedy Central Press 2717:Current running gags 2485:and the early 1980s 2337:Other segment titles 1808:Are You Dave Gorman? 1088:Jaboukie Young-White 798:Black Eye on America 760:. The attorneys are 701:2016 Summer Olympics 588:Livin' on the Street 541:What the Actual Fact 515:as a correspondent. 4627:2009 CNBC criticism 3155:Presidential Debate 3001:While covering the 2846:Walt Disney Company 2738:Correspondent" and 2608:A book released in 2385:gay rights movement 2348:, a segment on the 1700:Mark One's Calendar 1599:Guantanamo Baywatch 1507:Dollars and "Cents" 1502:Dollars and "Cents" 1266:Are You Prepared?!? 1261:Are You Prepared?!? 948:Profiles in Courage 713:Ryan Lochte scandal 709:Zika virus epidemic 426:The Futile Crescent 4668:Who Made Huckabee? 4633:America (The Book) 4584:The Colbert Report 4322:Recurring segments 4291:Guest hosts (2023) 4011:2009-02-18 at the 3961:2011-11-06 at the 3940:2018-12-15 at the 3770:The New York Times 3704:2016-08-03 at the 3615:2008-04-06 at the 3534:2017-09-20 at the 3343:Bloomberg Politics 3313:The New York Times 3054:The Colbert Report 3020:Mark Foley scandal 2697:Trivial Compromise 2692:Trivial Compromise 2642:The Late Late Show 2548:The Late Late Show 2414:to the White House 2412:Bataan Death March 2317:The Colbert Report 2303:The Colbert Report 2270:treasury secretary 2056:The Colbert Report 2047:The Colbert Report 1976:The Colbert Report 1940: 1838:Your Moment of Zen 1792:Poll Smoking with 1680:Mark Your Calendar 1675:Mark Your Calendar 1668:The Colbert Report 1593:Hannity and Colmes 1544:, Campbell Smith, 1369:A Tale of Survival 1364:A Tale of Survival 1344:The Colbert Report 1013:Treasury Secretary 1009:Anthony Scaramucci 931:draining the swamp 636:The New York Times 505:Today's Future Now 295:, referencing the 152:Your Moment of Zen 97:The Colbert Report 66:Your Moment of Zen 43:The Colbert Report 4706: 4705: 4538: 4537: 4518:Under guest hosts 4035:The Seattle Times 3835:978-1-4555-6538-2 2970:. Similarly, the 2789:World of ___craft 2785:World of Warcraft 2732:Child Molestation 2483:George H. W. Bush 2389:same-sex marriage 1761:Out at the Movies 1756:Out at the Movies 1465:The Procastinator 1443:as the superhero 1231:COVID-19 pandemic 1213:COVID-19 pandemic 1000:, Senior Adviser 917:In this segment, 901:Third Month Mania 879:Third Month Mania 872:Third Month Mania 571:alternative facts 530:and flying cars. 120:Brussels, Belgium 113:Bruce Springsteen 92:the final episode 4731: 4696: 4695: 4640:Earth (The Book) 4371:Stewart's tenure 4345:Kilborn's tenure 4342: 4341: 4254: 4247: 4240: 4231: 4230: 4225: 4224: 4222: 4221: 4202: 4196: 4195: 4193: 4192: 4173: 4167: 4166: 4164: 4163: 4144: 4138: 4137: 4135: 4134: 4115: 4109: 4108: 4106: 4105: 4086: 4080: 4079: 4077: 4076: 4057: 4051: 4050: 4048: 4046: 4026: 4020: 4001: 3995: 3994: 3992: 3991: 3972: 3966: 3951: 3945: 3944:|NPR's Fresh Air 3933: 3927: 3926: 3924: 3923: 3904: 3898: 3897: 3895: 3893: 3878: 3872: 3871: 3863: 3854: 3853: 3849: 3840: 3839: 3821: 3815: 3814: 3812: 3811: 3792: 3786: 3785: 3783: 3781: 3761: 3755: 3754: 3749:. Archived from 3743: 3737: 