Showing posts with label The Daily Show. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Daily Show. Show all posts

Monday, November 2, 2020

TV NEWS ROUND-UP. Today's interesting TV stories to read - 2 November 2020.


Here's the latest news about TV that I read and that you should read too:








Many viewers feel that the "new" Top Gear seen on BBC Brit (DStv 120) doesn't work and is awkward.



"While the host and producer should shoulder some of the blame, serious questions need to be raised about the editorial failure that gave the go-ahead to run the interview."







Creating a fictional world for the 1 percent isn't as easy as it seems.


Friday, May 1, 2020

Coronavirus: Trevor Noah personally paying his Daily Show staffer salaries - report.


The South African comedian Trevor Noah is reportedly paying the salaries of 25 staffers of his The Daily Show who have been furloughed because of the Covid-19 shutdown of America's TV industry.

Variety reports that Trevor Noah is paying the monthly salaries of 25 members of The Daily Show on Comedy Central (DStv 122) out of his own money.

He reportedly told staffers that he will continue to personally pay their salaries until The Daily Show returns to normal production from its New York studio.

"These are the people who have been on the show with Trevor from day one and help him put on the show," a source told the trade publication, saying "Trevor is personally covering their salaries until the production business opens again. He respects his crew tremendously and feels it’s only right that they get thru this together."

This week the temporarily renamed The Daily Social Distancing Show was expanded from a half hour to a 45 minute show.

The Daily Show is broadcast in the United States from Mondays to Thursdays and seen a day later in South Africa and across sub-Saharan Africa from Tuesdays to Fridays at 22:30 on the African channel feed of ViacomCBS Networks Africa's Comedy Central (DStv 122).

It will be the first time in the 24-year history of The Daily Show that episodes will be longer says Comedy Central in a statement.

"The news of supersized Daily Show episodes comes at a moment in time when viewers are heading to host Trevor Noah not just for satire and escapism, but also for an honest point of view and as a source of trustworthy information."

This week is the 6th week of "The Daily Social Distancing Show" that Trevor Noah now anchors from his home without the help of a live audience or the New York-based studio. The show has seen linear TV ratings rise as well as digital gains over the last month.

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Coronavirus: Trevor Noah upsizes The Daily Show on Comedy Central to 45 minute episodes.


by Thinus Ferreira

The South African comedian Trevor Noah is upsizing his late-night talk show done from his New York highrise with The Daily Show that will expand this week from a half-hour show to 45 minutes on Comedy Central.

With less original and new content on television because of the global Covid-19 pandemic that has had a massive negative impact on the South African and international TV and film industry, and coupled with the success of the renamed "The Daily Social Distancing Show", Comedy Central is expanding the show with an additional 15 minutes per episode.

The Daily Show is broadcast in the United States from Mondays to Thursdays and seen a day later in South Africa and across sub-Saharan Africa from Tuesdays to Fridays at 22:30 on the African channel feed of ViacomCBS Networks Africa's Comedy Central (DStv 122).

It will be the first time in the 24-year history of The Daily Show that episodes will be longer says Comedy Central in a statement.

"The news of supersized Daily Show episodes comes at a moment in time when viewers are heading to host Trevor Noah not just for satire and escapism, but also for an honest point of view and as a source of trustworthy information."

This week is the 6th week of "The Daily Social Distancing Show" that Trevor Noah now anchors from his home without the help of a live audience or the New York-based studio. The show has seen linear TV ratings rise as well as digital gains over the last month.

Sunday, March 24, 2019

eNCA spreads completely 'fake news' as it wrongly reports that 'Trevor Noah might be out of his job'; TV news channel erroneously claims that The Daily Show on Comedy Central could be cancelled.


The South African TV news channel eNCA (DStv 403) on Saturday spread "fake news", erroneously and wrongly reporting as a breaking news "top story" that "Trevor Noah might be out of a job" and wrongly claiming that The Daily Show on Comedy Central (DStv 122) could be cancelled with its "future hanging in the balance".

None of it is true.

Sadly and shockingly, neither the clueless and incompetent weekend worker at eNCA who cobbled together the report from false facts without attribution to any actual original news sources, nor any information checkers, online editors or other gatekeepers at eNCA saw or bothered to check and first verify any of the false information before publishing it.

eNCA with a fake headline "Trevor Noah might be out of a job" that is devoid from all truth, reported wrongly to news consumers that "the future of Comedy Central's Daily Show hangs in the balance".

That is not true and neither is or will Trevor Noah be out of a job, nor does the future of The Daily Show "hang in the balance".

eNCA wrongly reported fake news, saying "This could mean the end of one of the most watched and beloved parody news shows" - again a completely false assumption since The Daily Show isn't and won't be ending.

eNCA wrongly reported that "authorities, AT&T-DIRECTTV plans to drop 22 channels".

Nothing like AT&T-DIRECTV exists.

DirecTV is an American satellite pay-TV service, "DirecTV" is its brand name, and is a subsidiary of AT&T (U-verse is another such similar service from AT&T).

DirecTV is also not an "authority" or "authorities" - it is a commercial pay-TV service, one of about 26 in America.

What is happening but that eNCA doesn't understand nor bothered to, is that DirecTV is in negotiations with Viacom at the moment, with Viacom that provides TV channels to all pay-TV providers in America and worldwide, like South Africa, for the continuation of its channels on DirecTV.

The suppliers of channels - like Viacom - sign what is called channel carriage agreements. This is a contract lasting for a specific period, for instance 5 years, with a pay-TV service that then pays the supplier an amount (usually a few cents per subscriber per month).

This contract for Comedy Central and a dozen other channels from Viacom delivered to DirecTV is now expiring. The two sides are busy negotiating a new possible contract.

If there isn't a new contract between Viacom and DirecTV, Viacom's Comedy Central will continue to exist,it just won't be available on DirecTV anymore.

