When Jon Stewart stepped down as host of the Daily Show in 2015, it seemed pretty conclusive. For nearly 16 years, he guided the show through 9/11, the Iraq war, the 2008 financial crisis and more, becoming a voice of reason for many amid growing political divisions — but it was time to move on.
This week saw him back in the host's chair once again, where he'll now be every Monday. But things have changed a lot in the last nine years — especially politics. Does Stewart's brand of Bush-era both-sides-ism still work in 2024? Slate writer and senior editor Sam Adams unpacks the legacy of the Daily Show and whether the world still needs it.
For transcripts of Front Burner, please visit: https://www.cbc.ca/radio/frontburner/transcripts
Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
Is democracy at stake in India’s election?
Is high finance killing Hollywood?
A pregnant woman’s perilous journey out of Gaza
Were years of Canadian paternity tests just guesswork?
The Liberals' plan to fix the housing crisis
Israeli-Iranian shadow war breaks into the open
What we know from Canada’s foreign interference inquiry so far
Trump 'won' on abortion. Could it lose him this election?
Tesla woes and Canada’s big EV bet
Charlie Angus on leaving politics, NDP’s future
Israel accused of using AI to choose Gaza targets
Israeli airstrikes and the deadly risk of feeding Gaza
Is Canadian aluminum being green-washed?
Facebook whistleblower on school boards’ social media lawsuits
Ohtani, Porter and sport’s gambling problem
Front Burner Presents: The Pornhub Empire Episode 2
Beyoncé and country’s Black roots
Why didn’t the U.S. block a Gaza ceasefire vote?
Inflation has slowed. At what cost?
Drought bears down on Alberta
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