Trump, Jon Stewart and MAGA
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Show’s Jon Stewart has flamed his parent company Paramount Global’s decision to settle President Donald Trump’s $20 billion lawsuit—and now he’s well aware that his job might be on the line. Stewart said on Thursday’s The Weekly Show,
“Surprisingly, MAGA world, for the first time in memory, isn’t just slavishly acquiescing to Trump’s reality distortion field,” he said, and played clips of figures on the right trashing the president after the Justice Department said last week that the long-rumored Epstein client list doesn’t exist.
Comedian Jon Stewart torched President Donald Trump and his administration as MAGA world erupts over the Jeffrey Epstein files.
Stephen Colbert and Jon Stewart slammed Paramount for making a deal with Trump, serving notice they won't be silenced by their parent company.
Jon Stewart hosted Elmo on tonight’s show, which was initially supposed to be about the tariffs. Remember those? Trump added a 17% tax to Mexican tomatoes today. But instead, Stewart did an extended riff about Elmo getting radicalized by the manosphere because he is a victim of the Male Loneliness Epidemic. The truth does, in fact, hurt.
Stewart and Colbert are stalwarts of the television world. Stewart is the long-running host of The Daily Show on Comedy Central, which he hosted from 1999 to 2015. He hosted The Problem with Jon Stewart on Apple TV+ from 2021 to 2023 and returned part time to The Daily Show in 2024.
Jon Stewart says he is not worried about Skydance potentially canceling "The Daily Show," saying "we'll land on our feet."
Jon Stewart didn't disappoint with his views on the multi-million-dollar settlement between Paramount Global, which owns The Daily Show network Comedy Central, and President Donald Trump. Five days after the company paid Trump $16M to settle the lawsuit that the President brought against it for its handling of a 60 Minutes interview with Presidential candidate
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Trump administration orders 2,000 National Guard troops to leave LA, some will remainPresident Donald Trump 's administration is ending the deployment of 2,000 National Guard troops sent to Los Angeles to support immigration enforcement activities, Chief Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell announced Tuesday.