In âHow to Tell a Story,â Mark Twain describes a distinctly American style of comedic delivery where what is said is less important than the way one says it:
The humorous story is strictly a work of artâhigh and delicate artâand only an artist can tell it; but no art is necessary in telling the comic and the witty story; anybody can do it. The art of telling a humorous storyâunderstand, I mean by word of mouth, not printâwas created in America, and has remained at home.
Mark Twain, How to Tell a Story & Other Essays (New York: Harper & Brothers Publishers, 1897), p. 4.
After forgoing the prize due to COVID restrictions in 2021, the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts announced that this yearâs honoree for the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor would be Jon Stewart. Though the comedianâs best-known work is The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, the Centerâs press release also cites his podcast (The Problem with Jon Stewart), his executive producing for Stephen Colbertâs Late Show and Colbert Report, his writing and directing, and his social advocacy for veterans and 9/11 first responders. On receiving the news, Stewart commented, âI am truly honored to receive this award. I have long admired and been influenced by the work of Mark Twain, or, as he was known by his given name, Samuel Leibowitz.â (This joke has its own tradition: Steve Martin, George Carlin, Jay Leno, David Letterman, and Julia Louis-Dreyfus all jokingly feigned ignorance of the awardâs namesake in their own speeches. Leno exclaims, âIn fact, A Tale of Two Cities is one of my favorite books!â)
In this article, I want to examine the Twainian resonances of Jon Stewartâs comedic career, in particular the âanti-bullshitâ position he adopted on The Daily Show, alongside the claims and staging of the Kennedy Centerâs Twain Prize. Stewartâs tenure on The Daily Show, where he stood at the cross-section of entertainment, press, and politics, provides an opportunity to reflect on the cultural history of the Mark Twain Award â a prize which similarly celebrates and uplifts comedy as a political force.
THE MARK TWAIN PRIZE
The prize includes a bust of Twain, a fundraising ceremony celebrating the honoree, and an optional visit to the White House â one not always accepted. There is a wide range of awardees: veteran comics, producers, writers, performers, and actors. The 22 previous Mark Twain Prize winners include Lorne Michaels, George Carlin, Neil Simon, Bill Cosby (rescinded in 2018 for his sexual assault convictions), and Eddie Murphy. The most recent awardees are Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Dave Chappelle.
It seems natural now that Americaâs most prestigious comedy award is the Kennedy Center Mark Twain Prize for American Humor. Yet, so much is embedded in that title: the declaration of an American tradition of humor, the legacy of the Kennedy name, and a distinct portrait of how we expect comedy and politics to meet. Thus, the Mark Twain Award inevitably stages a constant friction between political criticism, humor, power, prestige, and cultural absorption. The award which seeks to elevate âcomedy as an art form and [unite] the community through laughterâ cites Twainâs legacy as a âfearless observer of society,â a controversial figure, and a man with a sense of humor driven by an âuncompromising perspective of social injustice and personal folly.â Richard Pryor put this mission in more direct terms when he accepted the inaugural prize, declaring, âIt is nice to be regarded on par with a great white manânow thatâs funny! Seriously, though, two things people throughout history have had in common are hatred and humor. I am proud that, like Mark Twain, I have been able to use humor to lessen peopleâs hatred!â3>Â The Mark Twain Award suggests that laughter is not only the best medicine for the individual, but for the political body.
Stewart, Twain, & Kennedy
Looking at the list of accolades, there is no doubt that Stewartâs great accomplishment is The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. Co-created by Madeleine Smithberg and Lizz Winstead and currently airing with Trevor Noah as host, the television program provides a satirical platform where commentary, segments, and interviews expose and mock the artifice of real news and political platforms. Over a critically acclaimed 16-year tenure as host, Stewart became âthe most trusted manâ for current events and American media commentary. Correspondents like Stephen Colbert, John Oliver, Samantha Bee, and Hasan Minhaj went on to launch their own shows â all of them borrowing from The Daily Show format in some way. Stewartâs particular form of progressive satire and performance calls to mind many Twainian resonances, both minor (an affinity for stylistic pauses) and significant (carrying their jokes with anger and bitterness).