3736: 3734: 3733: 3714: 3708: 3696: 3690: 3689: 3677: 3671: 3670: 3665:. Archived from 3655: 3649: 3648: 3646: 3645: 3626: 3620: 3607: 3601: 3600: 3598: 3597: 3578: 3572: 3571: 3569: 3568: 3549: 3543: 3526: 3520: 3519: 3517: 3516: 3497: 3491: 3490: 3488: 3487: 3459: 3453: 3452: 3450: 3448: 3432: 3426: 3425: 3413: 3407: 3406: 3394: 3388: 3387: 3385: 3384: 3365: 3359: 3358: 3356: 3354: 3335: 3329: 3328: 3326: 3324: 3304: 3298: 3297: 3287: 3281: 3280: 3278: 3277: 3258: 3252: 3242: 3236: 3235: 3233: 3232: 3213: 2932:Cecil the Turtle 2930:in the voice of 2671:This Week in God 2565:A. Whitney Brown 2479:Persian Gulf War 2449:Alberto Gonzales 2330:The Nightly Show 2242:first responders 2240:(a reference to 2238:Worst Responders 2233:Worst Responders 2207:with Terry Gross 2135:Access Hollywood 2016:Snuggle the Bear 1992:This Week in God 1943:This Week in God 1930:This Week in God 1858:The Seat of Heat 1854:Johnny Knoxville 1849:The Seat of Heat 1844:The Seat of Heat 1254:10 F#@king Years 1249:10 F#@king Years 973:Michael T. Flynn 956:Attorney General 921:takes a look at 770:trigger warnings 567:Kellyanne Conway 556:Jessica Williams 528:smart technology 443:. Although the 263:dated using the 54:Current segments 39: 4739: 4738: 4734: 4733: 4732: 4730: 4729: 4728: 4709: 4708: 4707: 4702: 4684: 4606: 4571: 4534: 4513: 4462: 4366: 4331: 4265: 4258: 4228: 4219: 4217: 4204: 4203: 4199: 4190: 4188: 4175: 4174: 4170: 4161: 4159: 4146: 4145: 4141: 4132: 4130: 4117: 4116: 4112: 4103: 4101: 4088: 4087: 4083: 4074: 4072: 4059: 4058: 4054: 4044: 4042: 4027: 4023: 4013:Wayback Machine 4002: 3998: 3989: 3987: 3974: 3973: 3969: 3963:Wayback Machine 3952: 3948: 3942:Wayback Machine 3934: 3930: 3921: 3919: 3906: 3905: 3901: 3891: 3889: 3880: 3879: 3875: 3864: 3857: 3850: 3843: 3836: 3822: 3818: 3809: 3807: 3794: 3793: 3789: 3779: 3777: 3762: 3758: 3745: 3744: 3740: 3731: 3729: 3716: 3715: 3711: 3706:Wayback Machine 3697: 3693: 3678: 3674: 3657: 3656: 3652: 3643: 3641: 3628: 3627: 3623: 3617:Wayback Machine 3608: 3604: 3595: 3593: 3580: 3579: 3575: 3566: 3564: 3551: 3550: 3546: 3536:Wayback Machine 3527: 3523: 3514: 3512: 3499: 3498: 3494: 3485: 3483: 3460: 3456: 3446: 3444: 3433: 3429: 3414: 3410: 3395: 3391: 3382: 3380: 3367: 3366: 3362: 3352: 3350: 3337: 3336: 3332: 3322: 3320: 3305: 3301: 3289: 3288: 3284: 3275: 3273: 3260: 3259: 3255: 3243: 3239: 3230: 3228: 3215: 3214: 3207: 3203: 3175: 3143: 3131: 3115: 3088: 3038:Nouri al-Maliki 2944: 2928:Mitch McConnell 2924: 2908: 2903: 2895:The Mandalorian 2890: 2882:Spirit Airlines 2878: 2876:Spirit Airlines 2858: 2838: 2797: 2780:Rod Blagojevich 2760:Ebony and Irony 2748: 2724: 2719: 2711: 2709:Recurring jokes 2694: 2679: 2660: 2587: 2558: 2535:A Moment for Us 2532: 2530:A Moment for Us 2520: 2475:Osama bin Laden 2422:Hillary Clinton 2339: 2298:Stephen Colbert 2286: 2254: 2235: 2223:AOL Time Warner 2215: 2178: 2122:We Love Showbiz 2119: 2117:We Love Showbiz 2103:YouTube Debates 2064: 1971:Stephen Colbert 1960:Deus ex machina 1932: 1913: 1890: 1874: 1846: 1821: 1789: 1758: 1739: 1720: 1708: 1690:hosted it from 1677: 