RT đ„ JON STEWART DEFIES THE SYSTEM â STAYS ON THE DAILY SHOW UNTIL 2026 AFTER PUBLICLY BLASTING HIS OWN BOSS! đ„đïž

Amid ongoing uncertainty in late-night television and concerns that his parent company is shifting right to curry favor with President Donald Trump, Jon Stewart will remain behind the anchorâs desk of âThe Daily Showâ through the end of 2026.
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Comedy Central announced that Stewart will continue to host the Emmy-winning series every Monday â a role he has enjoyed since returning to âThe Daily Showâ before the 2024 election â and serve as executive producer of the show until December 2026.
Jon Stewart continues to elevate the genre he created. His return is an ongoing commitment to the incisive comedy and sharp commentary that define The Daily Show,â Comedy Central head Ari Pearce said in a statement Monday. âThe renewal is a win for audiences, for Comedy Central and for all our programming partners. Weâre proud to support Jon and the extraordinary news team.â
The move will keep the comic, who initially helmed the political satire show from 1999 until 2015, in his once-a-week spot through next yearâs midterm and gubernatorial elections. The rest of the week will feature correspondent from The Daily Showâs âNews Teamâ â such as Ronny Chieng, Jordan Klepper, Josh Johnson and Desi Lydic â taking turns behind the anchorâs desk.
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More than that, though, the extension will tamp down questions about Stewartâs immediate future that have been swirling since Paramount pulled the plug on Stephen Colbertâs late-night show on CBS, which is Comedy Centralâs sister network. Colbert, a close friend of Stewart and a one-time âDaily Showâ correspondent, is set to exit CBS next May as âThe Late Showâ franchise will come to an end after more than three decades.
The cancellation of Colbert â an outspoken critic of Trump â was announced this past summer as Paramount was preparing to close on a politically fraught $8 billion merger with David Ellisonâs Skydance Media.
While Paramount asserted that the decision was âpurely financialâ due to late-night television becoming unprofitable, it came shortly after Colbert accused the company of bribing Trump by settling the â60 Minutesâ lawsuit to help the Skydance deal go through. Days after âThe Late Showâ was axed, the Trump administration approved the merger.
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âThe fact that CBS didnât try to save their No. 1 rated late night franchise thatâs been on the air for over three decades is part of whatâs making everybody wonder: Was this âpurely financialâ? Or maybe itâs the path of least resistance for your $8 billion merger to kill a show that you know rankled a fragile and vengeful president whoâs so insecure that heâs suffering terribly from a case of chronic penis insufficiency,â Stewart said in his first episode after Colbertâs cancellation was announced.
âI think the answer is in the fear and pre-compliance that is gripping all of Americaâs institutions at this very moment, institutions that have chosen not to fight the vengeful and vindictive actions of our pubic hair-doodling Commander in Chief,â he added. âThis is not the moment to give in.â
Stewart, who has long railed against Trump and Republicans, has also openly wondered if he or âThe Daily Showâ could see itself out of favor in a new Ellison regime. While Ellison â the son of mega-billionaire and close Trump ally Larry Ellison â has seemingly shifted the new Paramount towards the right, the president has repeatedly heaped praise on the 42-year-old media mogul.
âWeâve all got a surmise about who actually is owning it and what his ideology is, but ideology may not play a part,â Stewart said amid the looming Paramount-Skydance merger.
The comedian also snarked last month about Ellisonâs plans to expand his media empire and acquire Warner Bros. Discovery, saying his new boss should âhave it allâ and that all media companies should be owned by one person. âShouldnât they all just be one? Shouldnât we get to a point where weâre all just fired and hired by the same guy?â he joked. âJust one guy controls all of the mediaâwhat could go wrong? Thatâs what I say.â
In recent weeks, however, Stewart publicly noted that he was âworking on stayingâ with âThe Daily Showâ as his deal was set to expire this December. At the same time, he made it known that he disagreed with many of Ellisonâs moves.
âTheyâve already done things that Iâm upset about,â Stewart said last month at the New Yorker Festival. âBut then if I had integrity, maybe I would stand up and go, âIâm out.â Or maybe the integrity thing to do would be to stay in it and keep fighting in the foxhole.â
He added: âYou donât compromise on what you do, and you do it until they tell you to leave.â
Meanwhile, one factor that may have helped Paramountâs leadership decide to stick with Stewart and the current staff is the showâs continued high ratings since his return. Comedy Central recently announced that its flagship late-night show scored its largest audience share in a decade among the coveted 18-49 advertising demographic.