Just before his Daily Show tenure, Stewart spoke at the 1997 White House Correspondents Dinner, an annual event where the US president, journalists, and a comedian gather for a roast that often jumps between entertaining quips to passive-aggressive observations to outright confrontational addresses. Stewart, a New York Yankee in President Clintonâs Hilton, moves between self-deprecation, impressions, and friendly banter. His signature critique of media comes out in a few select jokes. In one, he discusses a Congressional debate about an FDR memorial:
They actually did a poll in USA Today on Friday, I guess to give Congress a sort of feel for how regular Americans feel about that issue and the results are really interesting. 8% felt he should be in a wheelchair. 12% said he should be standing and 80% said pass a budget. So, I know that was interesting.
In another, he mocks their response to the Million Man March to laughs and groans:
Washington has always been a hotbed of social protests. I guess the biggest recent one was the Million Man March or as many you probably remember it, âThat day we called in sick.â
Examining Stewartâs careful deployment and withdrawal of comedy when intervening in politics, we recognize a celebrity who strategically crosses the comedic and political spaces of the national public agenda â what Judith Yaross Lee calls the âunstable comic self.â7In his 1880 essay âOn the Decay of the Art of Lying,â Twain makes a humorous argument for âcharitable and unselfish lyingâ and against the âgrowing prevalence of the brutal truthâ in the Gilded Age: âJoking aside, I think there is much need of wise examination into what sorts of lies are best and wholesomest to be indulged, seeing we must all lie and we do all lie, and what sorts it may be best to avoid.â Blatant (or artless) deceit in the farcical 24/7 news cycle â even more than ideology â was always Stewart greatest target. In the oral history of The Daily Show, Colbert recalls words from producer and writer Steve Bodow on the showâs key approach: âI donât think weâre anti-Bush, I think weâre anti-bullshit.â8
In 2012, we could easily adapt this statement to, âI donât think weâre anti-Romney, I think weâre anti-Bullshit Mountain.â Stewart exited The Daily Show with his âbullshit is everywhereâ speech in 2015, imploring his audience to separate the âday-to-day, organic free-range bullshitâ that âkeeps people from making each other cry all dayâ and the more pernicious kind: âYour premeditated, institutional bullshit, designed to obscure and distract. Designed by whom? The bullshitocracy.â He lists among them the Patriot Act, misleading legislation names, banks, tech companies, and âthe guise of unending inquiryâ (climate change, guns, vaccines, same-sex marriage), ending with a call for vigilance. âSo if you smell something,â says the host, âsay something.â
Key moments of Stewartâs career stand out as particularly âanti-bullshitâ: the damning week-long series of clips and eventual interview with Jim Cramer for CNBCâs âdisingenuous at best and criminal at worstâ coverage of the financial crisis, his confrontational refusal to play the comedian on Crossfire with Tucker Carlson and Paul Begala (when Tucker cries, âWait, I thought you were gonna be funny!â Stewart famously replies, âNo. No, Iâm not gonna be your monkeyâ), and his interview with Judith Miller on her inaccurate coverage of the Iraq War supporting the Bush Administrationâs claims about weapons of mass destruction. These anti-bullshit moments often display Stewart at his most furious and earnest. Through his own appearances and performances, Stewart modeled and signaled to viewers what should be funny and what should be serious (and indeed, each tone seems possible and heightened only because of the other).
The bite of Stewartâs commentary could also demonstrate the limitations of comedy â a âfeel-badâ wit showed his audience how humor could function as a means of coping. At the end of his interview with Miller, a visibly frustrated Stewart concludes with, âThese discussions always make me incredibly sad because I feel like they point to institutional failure at the highest levels and no one will take responsibility for it. They pass the buck to every individual other than themselves.â After Miller asserts, âI think they point to intelligence failures that I still worry about â we are still relying on the same information on Iran, North Korea, Pakistan and the other countries,â Stewart sarcastically replies, âHopefully, given the same effort, weâll get to invade them soon.â Ending with a bitter note, refusing to play the conciliatory or friendly host, Stewart balances the tones of sadness and the humor.