Comedy Central will continue to be available to subscribers and viewers of more than 20 pay-TV services in America, as well as globally, as well as Comedy Central Africa carried and available in South Africa and Africa on MultiChoice's DStv and provided by Viacom International Media Networks Africa (VIMN Africa).

The same with The Daily Show and the same with Trevor Noah.

Just because it might no longer be on "the authorities" DirecTV, doesn't mean Comedy Central as a TV channel, The Daily Show or Trevor Noah is in any danger, has a "future in the balance" or "might be out of a job".

It is the same as if MultiChoice decided to drop e.tv as a channel from its line-up on DStv.

e.tv would still be available on the satellite TV services of StarSat and on Openview. The future of shows like Scandal! and Rhythm City wouldn't "hang in the balance", they would just not be on DStv anymore, they wouldn't be cancelled, and the soap stars in these shows won't be at risk of a "might be out of a job".

It's absolutely shocking that eNCA would produce and run fake trash like this.

eNCA ended up deleting its Tweet linking to its fake news reporting on Saturday afternoon after TVwithThinus noted the horrific fake news from eNCA.


Later eNCA did another Tweet after altering its fake news story and making the headline "Trevor Noah's Daily Show up in the air at AT&T" - still a clickbait headline and false news.

eNCA also altered and edited its original fake news report, without adding any editorial note that the article has been changed since it was first published and explaining why - something legitimate news sources do when changing and updating stories and correcting mistakes.

eNCA kept the mistake "AT&T-DIRECTV" but took out that it is "authorities", added that it could mean the end of the show for "AT&T-DIRECTV customers" at the end of a sentence and wholly deleted wrong sentences.

On Twitter readers criticised eNCA, saying it's "still a very misleading headline". "Noah's show is perfectly safe. One US TV provider out of many that is making (idle) threats because of a contract dispute. #clickbait".

Another said "This is not accurate. There are middle school papers with better editors".

Saturday, March 9, 2019

The Daily Show comedian correspondent Desi Lydic gets her own special looking at gender equality, travelling internationally to Namibia and other countries as they pass America as better places for women to live.



The Daily Show comedian correspondent Desi Lydic on Comedy Central (DStv 122) got her own hour-long special looking at gender equality and travelling internationally as countries like Namibia in Africa and others have passed the United States as better places for women to live.

Desi Lydic: Abroad will become available on Tuesday 14 May in full on the cc.com website after it's broadcast on 13 May in America. A possible broadcast date for Desi Lydic: Abroad on Comedy Central Africa on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV service isn't known yet.

Trevor Noah is one of the executive producers of Desi Lydic: Abroad that sees her travel around the globe to countries where the situation for women are in some aspects better than in the United States when it comes to gender equality.

Desi Lydic, a professionally trained improvisational and comedic actress, joined The Daily Show as a correspondent in September 2015 when Trevor Noah took over as host of The Daily Show.

On her global visit, Desi Lydic sets out to explore how and why the United States has fallen so far behind much of the world when it comes to women and education, economics, health and politics, with countries like Iceland (1), Namibia (13) and Spain (24) that all rank higher than America (49) when it comes to gender equality.

Desi Lydic: Abroad is executive produced by Desi Lydic and Trevor Noah, Khoby Rowe, Steven Fisher, Jen Flanz and Jill Katz.

Wednesday, December 5, 2018

Trevor Noah lost his voice after hosting the Mandela 100: Global Citizen Festival - and this is how he now does The Daily Show on Comedy Central from tonight.


Someone should check on Bonang Matheba because her co-host Trevor Noah has now lost his voice after Sunday’s Mandela 100 Global Citizen Festival 2018 and this is how he had to do his latest edition of The Daily Show on Comedy Central (DStv 122) that South African and African viewers will see tonight – using the show's correspondents and a type of sign language.

After pre-recording this week's first episode of The Daily Show in South Africa broadcast last night and interviewing his grandmother during his visit to co-host the Global Citizen Festival where Beyonce and Jay Z performed, Trevor Noah flew back to Comedy Central's New York studio but lost his voice.

Instead of broadcasting a rerun, Trevor Noah – without voice due to vocal cord damage from all of Sunday’s talking and flying for 36 hours – decided to call up the army in the form of the show’s various correspondents to do the talking. 

This episode with Trevor Noah doing literally pointed commentary through his version of sign language, will be broadcast on Comedy Central tonight.

On Twitter Trevor Noah explained what happened: "As you'll know, when you watch The Daily Show tonight, I don't have a voice right now. I thought that my vocal cords were healed but according to the doctor, flying 36 hours and hosting a giant concert in South Africa didn't help me."

"So now if I want to get better I have to take it seriously so that I can perform at 100% on my new tour next year."

"I hate cancelling shows but I also hate the idea of losing my voice forever so I'm postponing all this year's stand-up shows. I'm gonna be like The Rock but in a voice gym."



Thursday, January 18, 2018

CNN wins the most awards in American president Donald Trump's Fakies.


The American president Donald Trump finally announced his inaugural “The Most Dishonest & Corrupt Media Awards of the Year” with TV news channel CNN (DStv 401) winning the most "categories" and with mentions also going to The New York Times, ABC News and The Washington Post.

The Fox News channel, Breitbart and Drudge got shut out and won no mentions at the "awards" that was quickly nicknamed the "Fakies".

The American GOP political party's website crashed on Thursday where the list was published while Donald Trump failed to have a ceremony or hand out actual awards.

Donald Trump originally announced that his 2017 Fake News Awards would be taking place after the Golden Globe Awards.

The American late night host Stephen Colbert immediately started a "For Your Consideration" campaign like what producers and studios do for the Emmys, Globes and Oscars, and created and rented a massive Times Square billboard in New York for his The Late Show, promoting the show to win in categories like “Fakest Dishonesty,” “Smallest Button” and “Least Breitbarty”.

