The Jon Stewart Show

For the talk show Jon Stewart hosted on Comedy Central, see The Daily Show.
The Jon Stewart Show
Genre Talk show
Variety show
Created by Jon Stewart
Presented by Jon Stewart
Starring Jon Stewart
Narrated by Howard Feller
Country of origin United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 160
Production
Executive producer(s) Jeff Ross, Lorne Michaels, Jon Stewart, Barry Secunda
Location(s) Chelsea Television Studios
New York, New York
Running time 30 minutes (MTV)
60 minutes (syndication)
Production company(s) Busboy Productions
MTV Productions
Paramount Domestic Television (syndication)
Release
Original network MTV (1993–94)
Syndicated (1994–95)
Picture format 480i (4:3 SDTV)
Original release October 25, 1993 
June 23, 1995
Chronology
Related shows The Daily Show

The Jon Stewart Show was a late night talk show that was hosted by comedian Jon Stewart. The program premiered on MTV in 1993 as a thirty-minute daily program. At the end of its first season, MTV's then-corporate sibling Paramount Domestic Television retooled the program, extended it to sixty minutes, and used it as a replacement for the canceled Arsenio Hall Show for the 1994—95 television season. While the show garnered high ratings on MTV, it was not a success in syndication and was canceled in 1995.

Guests

Celebrity guests who made appearances on the show included Howard Stern, David Letterman, Jonathan Brandis, Courteney Cox, Sherry Stringfield, Lorenzo Lamas, Bronson Pinchot, Conan O'Brien and William Shatner. The show was also popular for showcasing the type of musical guests that usually were not seen on other talk shows, such as King's X, Quicksand, Blind Melon, Killing Joke, Buffalo Tom, Diamanda Galás, Slayer, Van Halen, Peter Murphy, Sunny Day Real Estate, Bad Religion, Naughty by Nature, White Zombie, Marilyn Manson, Redd Kross, Dom Pachino, Faith No More, Rocket from the Crypt, Ol' Dirty Bastard, The Breeders, Belly, Letters to Cleo, "Weird Al" Yankovic, The Afghan Whigs, The Notorious B.I.G., Guided by Voices, Warren Zevon, Mike Watt, Body Count, Danzig, Face to Face, Helmet, and Pop Will Eat Itself, as well as fringe sub-culture guests such as Rev. Ivan Stang of the Church of the SubGenius.

The show was produced by Madeleine Smithberg, the creator of The Daily Show.

One of the more memorable episodes featured a performance by Marilyn Manson, who threw instruments around the stage, and ended with a piggyback ride offstage by Jon Stewart. During the show's final episode, the audience was offered margaritas and taxicab rides home. This final episode featured a lengthy interview with David Letterman, who rarely appears on talk shows other than his own. The eleven members of (then-upcoming) MTV sketch show The State appeared as the last guests on the final episode of the half-hour version of the show, and The State cast members received Stewart's permission to "trash" the set with various implements of destruction. Stewart had been told to "get (his) shit and get out" by the production company prior to the show, and during the interview, Letterman advised Stewart to "not confuse cancellation with failure."[1]

See also

References

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