this post was submitted on 05 Oct 2023
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Comic Roy Wood Jr. says he will not return to his position as a correspondent on Comedy Central's The Daily Show when the show resumes new episodes later this month, ending a job he first started eight years ago.

The reason: Since he hasn't been offered the job as permanent host of the show, Wood wants some time to figure out his next act.

Wood says he doesn't know if his name is under consideration for the top job and he has already informed Comedy Central of his intention not to return. ("What could they really say?" he adds when asked how the cable channel responded. [They're] not going to give me the job just to keep me.") But if Comedy Central offered him the permanent host job now, the comic says he would still consider it.

The show began presenting a succession of guest hosts starting in January after South African comic Trevor Noah left the job

According to figures provided by Comedy Central in April, Wood had the second-best ratings of the show's first 11 guest hosts, second only to Al Franken and beating Minhaj.

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[–] UrLogicFails 10 points 1 year ago (2 children)

I haven't watched The Daily Show in a long time, so I don't have much of a horse in this race; but I could tell a lot of people were really hopeful that Roy Wood Jr would get the host role.

Hearing about the guest host roster and the entire process definitely is reminiscent of when Jeopardy short changed Levar Burton for the host position. It was later revealed to have been a play by the (former) executive producer to give himself the host position; but by the time Jeopardy got its house in order, Levar Burton had already been given his own show to host.

I think a lot of times studios aren't really as in touch with what people want as they think and they can easily overlook a crowd favorite. I'm hoping that similar to the Levar Burton Jeopardy situation, this will reveal Roy Wood Jr's popularity to allow him his own show as well.

[–] communication 4 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

I think this may be different than the Jeopardy situation. I know there's a general sentiment that Burton was the best option - and I felt the same way at the start of the process - but I've read a lot of behind-the-scenes accounts that suggest Burton simply wasn't good at the job. They had to spend hours refilming segments in ways that weren't necessary for other hosts, and the finished product wasn't as good as most of us were imagining.

Obviously the Mike Richards situation was ridiculous, and maybe there was sabotage we don't know about. My own sense is that the hive mind was wrong about Burton for that specific role - and that's not a knock on Burton! - and things concluded well for everyone.

[–] UrLogicFails 3 points 1 year ago

I never kept up too closely with the Jeopardy situation, but my (limited) understanding was that the EP deliberately set Burton up to fail; giving him only one week (instead of the two weeks that other hosts were given) and making his week during the Olympics.

Only having one week instead of two meant that he was only actually filming for a day or two and likely didn't have a chance to really find his footing. And of course, being during the Olympics hurt his ratings.

Now, were those two issues the some cause of all of his problems? Probably not; but it definitely feels like they were never intending to give him the job.

As you said, though, it all worked out in the end anyways; and I'm hoping it all works out for Roy Wood Jr as well.

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