He had competition.

The South African comedian Trevor Noah of The Daily Show on Comedy Central (DStv 122) responded by taking out a full-page ad in The New York Times and canvassing for The Daily Show as "most deserving" of a Fakie.

Then Donald Trump inexplicably postponed his Fakies to Wednesday, January 17. He explained that his fake news awards were moved since “interest in, and importance of, these awards is far greater than anyone could have anticipated!”

Wednesday also came and went and finally on Thursday a list was published. It had no categories and was just a badly done 11-point list:


1. The New York Times' Paul Krugman for claiming on the day of Donald Trump's election victory that the economy would never recover.

2. Brian Ross who was suspended and demoted by ABC News after inaccurately reporting that the ousted National Security Adviser Michael Flynn was going to testify that Donald Trump, while still a candidate, ordered Flynn to make contact with Russians.

3. CNN wrongly reporting that candidate Donald Trump and his son Donald Trump Jr. had access to hacked documents from WikiLeaks.

4. TIME magazine reporting that Donald Trump had removed the bust of Martin Luther King Jr. from the Oval office in the White House.

5.The Washington Post reporter Dave Weigel's photo of a Donald Trump rally suggesting low turnout.

6. CNN video showing Donald Trump overfeeding fish while visiting the Japanese prime minister Shinzo Abe.

7. CNN wrongly reporting that Donald Trump's aide Anthony Scaramucci met with the chief executive at a Russian investment fund.

8. Newsweek reporting that the Polish first lady Agata Kornhauser-Duda declined to shake Donald Trump’s hand.

9. CNN reporting that the former FBI director James Comey would dispute Donald Trump’s claim of being told he’s not under investigation.

10. The New York Times article on Donald Trump's administration's climate report.

11. "And last, but not least: "RUSSIA COLLUSION!" Russian collusion is perhaps the greatest hoax perpetrated on the American people. THERE IS NO COLLUSION," says Donald Trump.


No laughing matter
In reality "awards" trashing the press are no laughing matter - a record number of journalists were jailed or killed worldwide in 2017, while journalists continue to be censored, abused, arrested, jailed and killed for their reporting around the globe.

The number of journalists globally in prison is at a record high.

In response to Donald Trump's "Fakies", The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) announced their own CPJ Global Press Oppressors Awards.

The Global Press Oppressors Awards recognise world leaders who have gone out of their way to attack the press and undermine the norms that support freedom of the media.

They are:

1. Most think-skinned: Turkey's president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
Runner-up: American president Donald Trump.

2.Most outrageous use of terror laws against the press: Turkey's president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
Runner-up: Egypt president Abdel Fattah el-Sisi.

3. Tighest grip on media: China's president Xi Jinping.
Runner-up: Russia's president Vladimir Putin.

4. Biggest backslider in press freedom: Myanmar de facto leader Aung San Suu Kyi.
Runner-up: Polish president Andrzej Duda.

5. Overall Achievement in Undermining Global Press Freedom: American president Donald Trump.

Tuesday, September 12, 2017

After his creative Emmy win, Trevor Noah slammed, asked to 'please make jokes about white people not blacks' as fans quickly rally to his defense.


A Twitter storm has started after the EFF political party congratulated the South African comedian Trevor Noah with his creative Emmy win, after some furious fans urged him to stop making fun of black people and to focus his jokes on white people only.

A lot of Trevor Noah fans however quickly rallied to his defense.

Trevor Noah, host of The Daily Show on Comedy Central (DStv 122) won his first Emmy at the Emmy awards' Creative Arts ceremony in Los Angeles for his YouTube comedy special, The Daily Show: Between the Scenes in the category for Best Short Form Variety Series.

Trevor Noah is in Washington where he was performing and couldn't accept the Emmy, and is back in America after his recent visit to South Africa where he did a special stand-up performance in Johannesburg and Durban entitled, There's a Gupta on My Stoep.

In There's a Gupta on My Stoep as well as in a special M-Net VIP-invite only once-off show, Getting to Noah You at the Johannesburg Theatre for M-Net's important stakeholders, Trevor Noah went out of his way to incorporate characters, colours, accents and languages from every single background - black, coloured, white English and white Afrikaans, male, female, Indian, Australian - and even Atul Gupta calling Jacob Zuma.

After his Emmy win, one of the congratulatory messages to Trevor Noah was from the EFF political party who said the "EFF congratulates Trevor Noah for winning his first Emmy for The Daily Show. Continue to make us proud.".


Then @ralekolwana tweeted: "Trevor and Schuster u disrespecting us please make jokes about white people not blacks".

Several supporters rallied to Trevor Noah's defense like @Wolvenheart saying "Trevor has made jokes about every race but there has always been an underlying truth. He uses comedy to punctuate it."

"I see you don't watch The Daily Show," said Mtshobisi Mtshali. "Plus black people aren't immune from ridicule by virtue of the comedian being black".

Trevor Noah will be back to headline a new TV comedy stand-up series, Trevor Noah Presents... that will be broadcast in 2018 on M-Net (DStv 101) in which he shines the spotlight on new upcoming comedic talent from across a broad spectrum across the whole of South Africa.

Friday, August 11, 2017

Trevor Noah's big warning to all of South Africa and the country's entertainment industry: 'In South Africa we underpay and we over-enjoy'.


The successful comedian Trevor Noah has come out guns blazing with a big warning for not just South Africa's entertainment industry but for everyone, saying South Africans "underpay and over-enjoy" and that it needs to stop.

Trevor Noah said South Africans - from businesses in the entertainment industry to elsewhere, as well as ordinary citizens and consumers - need to start paying each other what they deserve "from a domestic worker to a petrol attendant to all the people where we take for granted how cheap we're paying for these people."