1659:Klassic Kolbert 1656: 1654:Klassic Kolbert 1648:Stephen Colbert 1641: 1621: 1601: 1582: 1562: 1530:Vance DeGeneres 1504: 1489: 1473: 1463:had now become 1434: 1403:Michael Blieden 1396: 1373:Vance DeGeneres 1366: 1298:Stephen Colbert 1287: 1263: 1251: 1239: 1223: 1209: 1195: 1181: 1171: 1157: 1139: 1122: 1104: 1073: 1063: 1037: 1025:former sheriff 991:Press Secretary 915: 864: 846: 830:, news company 816: 787: 750: 697: 672: 608:(also known as 603: 585: 569:'s gaffe about 538: 520:virtual reality 502: 495: 456:Mess O' Potamia 430:Mess O' Potomac 411:Mess O' Potamia 408: 391:President Trump 369: 331:InDecision 2004 265:Hebrew calendar 210: 177: 63: 56: 37: 12: 11: 5: 4737: 4727: 4726: 4721: 4719:The Daily Show 4704: 4703: 4701: 4700: 4689: 4686: 4685: 4683: 4682: 4677: 4670: 4665: 4660: 4653: 4648: 4643: 4636: 4629: 4624: 4614: 4612: 4608: 4607: 4605: 4604: 4596: 4588: 4579: 4577: 4573: 4572: 4570: 4569: 4564: 4559: 4554: 4548: 4546: 4540: 4539: 4536: 4535: 4533: 4532: 4527: 4521: 4519: 4515: 4514: 4512: 4511: 4506: 4501: 4496: 4491: 4486: 4481: 4476: 4470: 4468: 4464: 4463: 4461: 4460: 4455: 4450: 4445: 4440: 4435: 4430: 4425: 4420: 4415: 4410: 4405: 4400: 4395: 4390: 4385: 4380: 4374: 4372: 4368: 4367: 4365: 4364: 4359: 4354: 4348: 4346: 4339: 4333: 4332: 4330: 4329: 4324: 4319: 4314: 4309: 4307:Correspondents 4303: 4302: 4301:(2024–present) 4299:correspondents 4292: 4289: 4283: 4277: 4270: 4267: 4266: 4262:The Daily Show 4257: 4256: 4249: 4242: 4234: 4227: 4226: 4210:Comedy Central 4197: 4181:Comedy Central 4168: 4152:Comedy Central 4139: 4123:Comedy Central 4110: 4094:Comedy Central 4081: 4065:Comedy Central 4052: 4021: 3996: 3980:Comedy Central 3967: 3946: 3928: 3912:Comedy Central 3899: 3873: 3855: 3841: 3834: 3816: 3800:Comedy Central 3787: 3756: 3753:on 2006-02-10. 3738: 3722:Comedy Central 3709: 3691: 3688:on 2007-11-21. 3680:Amorosi, A.D. 3672: 3669:on 2007-09-27. 3659:"Student Life" 3650: 3634:Comedy Central 3621: 3602: 3586:Comedy Central 3573: 3557:Comedy Central 3544: 3521: 3505:Comedy Central 3492: 3454: 3427: 3408: 3389: 3373:Comedy Central 3360: 3330: 3299: 3282: 3266:Comedy Central 3253: 3237: 3204: 3202: 3199: 3174: 3173:Jon Stewart... 3171: 3148:Brian Williams 3142: 3139: 3130: 3127: 3114: 3111: 3087: 3084: 3046:George W. Bush 2992:global warming 2943: 2940: 2923: 2920: 2907: 2904: 2902: 2899: 2889: 2886: 2877: 2874: 2857: 2854: 2837: 2834: 2796: 2793: 2764:Strom Thurmond 2752:The Daily Show 2747: 2744: 2736:Conceptual Art 2723: 2720: 2718: 2715: 2710: 2707: 2693: 2690: 2678: 2675: 2659: 2656: 2647:Five Questions 2614:Comedy Central 2590:Five Questions 2586: 2585:Five Questions 2583: 2557: 2554: 2543:The Daily Show 2531: 2528: 2519: 2516: 2515: 2514: 2504: 2494: 2471:Saddam Hussein 2463:George W. Bush 2452: 2439: 2429: 2406: 2399:Baracknophobia 2396: 2378: 2377: 2376: 2375: 2374: 2338: 2335: 2285: 2282: 2262:You're Welcome 2253: 2250: 2234: 2231: 2214: 2211: 2209:in June 2007. 