New Daily Show host takes on past ‘racist,’ ‘misogynistic’ tweets

Trevor Noah suggests his Twitter posts mocking Jews and women were judged harshly because of unfamiliarity with his comedy

Trevor Noah poses for a portrait at The Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, Calif., Wednesday, July 29, 2015. (Matt Sayles/Invision/AP)
Trevor Noah poses for a portrait at The Beverly Hilton in Beverly Hills, Calif., Wednesday, July 29, 2015. (Matt Sayles/Invision/AP)

BEVERLY HILLS, California — Incoming “Daily Show” host Trevor Noah said politics and the media will remain targets of the program but the perspective will be distinctively his.

“The show still has its voice. It’s just I’m at the helm taking things in a slightly different direction, but still trying to get to the same end place,” Noah said Wednesday during a Q&A session with TV critics.

Outgoing host Jon Stewart is a middle-aged Jewish man from New Jersey, Noah said, while he’s a 31-year-old half-black, half-white South African man who’s spent about five years in America as he’s pursued his comedy career.

“Look at issues in America right now, say just about racial inequality, Jon and I come from totally different points of view,” he said. “Jon would have to empathize; I myself come from a totally different place.”

During Wednesday’s Q&A, he was self-assured and relaxed as he fielded questions that included the backlash to jokes that the comedian had tweeted several years ago, including ones that mocked Jews and women.

Earlier this year, the South African stand-up comedian came under fire for tweets such as “South Africans know how to recycle like Israel knows how to be peaceful” and “Messi gets the ball and the real players try foul him [sic], but Messi doesn’t go down easy, just like jewish[sic] chicks.” This prompted B’nai B’rith and the Anti-Defamation League to issue statements urging Noah not to perpetuate Jewish stereotypes when he takes over the show.

Noah politely dismissed the tweets as a few among many, suggesting they were judged harshly in part because Americans were unfamiliar with him and his comedic perspective.

“Luckily, Comedy Central hasn’t limited me to 140 characters on the show, so I should be able to (speak) in a better, well-formed way,” he said.

When Noah was asked why he appeared to be so unflappable, he traced it back to a difficult early life that included a household beset by domestic violence and a native country fighting to break free from apartheid. Both his family and country are better off now, he said.

“Maybe I’ve been tainted by hope and optimism. Maybe that’s why I’m unflappable. I’m mixed now only in my blood but my life,” he said. There are issues that get him “riled up,” he added, but he likes to think before he acts.

Jon Stewart during a taping of "The Daily Show with Jon Stewart" in New York in November 2011. (photo credit: AP/Brad Barket)
Jon Stewart during a taping of “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart” in New York in November 2011. (photo credit: AP/Brad Barket)

The show is retaining its senior producing staff, Comedy Central has said and which channel executive Kent Alterman reaffirmed at the Television Critics Association session. The emphasis on stability makes sense: “Daily Show” with Stewart has been a cornerstone of the channel’s success.

Noah said he’ll be looking for affirmation from Stewart that he’s doing right by the program. Stewart leaves Aug. 6 and Noah takes over Sept. 28.

“The biggest pressure … is living up to the expectations that Jon has of me. Jon believes in me,” he said. There will be comparisons made between them, he acknowledged, but it’s not his intent to immediately match what Stewart has built over a period of years.

“I have a foundation set up by a wonderfully smart, funny man,” he said.

While the show’s emphasis on domestic issues will remain, including how the media addresses them, Noah said he will broaden the long-time emphasis on Fox News Channel because the sources of news in the online era are far more extensive.

He also intends to address international issues that are resonating in America, said Noah, who said he speaks seven languages.

The comedian was well-received by fans and critics when he performed his stand-up act Tuesday night at a theater in Santa Monica, California. He put the emphasis on topics including black deaths at the hands of law enforcement rather than politics.

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