The South African comedian is back in South Africa during his holiday from The Daily Show on Comedy Central (DStv 122), to do a new stand-up show in South Africa, There's a Gupta On My Stoep, in Johannesburg and Durban.

Trevor Noah is also back in business with M-Net and will be hosting a new 13-part comedy TV series for M-Net (DStv 101), Trevor Noah Presents... that will be broadcast in 2018.

He was responding to criticism from a journalist at M-Net's press conference on Thursday about how seemingly expensive some of his concert tickets are.

"One thing I've never taken for granted is the cost of doing business and one thing that was tough is that I wanted to do a show, and I wanted to come back to South Africa and perform for as many of my fans as possible."

"In the time that I have allocated, with the venues that I could find, The Dome was probably the only place that I could do that. In South Africa we have a shortage of large venues and it's something that anyone in entertainment knows."

"So if you want to get more than a certain number of people into a room, you only have these few places."

"I don't want you to come to a venue and not see me, I don't want you to come to a venue and not hear me. And I don't want you to come to a venue and not have an extravaganza because that's what I believe it should be."

"I put together the show and I remember, funny enough, when Cassper Nyovest did #FillUpTheDome, I remember Cassper said 'You can sell out The Dome and lose money,' and I didn't understand what he fully meant at the time. It's an extremely expensive thing, and that's the cost of doing business."

"What I've done in the pricing of my tickets I've always made sure that according to what you can afford, you can come to a show. So I have tickets that range from a very affordable ticket to some people who want to pay a premium price and they want to sit right up front at that show."

"And that's the best way I can amortise the cost and make sure that I can put on the show that people want me to put on. Is it expensive? Definitely."

"The cost unfortunately is going to be borne by some who are willing to pay it. Some people have the money. For those who don't, they can still make it to the show."

"I have surprise acts. I have more than just comedy at a show. I will say as a South African and a performer we have to value our own. When I was touring with Julio Iglesias seven years ago in my career - and the price of tickets then - and people went: But it's Julio Iglesias."

"And I thought: When do we pay for our own?"

"If we pay for our own, our own are more likely to stay here because they feel appreciated."

'I was exploited when I was new in the industry'
Trevor Noah said working with M-Net has been a "wonderful experience for me" when it comes to the payment of artists.

"I think a lot of the time in South Africa we take for granted how easy it's been to underpay people."

He said people read all the time how artists die poor - people who were legends.

"You read stories about the Brenda Fassies and you wonder how did these people die without a penny in their pockets when we saw them selling out stadiums? And then we've come to realise over time that in South Africa we've become used to paying people way below what they should be getting paid".

"One thing I'm proud of, any comedian who works for me - I don't care whether you're unknown, or a new comic or a new face - I will make sure that you are earning an income that will help sustain you as a person."

"I don't want to exploit you. I remember that I was exploited when I was very new in the industry. I made almost no money for doing what I love."

"But I'm proud that today I'm in a place where I can say that if you work for me, you're going to feel a difference in your life as a South African comedian. I'm not going to, because you're unknown, not pay you what you deserve," said Trevor Noah.

"In South Africa we must get better at paying each other what we deserve and I'm talking all levels - not just entertainment. Everyone from a domestic worker to a petrol attendant to all the people where we take for granted how cheap we're paying for these people."

"I realised it when I went overseas. I was 'Wow, in South Africa we underpay and we over-enjoy."


M-Net CEO: 'Focus on making African entertainment a big thing'
"We have to value who we are, we have to value what we do," said M-Net CEO Yolisa Phahle.

"We can't be prepared to spend money and run after things which are outside of our country but when it comes to our own investment in our own country, in our own languages, in our own communities, in our own musicians, have double standards," said Yolisa Phahle.

"It doesn't cost a different amount of money to hire The Dome if your name is Kendrick Lamar, than what it cost if your name is a local artist. The costs are the same."

"I think sometimes we are very hard on ourselves. What we actually need to do is to support ourselves and focus on making African entertainment the big thing it should be."

"Hollywood was built on its own hype. People in Hollywood said: 'We're coming here, we're building an industry, we're supporting this industry, we're reporting on this industry, we're funding this industry - and those are the lessons that we can learn," said Yolisa Phahle.

"There's no shortage of talent, there are no limits for our industry. It's down to us to do every single thing we can to make sure it happens."

'Not just local, but quality local'
Speaking about Trevor Noah's upcoming Trevor Noah Presents... that will be broadcast in 2018, Yolisa Phahle said South Africa needs to make television that is not just local, but television that is of the quality that will be appreciated all over the world.

"We want to make television that will showcase South African talent, television that will bring to the fore the incredible diversity of comedy in the country."

"At M-Net historically, we've been very good at dramas - if you think about kykNET (DStv 144), if you think about Mzansi Magic (DStv 161). We've made a lot of drama, we've made a lot of telenovela."

"The one genre where we have under-invested is comedy. And maybe it's because comedy is very difficult. It is actually, possibly, one of the most difficult genres to write and one of the most difficult genres to deliver."

"But we do have that comedy, we do have the amazing dynamics in our country which ultimately you can cry over but also you can laugh a lot because we're together and we've come a long way."

"Trevor Noah Presents... is a 13-part series. It is something which we are taking extremely seriously," said Yolisa Phahle.

"We really want to make sure that we do bring through new comedians and that Trevor Noah is able to give them the profile that they deserve so that they too can go out, and they too can earn a good living that they deserve, and to put the spotlight on South Africa globally."

Thursday, August 10, 2017

Trevor Noah reteams with M-Net for new 13-part comedy show in 2018, Trevor Noah Presents ..., to showcase young new South African comedians.


