Trevor Noah's final night as host of Comedy Central's satirical news report "The Daily Show" celebrated his 7-year tenure anchoring the show, ...
Trevor Noah's Daily Show family has bid the South African comedian farewell after working with him for seven years.
said the caption to photos of Noah and all the fur babies. "Thank you for sneaking us treats for the past 7 years! - "And like that...
"This is it, my final show, and I've got a ton of cleanup to do so I can get the security deposit back on the studio," Trevor Noah joked on Thursday's Daily ...
After seven years at the helm, South African comedian Trevor Noah signed off from his role as host of Comedy Central's left-leaning satirical news program ...
Trevor Noah's run at “The Daily Show” has come to an end. The South African comedian bid adieu to the late-night show he has hosted since 2015.
'Grateful for my mom, my grand[mom], my aunt, all these Black women in my life, but in America as well.'
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Trevor Noah has bid an emotional goodbye to The Daily Show, but who will replace the host?
[subscribe now](http://radiotimes.com/magazine-subscription?utm_term=evergreen-article). Read on for everything you need to know about Noah's replacement. I miss learning other languages. And I found myself thinking throughout the time, you know, everything we’ve gone through, the Trump presidency, the pandemic, just the journey of, you know, the more pandemic,” he said. “It’s been absolutely amazing. Who will replace Trevor Noah on The Daily Show?
Trevor Noah has ended his run as host of 'The Daily Show' after seven years with a moving and deeply personal signoff that included a tribute to Black ...
When things go bad, Black people know that it gets worse for them. Black people understand how hard it is when things go bad, especially in America, but any place where Black people exist. From there, Noah shared his appreciations for everyone who made his tenure a success, even those who “hate-watched” the show. Who do you think has shaped me, nourished me, and formed me? … There were empty seats,” Noah said on Thursday, as seen in the video above. Every seat that has ever been filled to watch something that I’m doing I always appreciate because I know the empty seat that sits behind it.”
I remember when we started the show, we couldn't get enough people to fill an audience. Then I look at this now, and I don't take it for granted ever.”
Trevor Noah signed off of "The Daily Show" after seven years. He will begin his "Off the Record" tour in January.
Trevor Noah said his final farewell to "The Daily Show" Thursday night and on his way to the exit, he got pretty emotional talking about who he credits for ...
"Please don't forget the world is a friendlier place than the Internet or the news would make you think," Noah said in his final sign-off from 'The Daily ...
A tearful Noah addressed the audience on Thursday (December 8) night, thanking his fans and viewers, particularly giving praise to Black women for their ...
Trevor Noah gave an emotional heartfelt speech and thanked all the viewers, as he ended his 7-year-long journey in The Daily Show.
With cameos from Oprah, Issa Rae, Tracee Ellis Ross, Vice President Kamala Harris, and more.
The bulk of the episode was dedicated to a long segment featuring the current correspondents — Michael Kosta, Desi Lydic, Ronny Chieng, Roy Wood Jr, and Dulcé ...
The show host credits his success to the "brilliant" Black women in his life.
Trevor Noah bid an emotional farewell to "The Daily Show," which he has hosted since 2015, on Thursday. During the emotional sendoff, the comedian gave "a ...
Noah says farewell after seven years on the Daily Show, and late-night hosts discuss Brittney Griner's release from Russian prison.
Though his final episode made the mysterious reason for his departure a running joke, his specials and memoir suggest he was always comfortable with ...
Trevor Noah said good-bye to 'The Daily Show' during his final episode on December 8. The host always seemed keenly aware of the rhetorical position he was ...
After seven years, the comedian ended his hosting gig for the Comedy Central late show on Thursday night.
Eventually, a permanent host ( [or multiple](https://www.avclub.com/daily-show-multiple-hosts-trevor-noah-1849674245), apparently) will take the reigns of the show, with [current](https://www.avclub.com/roy-wood-jr-the-daily-show-host-pitch-1849678268) correspondents [already being eyed](https://www.avclub.com/trevor-noah-met-daily-show-correspondents-hosting-1849809195) for the gig. [Trevor Noah](https://www.avclub.com/trevor-noah-leaving-the-daily-show-with-trevor-noah-1849600002) to sign off from The Daily Show With Trevor Noah. [ a slew of comedian and celebrities](https://www.avclub.com/the-daily-show-guest-hosts-chelsea-handler-hasan-minhaj-1849863842) will take over the hosting duties. From my mom, my gran, my aunts, all these black women in my life but then in America as well.” Every seat that has ever been filled to watch something I’m doing is always appreciated because I know the empty seat that sits behind it,” he added. “I’m grateful to you, every single one of you.
When one audience member asked what he'd tell his younger self about hosting the show, Mr. Noah joked: 'Run!'
[Hotels.com Coupon - 30% Off](https://www.wsj.com/coupons/hotels-com) [$60 Off everything - DSW coupon](https://www.wsj.com/coupons/dsw) - Michaels: Thursday night, the house was packed. Noah first started, he said, they couldn’t even fill all the seats. The atmosphere in the room felt like friends hanging out on the last day of school, with the host, who took over from Jon Stewart seven years ago, in cheerfully high spirits.