Yet there is also something to be said about having these conversations at all â this same approach to engagement earned Stewart criticism recently, when the comedian defended podcaster Joe Rogan amidst calls for Spotify to drop Rogan for his spread of vaccine misinformation. Stewart said, âIt might be a foolâs errand, but I will never give up on engagement.â Itâs a sentiment heâs consistently voiced, while also acknowledging its challenges. In response to critics calling his âRally to Restore Sanityâ a reduction of political issues to a call for politeness, Stewart defended his message as one of intellectual engagement, saying, âif youâre going to have an argument, have the actual argument. Be precise.â In The Daily Showâs oral history, he describes both the desire to âfind, within someoneâs humanity, some understanding of why theyâve done what theyâve doneâ and his own fallibility as interviewer (on his Donald Rumsefeld interview, showrunner Rory Albanese says, âI remember Jon felling like he blew itâ).9 Alongside articles praising Stewartâs viral confrontations are analyses which question the effectiveness of this model â far from a brave truth-teller, Stewart morphs into the face of liberal civility, hypocritically invested and dependent on the spectacle and circus he critiques. With the social media ethos that all exposure is good exposure, there is an understandable skepticism towards this model of engagement where unearned good faith is extended to questionable individuals. (Google Trends shows that the word âdeplatformâ saw spikes in 2018 and reached a peak in 2021.) The Twanian critique is best articulated by Steve Almond in his 2012 article âThe Jokeâs on You.â Almond, who dubs the Stewart credo âcivility at any cost, even in the face of moral atrocity,â pushes against the image of Stewart and his fellow comedians as subversive critics:
Twain had this to say about the patriotism of his day: âThe Patriot did not know just how or when or where he got his opinions, neither did he care, so long as he was with what seemed the majorityâwhich was the main thing, the safe thing, the comfortable thing.â Itâs this quality of avoiding danger, of seeking the safety of consensus, that characterizes the aesthetic of Stewart and Colbert. Theyâre adept at savaging the safe targetsâvacuous talking heads and craven senators. But you will never hear them referring to our soldiers as âuniformed assassins,â as Twain did in describing an American attack on a tribal group in the Philippines.
Steve Almond, âThe Jokeâs On You,â The Baffler (July 2012)
Though his Daily Show hosting and comedic persona often depended on Stewart as an âoutsiderâ and observer of politics and media, this positioning ignores the fact that comedy has always had a position in politics â one that the Mark Twain Award makes explicit.
While Stewart and his comedy depended on a shifting public persona that required âanti-bullshitâ punctuations, political entities also needed to show that they were in on the joke by calling on humor for relief or a diversion. Of course, this award doesnât only draw a connection between Mark Twain and a contemporary humorist. Rather, it draws a line between Twain, a contemporary humorist, John F. Kennedy, and the current political administration (and sponsor American Airlines). Kennedyâs name, which conjures up for many a legacy of service, civil rights, scientific exploration, and a mythologized tragedy, frames this award. Yet, the 35th president is also a kind of mirror to these awardees in that he was an entertaining politician while they are political entertainers. JFKâs often self-deprecating humor gave him power in press conferences, bolstered his calls for innovation, and magnified a charisma furthermore amplified by television and new communications technologies. At one conference he joked, âI do not think it all-together inappropriate to introduce myself to this audience. I am the man who accompanied Jacqueline Kennedy to Paris â and Iâve enjoyed it.â Aware of his own celebrity and legacy, JFKâs humor played on and with his public image. With Kennedy, we see humor as a means of soft power, of diffusing tension, and moderating confrontation.
Revisiting the awardâs description of Twain and the awardees, it is worth asking: how does one simultaneously unite a community through laughter and fearlessly/controversially push forward social justice? What happens when a prestigious collective honors their âfearless observerâ? The marriage of comedy and politics promised in the Kennedy Center Mark Twain Prize for American Humor, then, simultaneously elevates comedy as an art form and sets boundaries for its radical potential (as is the case with any prestigious award). In the middle of his 2005 acceptance speech for the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor, Steve Martin paid tribute to the awardâs namesake: âIâm laughing at something â a Mark Twain quote I wrote down because I wanted to get it exactly right,â says Martin, pulling a folded piece of paper out of his pocket, âHe said, whatever you do, for Godâs sake, do not name a prize after me.â
Charline Jao is a graduate student in the Literatures in English Department at Cornell University. Her research focuses on nineteenth-century American literature, with special interest in speculative work by women writers and print culture. She is currently working on a digital humanities project which catalogues poetry published in abolitionist periodicals.
Works Cited
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