Comedian and The Daily Show host Trevor Noah is reteaming with M-Net (DStv 101) and will be doing a 13-part TV series set for broadcast in 2018, currently with the working title Trevor Noah Presents ... in which he will showcase upcoming young comedians in South Africa.

Back in South Africa to do a new stand-up show in Johannesburg and Durban during his holiday, Trevor Noah slammed criticism that tickets are too expensive, saying that it's time that South African talent and performers start valuing their work in the way that overseas artists are doing.

Trevor Noah, currently the host of The Daily Show on Comedy Central (DStv 122) made the announcement about his new comedy show partnership at a M-Net press conference on Thursday morning.

Trevor Noah who in the past credited M-Net as the first South African broadcaster that was willing to give him a TV show, Tonight with Trevor Noah that ran from 2010 on M-Net and Mzansi Magic, reiterated on Thursday that M-Net was a "big stepping stone" to getting his The Daily Show gig.

"I've had a great partnership with M-Net for many years now, M-Net was first to give me a shot to have my own TV show where I was involved in the creation of the show," said Trevor Noah.

"I've always wanted to give young comedians the opportunity to connect with their audience - young comedians doing comedy in different languages," he said about his plans for Trevor Noah Presents... 

"In the series I will be working with M-Net, me being in South Africa, gathering the finest comedians from across the country, and showcasing them to viewers in South Africa and saying 'hey, these are the comedians who will make you laugh' for every walk of life, every single race, every single language".

"I will be hosting the episodes, showcasing some of the comedians who I think deserve to be out there".



'M-Net provides a platform to launch incredible careers'
"We've always been passionate about showcasing local talent," said Yolisa Phahle, M-Net CEO, "not just because audiences love it, but also because at M-Net we firmly believe in giving ambitious, talented and creative people a platform on which they can hone their skills."

"Over the years M-Net's channels have provided a platform for many great South Africans who – through their own sheer hard work – have gone on to launch incredible careers."

"If we are going to grow this industry we have to compete with the biggest and the best. And that is actually what Trevor did."

"He left at a time when his star was rising very, very fast. He was a big name. But he realised there was a whole world out there and actually the best of South African talent can compete with the best of the world," said Yolisa Phahle.

'Take the no's as an opportunity to find the yes'es'
TVwithThinus asked Trevor Noah what his advice is for up-and-coming young South Africans, looking to him, dreaming of emulating him and of having a career in talk or stand-up and working in television.

"It's about determination," said Trevor Noah. "It's going where the work leads you. And taking the no's as an opportunity to find the yes'es."

"When I worked in South Africa, my dream was never to leave South Africa. That was never my dream. I just went where the work led me. I love doing shows in South Africa as much as I love doing shows out there in the world."

"I encourage people in South Africa to create excellence here. We have opportunities here that you don't have in the rest of the world. We have a shortage of local productions. We have a shortage of local talent because so many people think we have to turn elsewhere."

"The truth is we can create it here. Many movies are coming to South Africa. So we know we have the technical ability. South African actors are appearing in movies and TV shows overseas, so we know we have the talent over here."

"What we have to build on is the personal and physical infrastructure and working on our excellence. Just because it's South African doesn't mean it has to be inferior. For anyone I would say be excellent here."

"Don't wait for overseas. Just work on making the best thing possible in your country and you will find overseas will come knocking."


The blessing that South Africans take for granted
"One thing in America like South Africa, is we have free speech over there," said Trevor Noah, when asked if he isn't scared of American president Donald Trump. 

"So what's great is working in an environment where you can speak your mind. And I think that's a blessing that South Africans take for granted."

"I know from just my parents' generations – 20 years ago you couldn't say certain things. We live in a country where we take for granted the leeway we have with our arts and our press."

"I know people fight about that and go 'we don't have the free-est press but our press freedom is pretty high up there in the world."



High ticket prices because ...
After a journalist criticised Trevor Noah over how seemingly expensive the ticket prices for his latest stand-up shows are, he said he's actually using his holiday to do them which is why he couldn't fit Cape Town in, and "wanted to do a great show that looks good, sounds good, is good".

"I want to put on the show that people want me to put on. It is expensive? Definitely? Would I do it again? Probably not."

"In South Africa for a long time we've had that attitude that 'oh these tickets are expensive for a South African audience’. And yet when an international artist comes here I don't see anyone complaining when its R4000, R5000 a ticket."

"I've worked very hard to keep my costs as low as possible. But at the same time I don't want to fall into the same trap as many South Africans where you go: I will keep the price cheap, and you attend, and go: 'Yes I can see the price was cheap here' and that this wasn't on the standard of an international show."

"If I bring you a show, I have to bring it to you on a standard that I bring to all of my shows around the world," said Trevor.

"As a South African and as a performer I must say that we have to value our own. If we pay for our own, our own are more likely to stay here because they feel appreciated. We've got to build our industries here."

"I'm not just doing Trevor Noah. When I do Trevor Noah I hire people here, I'm hiring South African production companies, I'm hiring South African crews specifically, I'm hiring South African people managing the venue, I'm hiring South African comedians."

"So this isn't a show of me, this is a show of us. And I'm proud that people are willing to come and to be a part of that."

Thursday, February 9, 2017

DAILY TV NEWS ROUND-UP. Today's interesting TV stories to read from TVwithThinus - 9 February 2017.

Here's the latest news about TV that I read, and that you should too:

■ ZBC immediately fires unqualified managers.
Unlike at South Africa's SABC, the minimum qualification at the Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation (ZBC) is now a university degree and executives who failed to provide proof got axed.


■ Sally Spectra is returning to The Bold and the Beautiful on SABC3. Sortof.
A decade after red head Darlene Conley left (and since died), get ready for the return of Spectra Fashions and Spectra: The next generation with Patrika Darbo playing Sally's sister, Shirley Spectra.