2177: 2174: 2168:and once with 2154:Rachael Harris 2150:Lauren Weedman 2118: 2115: 2107:Demetri Martin 2071:Demetri Martin 2063: 2060: 2012:Captain Morgan 1985:The Daily Show 1931: 1928: 1912: 1909: 1889: 1886: 1873: 1870: 1862:Five Questions 1845: 1842: 1820: 1817: 1788: 1785: 1777:Comedy Central 1757: 1754: 1738: 1735: 1719: 1716: 1707: 1704: 1676: 1673: 1663:The Daily Show 1655: 1652: 1640: 1637: 1620: 1617: 1600: 1597: 1581: 1578: 1561: 1558: 1546:Lauren Weedman 1503: 1500: 1488: 1485: 1472: 1469: 1441:George W. Bush 1433: 1430: 1395: 1392: 1365: 1362: 1336:The Daily Show 1286: 1283: 1277:correspondent 1274:sensationalist 1262: 1259: 1250: 1247: 1238: 1235: 1225:Introduced on 1222: 1219: 1208: 1205: 1194: 1191: 1180: 1177: 1170: 1167: 1156: 1153: 1138: 1135: 1121: 1118: 1103: 1100: 1072: 1069: 1062: 1059: 1047:, such as the 1036: 1033: 1016:Steven Mnuchin 1002:Stephen Miller 966:Steven Mnuchin 935:The Daily Show 914: 911: 892:By the end of 863: 860: 845: 842: 815: 812: 786: 783: 762:Jordan Klepper 749: 746: 728:Jordan Klepper 705:Rio de Janeiro 696: 693: 671: 668: 602: 599: 584: 581: 537: 534: 513:The Daily Show 501: 498: 494: 491: 407: 404: 372:Jordan Klepper 368: 365: 327: 326: 320: 314: 304: 289: 283: 277: 273:acknowledging 267: 257: 251: 240: 237: 231: 214:InDecision '92 209: 206: 200:The Daily Show 176: 173: 170: 169: 167:Liverpool F.C. 155: 148: 135: 124:Ankara, Turkey 116: 109: 88:The Daily Show 71:musical guests 62: 59: 55: 52: 48:The Daily Show 35:The Daily Show 19:The Daily Show 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 4736: 4725: 4722: 4720: 4717: 4716: 4714: 4699: 4691: 4690: 4687: 4681: 4678: 4676: 4675: 4671: 4669: 4666: 4664: 4661: 4659: 4658: 4654: 4652: 4649: 4647: 4644: 4642: 4641: 4637: 4635: 4634: 4630: 4628: 4625: 4623: 4621: 4616: 4615: 4613: 4609: 4602: 4601: 4597: 4594: 4593: 4589: 4586: 4585: 4581: 4580: 4578: 4574: 4568: 4565: 4563: 4560: 4558: 4555: 4553: 4550: 4549: 4547: 4545: 4541: 4531: 4528: 4526: 4523: 4522: 4520: 4516: 4510: 4507: 4505: 4502: 4500: 4497: 4495: 4492: 4490: 4487: 4485: 4482: 4480: 4477: 4475: 4472: 4471: 4469: 4467:Noah's tenure 4465: 4459: 4456: 4454: 4451: 4449: 4446: 4444: 4441: 4439: 4436: 4434: 4431: 4429: 4426: 4424: 4421: 4419: 4416: 4414: 4411: 4409: 4406: 4404: 4401: 4399: 4396: 4394: 4391: 4389: 4386: 4384: 4381: 4379: 4376: 4375: 4373: 4369: 4363: 4360: 4358: 4355: 4353: 4350: 4349: 4347: 4343: 4340: 4338: 4334: 4328: 4325: 4323: 4320: 4318: 4315: 4313: 4310: 4308: 4305: 4304: 4300: 4296: 4293: 4290: 4287: 4284: 4281: 4278: 4275: 4274:Craig Kilborn 4272: 4271: 4268: 4264: 4263: 4255: 4250: 4248: 4243: 4241: 4236: 4235: 4232: 4215: 4211: 4207: 4201: 4186: 4182: 4178: 4172: 4157: 4153: 4149: 4143: 4128: 4124: 4120: 4114: 4099: 4095: 4091: 4085: 4070: 4066: 4062: 4056: 4040: 4036: 4032: 4025: 4018: 4014: 4010: 4007: 4006: 4000: 3986:on 2019-02-23 3985: 3981: 3977: 3971: 3964: 3960: 3957: 3956: 3950: 3943: 3939: 3936: 3932: 3918:on 2019-02-22 3917: 3913: 3909: 3903: 3887: 3883: 3877: 3869: 3862: 3860: 3848: 3846: 3837: 3831: 3827: 3820: 3805: 3801: 3797: 3791: 3775: 3771: 3767: 3760: 3752: 3748: 3742: 3727: 3723: 3719: 3713: 3707: 3703: 3700: 3695: 3687: 3683: 3676: 3668: 3664: 3660: 3654: 3639: 3635: 3631: 3625: 3618: 