logo
Jon Stewart Remembers Creepy Meeting With Roger Ailes in the ‘Bowels of Fox News': ‘Yelled at Each Other for About an Hour'

Jon Stewart Remembers Creepy Meeting With Roger Ailes in the ‘Bowels of Fox News': ‘Yelled at Each Other for About an Hour'

Yahoo2 days ago
"He wanted me to show appreciation because without him I have no career,' the 'Daily Show' host tells Mehdi Hasan
Jon Stewart had an interaction with former Fox News president Roger Ailes that still chills him to the bone.
While speaking with Medhi Hasan on 'The Weekly Show' podcast Thursday, the Comedy Central star explained that his presence was once requested for 'one of those bananas-type meetings in the bowels of Fox News' with Ailes after he had guested on 'The O'Reilly Factor.'
More from TheWrap
Jon Stewart Remembers Creepy Meeting With Roger Ailes in the 'Bowels of Fox News': 'Yelled at Each Other for About an Hour' | Video
Megyn Kelly Slams Sen. Elissa Slotkin's Stephen Colbert Interview, Says She Wanted to 'Punch Her in the Face' | Video
Fox News Had Only 3 Minutes of Epstein Coverage in the Last 4 Days – and 85 Minutes of Sydney Sweeney's Jeans Ad
Shirley Halperin Exits Hollywood Reporter for Rolling Stone, Maer Roshan Becomes Sole EIC of THR
To hear Stewart tell it, 'The Daily Show' host had gone after Ailes and his Fox News for the entirety of his run on the show and the late network president wanted thanks.
'I used to go on Bill O'Reilly's show. Every now and again they would bring in the, you know, 'clownish liberal' – myself – and I would go on there,' he began. 'And one day, one of the people came down and said Mr. Ailes would like to see you. And I thought, 'Why? Geez, I didn't even know he lived in the building.''
Stewart continued: 'We had to walk through the kind of 'Get Smart' — doors would open and shut. You didn't really know where you were until you got into this one part of the building that was colder than the other parts of the building. You almost felt the hair on the back of your neck and the chill, and you could see everybody's breath in this one part. And he and I yelled at each other in the office for about an hour. He wanted me to show appreciation to him, because without him I have no career. And I wanted him to stop poisoning the atmosphere around the country.'
'And harassing his blonde hosts,' podcast guest Mehdi Hasan chimed in.
Ailes also mentioned the meeting between the two in an interview with The Hollywood Reporter back in 2015 as Stewart's time on 'The Daily Show' was coming to an end. The then-president had a much cheerier perspective on the meeting.
'You can't say that many negative things about people unless you're really unhappy about something,' Ailes said. 'I actually think he doesn't dislike me. We met once or twice. I talked to him for an hour once in my office. I think he's really smart, and he's got a great future.'
Stewart and Hasan marveled at Ailes' strategy for dealing with discourse and opposition from the left. It happens to be the same playbook used today by most of the right — most prominently by President Donald Trump and his supporters, they said.
'His methodology was: 'I am going to discredit all of the institutions or any of the voices that may in any way harm my movement. I'm going to make sure that editorial authority is seen as elitism. I am going to exercise authoritarian control over my message machine,'' Stewart explained. 'And that's, I think, the genius of that movement.'
Hasan just went viral for debating a number of right-wing enthusiasts on Jubilee's YouTube page earlier this month. He explained the difficulties that came with having those conversations because the people he was debating don't play by the same rules.
'Liberals and Democrats and Leftists have got to understand that you are not on some ridiculous even playing field,' he said. 'I've been hearing this since Donald Trump came down the escalator in 2015 – 'just because they don't play by the rules doesn't mean we shouldn't.' No that's exactly what it means!'
Watch the full 'Weekly Show' episode below:
The post Jon Stewart Remembers Creepy Meeting With Roger Ailes in the 'Bowels of Fox News': 'Yelled at Each Other for About an Hour' | Video appeared first on TheWrap.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New Photos Reveal Iconic White House Rose Garden Paved Over After Trump Makeover
New Photos Reveal Iconic White House Rose Garden Paved Over After Trump Makeover

Yahoo

time2 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

New Photos Reveal Iconic White House Rose Garden Paved Over After Trump Makeover

President Donald Trump'slong-promised overhaul of the White House Rose Garden became reality in photos taken this week. The green lawn at the center of the garden, used for decades for White House events, has been replaced with what appeared to be white stone. Some foliage remained, with rose bushes and hedges bordering the new patio area. The changes fulfilled Trump's former vow to pave over the garden. He said the grass got too wet and the terrain made it hard for women to walk in high heels. This is the second time the Rose Garden has undergone big changes with Trump in office. In 2020, First Lady Melania Trump oversaw her own Rose Garden makeover, which involved adding pathways, planting new rose bushes and tearing out some of the garden's previous vegetation, including its beloved crab apple trees. While her updates drew some backlash at the time, the changes weren't nearly as stark as her husband's new redesign. This week, critics blasted the garden's new look on social media. That said, some people liked it, with fans noting that it includes drains shaped like American flags. Revamping the garden isn't the only thing on Trump's White House renovation docket. He also plans spend $200 million tearing down the East Wing to construct a ballroom. Related... New Photos Show Gravel Laid Over White House Rose Garden As Trump Reno Takes Root Trump Is Tearing Up Part Of The White House To Build A $200 Million Ballroom Trump Makes Good On His Much-Criticized Rose Garden Pledge