■ MultiChoice Swaziland warn about a fake DStv scam in Swaziland.
Scam tries to con Swazis about MultiChoice allegedly handing out gift cards that can also be used to withdraw money at banks. It's fake.

■ New Zealand viewers absolute hate the new TV3 on-air look and rebrand.
Similar to SABC3's previous rebranding in 2014, New Zealand's TV3 channel is facing a viewer backlash over its terrible new look.

■ Facebook is getting very serious about (doing) TV.
Hires away MTV's head of scripted development Mina Lefevre to become Facebook's head of development for original programming.

■ BBC forced to admit people in crime show dramatisation were paid.
ITV Studios paid people to appear in the controversial crime show The Moorside to be in it to compensate them apparently for "their time, and time taken off work".


■ Viacom isn't planning on shutting down any of its struggling pay-TV channels.
But Spike TV is getting renamed Paramount Network. Viacom will also focus on 6 key TV channels: Comedy Central, BET, MTV, Nickelodeon, Nick Jr. - all available from Viacom International Media Networks Africa (VIMN Africa) on MultiChoice's DStv - and the Paramount Network. The rest of the channels are now less important.


■ How Netflix is failing in India ... and how Amazon Prime Video is winning.
India doesn't have a culture of spending on video and America's Netflix doesn't care to understand that India isn't one unified market.

■ Disney going digital.
Disney CEO Bob Iger explains how for Disney its future in television is now all about becoming digital channels (and that pay-TV sport channel ESPN still matters even though it continues to drag Disney down).

■ Did Sky News (DStv 402) presenter Jacquie Beltrao swear on air?
Start of an on-air oopsie when the nurdles fell.

■ John Oliver is trying to avoid Donald Trump ...
... or at least speaking about the American president when his weekly show, Last Week Tonight with John Oliver returns for a new season.

■ Meanwhile The Daily Show's Trevor Noah on Comedy Central (DStv 122) blasts Donald Trump
for ignoring "white" terrorism.

■ How Melissa McCarthy ended up playing Sean Spicer on SNL
The explainer for how the comedian became the pitch perfect belligerent White House press secretary on Saturday Night Live.

■  When will ITV Choice (DStv 123) eventually start showing The Halcyon ... if ever?
The 1940's drama called "the new Downton Abbey" might only eventually be on MultiChoice's DStv years behind in the way it happened on BBC Worldwide's BBC Entertainment with Downton Abbey.

■ Netflix plans to make toys, do books, based on some of its hit TV shows.
Streaming service wants to make more money from shows like Stranger Things.

Thursday, March 24, 2016

Things turn awkward for Trevor Noah from The Daily Show on Comedy Central when he's asked on-air: 'Are you a US citizen? Do you have a green card?'

Viewers can tune in tonight for a very awkward interview on Comedy Central (DStv 122) at 21:00 that turned into an even more cringe-worthy exchange when Trevor Noah as host of The Daily Show was asked on-air if he is a US citizen or has a green card.

The awkward moment came in a week that Trevor Noah was again slammed this week by TV critics and pop culture commentators in the United States for not quite living up to what they expect and want in a host of this satirical news show.

Things went weird and Trevor Noah seemed unprepared for the wit of the South Carolina Republican senator Lindsey Graham who got audience cheers and applause for his zingers which saw Trevor starting to play catch-up, instead of leading the interview, with a politician.

Lindsey Graham said he endorsed Ted Cruz as the Republican presidential candidate and that his endorsement "tells you everything you need to know about Donald Trump".

"I don't understand it," said Trevor Noah.

"We'll, you're not from here," said Lindsey Graham who after a few more zingers about the presidential race, turned on Trevor Noah asking: "Are you a citizen?"

"Am I a citizen? No, I'm not," said a hesitant Trevor Noah who failed to seize back control of the control of the interview. "I'm not, why?"

"Do you have a green card?" asked Lindsey Graham of Trevor Noah who started to look more and more uncomfortable. "I do not," said Trevor.

"If I were you, I'd be in a hurry," joked Graham. "If Trump wins, your days are numbered, pal. Young black liberal guy from Africa is not going to work with him".

Tuesday, February 2, 2016

Why The Daily Show's Trevor Noah on Comedy Central is increasingly being ignored by America; 'distant' Trevor seems remote instead of curious.


South Africa's Trevor Noah is apparently increasingly being "ignored" by America, with the new host of The Daily Show on Comedy Central (DStv 122) who've fallen out of favour with American audiences.

In an article entitled "Why are Americans ignoring Trevor Noah?" the influential Slate is now asking why American viewers are abandoning the South African comedian as viewership is continuing to slide for the show following the departure of Jon Stewart.

Where it used to be must-watch television, The Daily Show on Comedy Central is now called "inessential" television.

The Daily Show on Comedy Central - with episodes of the Viacom International Media Networks show seen in South Africa and Africa on DStv a day later on weekdays - has so far lost a third of its viewership compared to when Jon Stewart was the host, although more young people in America are watching the show online.

After four months as the new host of The Daily Show, Slate describes Trevor Noah's approach to jokes as "distant" and that he lacks the "outraged advocacy" that made Jon Stewart's comedy so agenda-setting and the comedian a media darling.

Where the British John Oliver - whose Last Week Tonight satirical news show was broadcast in South Africa on M-Net (DStv 101) and will be switching to M-Net Edge (DStv 102) from Sunday 21 February at 21:00 - is using his "distance" from America to make his jokes on American politics "feel even sharper and more objective", Slate says "The Daily Show hasn't decided whether to play up Noah's outsider perspective or to pretend it doesn't exist".

"Playing naïve has also undermined Noah," says Slate. "Trevor Noah tends to seem remote and jokey, rather than genuinely curious".

"Noah will have time to figure out his point of view and his writers time to figure out how to maximize his particular skills. But in the meantime, we're left with a dulled Daily Show shedding relevancy in the midst of a wild and urgent election," says Slate.