Host and comedian Trevor Noah had an emotional farewell as he thanked members of his audience as well as those watching at home for his seven-year long ...
While The Daily Show has not announced any replacement for Trevor as yet, several guest hosts are expected to take his place beginning in January 2023. He announced his departure from the show in September 2022. He told Jimmy Fallon that he wanted to get back to performing stand-up all over the world again on his talk show recently. Trevor, who was born in South Africa, began appearing as a contributor on The Daily Show in 2014 and was tipped for the main job in under a year. "Honestly, most importantly, I'm most grateful to you," he began in his farewell speech. He continued, "Black people understand how hard it is when things go bad, especially in America or anything place that black people exist, whether it's Brazil or South Africa, wherever they exist.
Trevor Noah said his final goodbye to The Daily Show on Friday, 9 December. Noah had hosted the immensely-popular late-night show for seven seasons.
Because the truth is worth it.) We had some amazing times @trevornoah, and we can’t wait to see what you do next. You did it your way, and you made @thedailyshow your own. "No, I always think it's good; that's how comedy is good enough", the comedian said, adding that he never takes the audience for granted. Trevor Noah's friends, colleagues and fans took to social media to wish him all the best for his future endeavours. “People are like, ‘Trevor, you're so smart.' I'm like, ‘Who do you think teaches me?
Only occasionally did the host, whose last episode aired on Thursday, fully deliver on the initial promise of using his outsider's gaze to satirize America.
[Roy Wood, Jr.](https://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/the-intimate-laughs-of-instagram-live-standup-comedy)—a Noah hire and the correspondent with the most multifaceted talent and appeal.) Whoever ultimately gets the job won’t have shoes as big to fill as Noah did [when Stewart left](https://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2015/08/10/exit-stage-left), but the task is formidable nonetheless. (He speaks seven languages, and in “Afraid of the Dark,” his Netflix début, he runs through at least ten accents.) Noah seemed to reserve his unguarded moments for online-only “Between the Scenes” clips, in which he spoke off the cuff about personal experiences and took questions from the studio audience on the debates of the day. As a viewer who has tuned in to the vast majority of his episodes, owing to the fact that the “The Daily Show” has been a fixture pretty much all of my adult life, I’m inclined to agree with that assessment. (That might be the main reason, aside from the finitude of days in a week, that his fellow-hosts appear not to have simultaneously pursued brand-honing standup careers.) Stewart treated “The Daily Show” like a calling; Noah just seemed like he was there to do a job. But because Noah’s biography has come to comprise a greater part of his public persona than those of his peers, and because we’ve encountered distillations of his comedic voice through his specials, the gap between what he offered on “The Daily Show” and what he’s capable of was ever distracting. Meanwhile, “The Daily Show” ’s tropes—sitting behind a desk, flitting through the day’s headlines—provided only a fitful showcase for Noah’s most exceptional gifts as a comedian, such as his physicality and his extraordinary ear for accents and impressions. Only occasionally did he fully deliver on that initial promise of using his outsider’s gaze to illuminate (or more sharply satirize) America, as when he compared Trump, in a celebrated early [viral hit](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2FPrJxTvgdQ), to an African dictator. His “fake news,” as the program once billed itself, before Trump’s appropriation of the phrase, was delivered by a fake newsman with no need for the pretense of a view-from-nowhere objectivity. Among Stewart’s many innovations on “The Daily Show” was his unabashed willingness to be himself, or at least a version of himself. In contrast, Noah’s tenure, which [encompassed the Trump Administration](https://www.newyorker.com/culture/culture-desk/trevor-noahs-crash-course-in-surviving-an-american-election) and the pandemic quarantine years, often gave the sense of complacency, with a host who seemed much smarter than the material he doled out. [took over as host](https://www.newyorker.com/culture/sarah-larson/trevor-noahs-daily-show-debut) of “The Daily Show” the following year, fleshed out his stage persona as that of a boundlessly curious globe-trotter. Noah, who already enjoyed a large following outside of the U.S., wielded his origins to critique Western assumptions about his native continent (that it’s “one giant village full of AIDS, huts, and starving children”) and to deflate American exceptionalism.
When legendary host Jon Stewart departed in 2015 after a 16-year-long stint, he personally chose Noah to succeed him because he trusted him.
Who do you think has shaped me, nourished me, and informed me? At the same time, Noah also shared the three lessons he learned from the show – Republican vs Democratic opposition is a construct, context is always important, and it’s important to think before reacting to information seen online. When legendary host Jon Stewart departed in 2015 after a 16-year-long stint, he personally chose Noah to succeed him because he trusted him.
Comedian Hasan Minhaj penned a heatfelt post for his former 'The Daily Show' colleague Trevor Noah after he quit the show.
Thank you for not firing me when I needed health insurance the most! We had some amazing times [@trevornoah], and we can’t wait to see what you do next. We had some amazing times @trevornoah, and we can’t wait to see what you do next.