3614: 3611: 3606: 3591: 3587: 3583: 3577: 3562: 3558: 3554: 3548: 3542:, 19 May 2017 3541: 3537: 3533: 3530: 3525: 3511:on 2017-08-19 3510: 3506: 3502: 3496: 3481: 3477: 3473: 3469: 3465: 3458: 3442: 3438: 3431: 3423: 3419: 3412: 3404: 3400: 3393: 3379:on 2016-10-23 3378: 3374: 3370: 3364: 3348: 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Excess 2683: 2682:Public Excess 2677:Public Excess 2674: 2672: 2668: 2664: 2655: 2652: 2648: 2644: 2643: 2638: 2634: 2629: 2627: 2626:0-8362-5325-6 2623: 2619: 2615: 2611: 2606: 2604: 2603:Kathy Ireland 2600: 2595: 2594:Craig Kilborn 2591: 2582: 2580: 2579: 2574: 2573:Even Stevphen 2570: 2566: 2562: 2553: 2551: 2549: 2544: 2540: 2539:Craig Kilborn 2536: 2527: 2525: 2524:Craig Kilborn 2512: 2508: 2505: 2502: 2498: 2495: 2492: 2491:Ronald Reagan 2488: 2484: 2480: 2476: 2472: 2468: 2464: 2460: 2456: 2453: 2450: 2446: 2444: 2440: 2437: 2433: 2430: 2427: 2423: 2419: 2415: 2413: 2407: 2404: 2400: 2397: 2394: 2390: 2386: 2382: 2379: 2372: 2368: 2364: 2360: 2359: 2357: 2354: 2353: 2351: 2347: 2344: 2343: 2342: 2334: 2332: 2331: 2326: 2325:Larry Wilmore 2321: 2319: 2318: 2313: 2309: 2305: 2304: 2299: 2295: 2291: 2290:Moment of Zen 2281: 2279: 2275: 2271: 2267: 2263: 2259: 2249: 2247: 2243: 2239: 2230: 2228: 2224: 2219: 2210: 2208: 2206: 2201: 2196: 2194: 2190: 2186: 2185:Larry Wilmore 2182: 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301:Sarah Palin 184:Lewis Black 102:Jon Stewart 75:Trevor Noah 4713:Categories 4544:Indecision 4220:2009-08-19 4191:2009-08-19 4162:2009-08-19 4133:2009-08-19 4104:2009-08-19 4075:2009-08-19 4045:August 19, 3990:2019-02-22 3922:2019-02-22 3810:2008-10-18 3732:2011-05-13 3644:2008-07-07 3596:2008-06-19 3567:2007-11-26 3515:2017-05-17 3486:2017-09-09 3447:2 December 3383:2016-10-23 3276:2017-04-06 3231:2006-11-03 3201:References 3163:Ted Koppel 3152:Democratic 3135:Baconnaise 3096:Aflac Duck 2667:John Bloom 2633:Tom Snyder 2387:, such as 2193:the n word 2111:vernacular 1951:John Bloom 1947:Daily Show 1920:Other News 1773:homosexual 1742:Other News 1737:Other News 1629:Other News 1542:Matt Walsh 1476:Diagnosis: 1399:Ad Nauseam 1394:Ad Nauseam 1387:Daily Show 1330:The Office 1327:(Carell's 1027:Joe Arpaio 980:Ben Carson 766:Desi Lydic 722:Hosted by 552:Desi Lydic 339:Democratic 4657:Rosewater 4622:criticism 4620:Crossfire 4576:Spin-offs 3868:USA Today 3476:1091-2339 3100:plush toy 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Index

The Daily Show
The Colbert Report
musical guests
Trevor Noah
the final episode
The Colbert Report
Jon Stewart
Bruce Springsteen
Brussels, Belgium
Ankara, Turkey
earlier that day in Brussels
earlier that month in Ankara
The Best F#@king News Team
The Avengers
Gerry and the Pacemakers
You'll Never Walk Alone
Liverpool F.C.
Lewis Black
AC/DC
Back in Black
Craig Kilborn
InDecision '92
NBC News
2003 California gubernatorial recall election
2004 United States presidential election
January
December 2005 Iraqi parliamentary election
2006 midterms
2006 Israeli legislative election
Hebrew calendar

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