Wednesday, January 6, 2016

More tweaks for The Daily Show on Comedy Central as first show for 2016 introduces a reworked theme song, Trevor Noah does his recaps in stand-up.


Trevor Noah, the South African comedian and new host of the The Daily Show on Comedy Central (DStv 122) is starting to make changes and returned last night with the first new episode of 2016 with slight tweaks to the satirical show including an updated theme song and doing news recaps away from the desk in stand-up.

On Tuesday night South African viewers of Viacom International Media Networks Africa's Comedy Central channel on MultiChoice's DStv heard a reworked version of the show's well-known theme song "Dog on Fire" on The Daily Show at the end of the first new episode.

The song was last changed in 1999 from the original version. It has now been redone by the R&B artist and rapper Timbaland and King Logan, and remixed by Chris Godbey with a faster beat and a more prominent rock sound. 

The new theme song follows the updated graphics and imaging that were introduced for The Daily Show when Trevor Noah made his debut at the end of September 2015.

It's likely that the South African comedian and his producers after a few months now feel more comfortable to introduce more changes after first wanting to reassure the audience in 2015 that the show will look the same and won't stray too far from Jon Stewart's legacy during the host transition. 

Another new change to The Daily Show viewers saw with the first 2016 episode was that Trevor Noah did his delivery of news recaps in stand-up as opposed to being seated behind the desk - a format he's much more comfortable with and used to.

It was only for his last story about guns in Texas that Trevor Noah quickly jumped back behind his desk, saying "Ah, Texas. You've even made me move to the desk. Because whenever I'm doing a story about guns I like to have something I can duck behind".

Since Trevor Noah took over hosting duties in September of The Daily Show ratings on Comedy Central has declined 38%. Although fewer viewers are watching, they are younger viewers. The Daily Show is now the 6th most watched late night show out of 12 in America.

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

BREAKING. Trevor Noah rushed to hospital for emergency operation; Comedy Central's Daily Show host recuperating after emergency appendectomy.


Trevor Noah (31) has been rushed to hospital for an emergency appendectomy on Wednesday morning in New York.

The South African comedian which recently took over hosting duties from Jon Stewart of The Daily Show at the end of September in New York, underwent an emergency operation and is currently recuperating from the surgery, says Comedy Central.

"Trevor Noah underwent an emergency appendectomy early this morning. We're happy to report the procedure went well and he is currently recuperating from the surgery," Comedy Central (DStv 122) said in a statement on Wednesday afternoon New York time.

"As a result, The Daily Show will air an encore tonight. We expect he and the show will be back with an original episode tomorrow."

The Daily Show said "we wish Trevor Noah a speedy recovery from his time in an American hospital".

Comedy Central said that the expectation is that Trevor Noah would be back behind The Daily Show anchor desk on Thursday night for a new episode.

Trevor Noah will definitely address his very first unscheduled absence from The Daily Show in Thursday night's episode when he's sure to make light of it; that episode will be broadcast on Comedy Central on DStv in Africa on Friday night.

While viewership of The Daily Show is down in the United States with Trevor Noah the past month compared to his predecessor Jon Stewart, the ratings show that the median age of those watching the show has dropped two years.

It means that less people are watching The Daily Show with Trevor Noah, but that those who are watching are a bit younger.

Wednesday, June 10, 2015

Trevor Noah's Twitter scandal was 'very unpleasant' for Viacom and Comedy Central bosses; admits Trevor's Twitter feed wasn't vetted.


The Comedy Central boss has admitted that Trevor Noah's Twitter scandal which broke the day after he was announced as the new host of The Daily Show was "very unpleasant" and that everyone forgot to look and vet at Noah's Twitter history.

At the Promax BDA conference in Los Angeles, Doug Herzog, Viacom Music and Entertainment Group chief, said that everyone forgot to look at Noah's Twitter feed and wasn't aware of the bad sexist and anti-Semitic jokes he had made.

"Truthfully, it never occurred to us," said Doug Herzog, who admitted that his boss immediately wanted to know if Trevor Noah's Twitter past was vetted before the announcement was made that he would be taking over from Jon Stewart on Comedy Central (DStv 122).

“We did not, and of course that's the first thing my boss asked me."

Doug Herzog was however adamant that there were no plans to replace Trevor Noah after the controversy erupted.

Viacom International Media Networks Africa (VIMN Africa) will bring The Daily Show with Trevor Noah from 29 September to Comedy Central (DStv 122) on MultiChoice's DStv satellite pay-TV platform, less than a day after episodes are broadcast.

About Trevor Noah's Twitter jokes Doug Herzog said that "when we looked back on it, many of them were taken out of context, some just weren't funny enough, and I think that's where a lot of people's problems were with it."

"I'm not sure what we really could have done. I'm not sure we would have said, 'Wait that guy's not for us because he made that joke five years ago in response to something that happened that day.' I'm not sure what we would have really done. But it should be a lesson to us all."

Doug Herzog said he watched Twitter explode. "It was unpleasant. But that's a very particular dark place." 

He said Viacom and Comedy Central should have been more prepared. "We should have been more mentally prepared for how people would react when the announcement was made, no matter who it was. And there was certainly an unfortunate misstep in there."

"Trevor will go on, and there will be people who love him the first night, there will be people who hate him the first night, but he's coming back for night two, he's coming back for night three. He's going to be there for a long time," said Doug Herzog.

"From the very moment we saw him, and I think Jon felt the same way, we said, 'This guy is going to host The Daily Show some day.' I don't think anybody expected that day to be as soon as it turned out to be," said Doug Herzog.