Fox News Entertainment Newsletter: American Eagle on Sydney Sweeney's ad, Paulina Porizkova stuns in bikini
Fox News Entertainment Newsletter: American Eagle on Sydney Sweeney's ad, Paulina Porizkova stuns in bikini

Fox News

time3 minutes ago

  • Fox News

Fox News Entertainment Newsletter: American Eagle on Sydney Sweeney's ad, Paulina Porizkova stuns in bikini

Welcome to the Fox News Entertainment Newsletter. TOP 3: - American Eagle fires back at critics after Sydney Sweeney campaign sparks online backlash - Supermodel Paulina Porizkova stuns in bikini and lingerie to show 'the beauty of 60' - Prince Harry 'desperate' to win back royal family in latest maneuver with King Charles: expert LIFTING THE CURTAIN - Justin Timberlake battling Lyme disease, faced 'relentlessly debilitating' pain during world tour. LEGENDARY GOODBYE - Rock legends gather for Ozzy Osbourne's final farewell at private mansion ceremony. HOLLYWOOD HEAT - Liam Neeson and Pamela Anderson's hot chemistry comes after he swore off dating. INDUSTRY PUSHBACK - 'Yellowstone' star Neal McDonough says Hollywood blackballed him due to his no-kissing rule. CAMO HEARTS - 'Duck Dynasty' stars Willie and Korie Robertson share the hard-won lessons of decades-long marriage. SPARKS FLY - Katy Perry fuels Justin Trudeau romance buzz with Montreal tour stop appearance. HOLLYWOOD HEARTBREAK - Dean Cain admits romance with Pamela Anderson was short-lived for this one reason. LIKE WHAT YOU'RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS FOLLOW FOX NEWS ON SOCIAL MEDIA

Trump should heed, not hide, the jobs numbers
Trump should heed, not hide, the jobs numbers

Washington Post

time4 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Trump should heed, not hide, the jobs numbers

Here's a life hack for readers who are trying to lose weight and are discouraged by the numbers on the scale: Take a hammer to the thing. If that seems too destructive, donate it to the Salvation Army and, if you must keep a scale in the house, buy a new model that tops out at 150 pounds. The secret behind this hack is psychology. It's hard to eat less than your body wants, which is why people who try to lose weight often fail and feel miserable. But if no working scale is available, you can't fail: Eat as much as you like; the numbers will never climb. Sound crazy? It is. But the president has just used a version of this trick to deal with a sagging American jobs market. For months, commentators have been asking why tariffs aren't weighing on the economy more heavily. Importers — including many manufacturers — have been worried that they will. But the headline jobs and gross domestic product data have looked pretty good. Then came Friday's jobs report. The Bureau of Labor Statistics, a unit of the Labor Department, revised its estimates for May and June payrolls sharply downward, by more than 250,000 jobs, and estimated that the economy added only 73,000 jobs in July, well below analysts' expectations. Virtually all these new jobs came from health care and social services. The numbers contain no sign of the manufacturing boom that President Donald Trump has promised. This is not the sort of jobs report any president wants to see; it's the kind that portends falling approval ratings and party losses at the next election. So Trump took immediate, decisive action: He hopped on Truth Social and announced that he would fire Erika McEntarfer, the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This move was so boneheaded, William Beach, who served as bureau commissioner during the first Trump administration, called it 'totally groundless' and 'a dangerous precedent' that 'undermines the statistical mission of the Bureau.' A hearty second to that. Trying to intimidate the Bureau of Labor Statistics is the policy equivalent of smashing your bathroom scale. It's banana republic stuff, and it won't work any better in the United States. On the margin, a few voters might be fooled into thinking economic conditions are better than they really are. But the trick can work only so far — as the Biden administration found out when it tried to gaslight voters into believing that everything in the White House was going just great. The people most susceptible to the spin fall into two groups: the president's base, who don't need it, and high-information voters who pay close attention to economic data, many of whom will understand how the numbers have been juked, and most of whom probably already know which side they're voting for next time around. Everyone will be paying closer attention to what's happening in their own experience. Are wages rising? Are their friends and relatives being laid off? Is it easy to find another job? If they're getting the wrong answers to these questions, it really doesn't matter what numbers the bureau is putting out. That is, it doesn't matter politically. Bureau of Labor Statistics numbers matter tremendously in other ways. They feed into a great deal of market activity as well as vital social science, both of which are possible only if the numbers are trustworthy. The statistics are also, of course, one of the president's essential guides to economic policy. This guide is now telling the administration that it is moving in the wrong direction. A wise politician would take heed and course-correct to avoid bumbling deeper into the woods. Instead, Trump wants to shoot the messenger so his supporters won't realize he's led them astray. He might be able to find a new BLS commissioner who will cook the numbers to make them more aesthetically pleasing, though this would not be easy. As economist Scott Winship of the American Enterprise Institute pointed out, a lot of people work on these numbers, 'So absent mass firings at BLS, this solves nothing.' But even if Trump managed to bully the guides into telling him what he wants to hear, what then? Eventually voters will look around and notice the truth: America is losing its way.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store