New York – Comedy Central: ‘Unfair’ To Judge Noah Based On Tweets Targeting Jews

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    An undated handout photo provided by Comedy Central shows South African comedian Trevor Noah. Comedy Central announced on 30 March 2015 that Trevor Noah has been selected to become the next host of Comedy Central's 'The Daily Show'.  EPANew York – A day after Trevor Noah was declared the new host of “The Daily Show,” his graphic tweets targeting women and Jews are causing a social media backlash and Comedy Central is defending its newest late-night star.

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    By Tuesday, Trevor Noah was a trending topic on Twitter as he drew fire for jokes described as tasteless, hateful — and unfunny. Roseanne Barr was among those calling out the 31-year-old South African comic, who has an international following and two million Twitter followers.

    “U should cease sexist & anti semitic ‘humor’ about jewish women & Israel,” she tweeted late Monday.

    In a statement, Comedy Central defended Noah as a “provocative” comedian who “spares no one, himself included.”

    “To judge him or his comedy based on a handful of jokes is unfair,” said the network, adding that he has “a bright future at Comedy Central.”

    Noah’s controversial tweets were posted between 2009 and 2014.

    In 2009 he wrote, “Almost bumped a Jewish kid crossing the road. He didn’t look b4 crossing but I still would hav felt so bad in my german car!”

    A 2012 post derides “jewish chicks.” Another one from 2011 jokes about “a hot white woman.”

    In a post from 2011, he writes, “Oh yeah the weekend. People are gonna get drunk & think that I’m sexy!” He attributes the joke to “fat chicks everywhere.”

    He also slammed the United States’ midsection in a 2013 tweet, writing that “When flying over the middle of America the turbulence is so bad. It’s like all the ignorance is rising through the air.”

    The tweets showed a different side to Noah than the picture painted by Comedy Central and the comedian himself just a day earlier: In a phone interview on Monday from Dubai, where Noah was traveling on a comedy tour, he likened himself to the New York-born Stewart, saying, “One thing we both share: We are both progressives.” He added, “traveling the world I’ve learned that progressives, regardless of their locations, think in a global space.”

    Noah, the son of a black South African mother and white European father who speaks six languages, was being pitched by Comedy Central as reflecting a new age of global multiculturalism, “a citizen of the world,” in the words of Michele Ganeless, the network’s president.

    He was named a little more than a month after Stewart unexpectedly announced he was leaving “The Daily Show” following 16 years as the show’s principal voice. Although no dates have been disclosed, Stewart is expected to depart by the end of the year, with Noah taking over soon afterward.

    On Monday, Ganeless spoke of the advantage of introducing Noah to a mainstream U.S. audience through “The Daily Show,” with viewers coming to the show he hosts with no preconceptions. “They will get to discover him, and form their opinions of him, as they watch him host.”

    But by Tuesday, some opinions were already forming. Weighing in on Noah’s selection, a Slate column compared his vetting to that of Sarah Palin as a running mate for presidential candidate John McCain.

    The choice of a new host for “The Daily Show” is a critical decision not only for the satirical-news program, but for the network, whose identity has largely been forged by the “Daily Show” franchise, which for years was followed by the likewise signature “The Colbert Report.”

    By the end of this year, Comedy Central will have completely remade this programming block. In January, African-American comic Larry Wilmore replaced the “The Colbert Report” hosting “The Nightly Show.”


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    12 Comments
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    curious
    curious
    9 years ago

    Comedy Central is wrong! He is an ananti-Semite for tweeting that. Between him and Lena Dunham we have to make it clear that this nonsense is intolerable.

    Brooklynhocker
    Brooklynhocker
    9 years ago

    Noah’s mother converted to Judism a few years ago. Not that it gives him a reason to make these types of jokes, but they really weren’t that insulting to Jews or Israel.

    9 years ago

    He might be special to see. A small attraction with now a big problem. What more can shoot you to stardom but a possible anti-semitic experience provided.

    I am sure we are in for another little place of history here.

    Drunks probably.

    Too bad.

    CommonSense
    CommonSense
    9 years ago

    Oh pleaseeeee
    I thought that was pretty funny.
    Seriously. We are our own worse enemies crying and screaming anti Semitism way to loosely.

    yankee96
    yankee96
    9 years ago

    nobody cares about cable on comedy central,but he will use his own rope to hang himself eventualy,as they all wind up doing

    BuckyinWisconsin
    BuckyinWisconsin
    9 years ago

    I love how liberals and especially minorities get a free pass on this stuff. Just imagine if this was a conservative or a Republican…pure liberal hypocrisy in action.

    PaulinSaudi
    PaulinSaudi
    9 years ago

    It is his job to make fun of people.

    bewhiskered
    bewhiskered
    9 years ago

    Black people in Germany were never subject to mass extermination as in the cases of Jews, Poles, and others, but were still considered by the Nazis ימ”ש to be an inferior race, and subject to the Nuremberg Laws. Perhaps, Noah might appreciate the joke’s sensitivity this way:

    “Almost bumped a black kid crossing the road. He didn’t look before crossing, but I still would have felt so bad driving in my Klansman’s hood.”

    9 years ago

    I’d just like to see the reaction if it had been a white comedian making the same jokes about blacks! No one less than our hypocrite of a president would be screaming and condemning it!

    leahle
    leahle
    9 years ago

    Good comedy always is edgy and takes risks. If you think smashing watermelons is funny, good for you; some of us like something more and are not scared by comedians who take risks and sometimes fall flat while doing so. To quote Don Rickles, “If I were to insult people and mean it, that wouldn’t be funny.”