"The Daily Show now demands somebody who's funny, who's insightful, who's smart, who understands world events and the news. It's not everybody who can bring all that together. We thought Trevor was one of the few guys who could, and who could speak in their own distinctive voice. I believe Trevor has that," said Doug Herzog. "Ultimately, we thought he was the right guy for the job."

Wednesday, April 1, 2015

Today's interesting TV stories to read from TV with Thinus - 1 April 2015.


The backlash in America against South Africa's Trevor Noah has started one day after he was announced as the new host of The Daily Show on Comedy Central (DStv 122).

Trevor Noah's social media became a beating stick as people scoured through his Twitter feed - as far back as 2009 -for messages offensive to women and Jews. 
Some more of Trevor Noah's offensive Twitter messages and Comedy Central had to do damage control on Tuesday, calling criticism of Trevor Noah "unfair" and saying that Trevor Noah "has a bright future at Comedy Central".
Why did Trevor Noah become a villain and why did people turn on him so quickly? Should Trevor Noah be held to a higher standard? Trevor Noah finally says it was "jokes that didn't land".

Ad Age says the outrage won't bring down Trevor Noah in its opinion and Variety says Comedy Central should defend Trevor Noah's right to offend.
Meanwhile the younger Trevor Noah could perhaps reverse the aging audience of Comedy Central and The Daily Show.
And how Trevor Noah got The Daily Show job - Jon Stewart played an advisory role.


South African documentary producer drags Sabido and e.tv to the broadcasting regulator.
The Independent Communication Authority of South Africa (Icasa) will hear on 9 and 10 April a fascinating case from documentary producer Kevin Harris alleging that Sabido and e.tv are not fulfilling their broadcasting licence obligations when it comes to supporting the production of independent local documentaries.


Downton Abbey bosses tried to keep the show going...
... without creator and writer Julian Fellowes. TV executives wanted the ITV drama shown on BBC Entertainment (DStv 120) to continue for longer and further than the final 6th upcoming season this year.

We can interfere with South Africa and the media's freedom of speech says parliament speaker, Baleka Mbete.
The controversial speaker of parliament has the audacity to argue in court papers that parliament has the "right" to cut broadcasts of the TV feed because because disruptions will damage the "dignity" of parliament.

eNCA (DStv 403) set to fire 40 people.
Forty people at Sabido's 24-hour TV news channel are apparently going to lose their jobs.

The SABC to hear the case against its head of news Jimi Matthews.
After Jimi Matthews allegedly assaulted a female SABC employee there's now a date for the grievance procedure and possible disciplinary process.

The arrival of Netflix in Australia is bad for pay-TV subscribers there.
A price comparison site reveals the best TV shows are already exclusively being shown on other pay-TV providers, and video-on-demand (VOD) services could damage Australia's TV and film industries.

And how Netflix is growing - could be worth a massive $100 billion.

Is Sherlock on BBC Entertainment (DStv 120) gay?
TV series creator Steven Moffat says that Sherlock is not gay and not interested in sex.

Nigerians now want to ditch DStv after MultiChoice's price hike from April.
DStv subscribers in Nigeria are furious over the price increase and blame the government for "failing to call MultiChoice Nigeria to order".

Richard Hammond and James May no longer work for the BBC.
After the BBC fired Jeremy Clarkson from Top Gear on BBC Entertainment (DStv 120) the other two co-presenters are now out of their Top Gear job as well.

Meanwhile the Top Gear Live world tours - including the one in South Africa - will now drop all references to Top Gear and be rebranded and known as Clarkson, Hammond and May Live as it is stripped of all BBC branding by BBC Worldwide.

Monday, March 30, 2015

Comedy Central Africa on Trevor Noah taking over The Daily Show from Jon Stewart: 'An extraordinary milestone for African comedy'.


Comedy Central Africa (DStv 122) run by Viacom International Media Networks Africa (VIMN Africa" calls South African Trevor Noah's appointment as the new host of The Daily Show taking over from Jon Stewart "an extraordinary milestone for African comedy".

Viacom's Comedy Central today officially announced Trevor Noah as the new host of The Daily Show after news leaked over the weekend that Trevor Noah was the frontrunner to replace Jon Stewart when he retires in September.

"When you hear that a South African comedian is going to replace Jon Stewart as the host of the most trusted satirical comedy show in the world,you know it's a great day for Trevor Noah and an extraordinary milestone for African comedy," says Evert van der Veer, the head of Comedy Central Africa in a statement on Monday afternoon.

"Supporting African comedians and comedy has been one of the key tenets of Comedy Central Africa since we started, and we salute Trevor's achievement with pride on our hearts and a tear in our eye," says Evert van der Veer.

Comedy Central says the debut date of The Daily Show with Trevor Noah is not yet certain.

"Trevor Noah is an enormous talent," says Comedy Central president Michele Ganeless in a statement.

"For the next host of The Daily Show we set out to find a fresh voice who can speak to our audience with a keen take on the events of the day, and we found that in Trevor. He has a huge international following and is poised to explode here in America, and we are thrilled to have him join Comedy Central".

In the statement Trevor Noah says "it's an honour to follow Jon Stewart. He and the team at The Daily Show have created an incredible show whose impact is felt all over the world. In my brief time with the show they've made me feel so welcome. I'm excited to get started and work with such a fantastic group of people."

Trevor Noah who appeared on The Daily Show for the first time in December and has made two other appearances since, has been the subject of David Paul Meyer's award-winning documentary film You Laugh But It's True which tells the story of his comedy career in post-apartheid South Africa.

Trevor Noah's Nationwide Comedy Tour has just been added by MultiChoice to DStv's DStv BoxOffice video-on-demand service.

The Hollywood trade publication Variety called Trevor Noah "a South African comedian with a low profile in the United States" and The Hollywood Reporter said that "the search to find a successor has been complicated by the fact that many of the presumed top choices have recently signed onto new shows that prevent them from taking the gig".