Here is a list of past recurring segments from mostly the era in which
Jon Stewart hosted the show, in alphabetical order:
10 F#@king Years 10 F#@king Years is a segment that was featured on the show throughout 2006, to celebrate the show's tenth anniversary. The segment usually features host Jon Stewart offering a nostalgic look back at the show's past segments (normally spanning Stewart's run as host), usually focusing on a specific theme. The segment debuted on July 17, 2006, around the time of the show's actual anniversary. The segment continued on until the end of 2006, when the anniversary was over.
Are You Prepared?!? Are You Prepared?!? was a segment that debuted on the show on May 16, 2006 featuring
Samantha Bee. Focusing on preparedness for a potential disaster or bad situation, the segment was styled as a parody of the scare tactics used by
sensationalist news shows. In the segment, the correspondent normally travelled around in a large van with the words "Are You Prepared?!?" on its side, often knocking on doors of unsuspecting residents and "testing their preparedness" in the given scenario. Bee performed the segment two times, with her husband, correspondent
Jason Jones hosting an installment on November 9, 2006.
Even Stevphen Even Stevphen was a segment that was an in-studio debate about a current topic between correspondents
Steve Carell and
Stephen Colbert. They would often spend the time insulting each other instead, sometimes resulting in one of them breaking down in tears, due to painful childhood memories. It is very similar to the show's earlier segment, "Backfire". The segment's name is a composite of the two correspondents' homophonic first names, sometimes appearing as
Even Stephven or
Even Stepvhen (the
ph and
v appear superimposed on top of each other in the segment's opening graphic). The segment's debut, on September 20, 1999, is the source of the two soundbites used in the most frequent incarnation of the segment's opening graphic: Carell's "You just made me vomit in my own mouth!" and Colbert's "What's the weather like up your own ass?" The segment was discontinued when Steve Carell left the show, after a brief one-off take featuring
Ed Helms (Carell's
The Office co-star) as Colbert's debate partner, in which Helms deliberately demonstrated that he was incapable of grasping the premise of the segment. On September 19, 2006, a montage of the best of "Even Stevphen" was shown as part of
The Daily Show's "10 F#@king Years". The segment was revived on the July 7, 2010 episode of
The Colbert Report, when Carell was the guest. They debated how uncomfortable the interview was for them, leading into both insulting each other for bad career decisions, and ending with both men crying and a surprise appearance by
Jon Stewart who begged the two to answer how they were able to leave the show. It was revived again on the May 13, 2024 episode of
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. Carell is a guest for Colbert's 60th birthday and they both argue about advantages and disadvantages of getting older.
A Tale of Survival A Tale of Survival was a segment that was always done by correspondent
Vance DeGeneres, in which he would present a feature done in the style of a
Dateline NBC report. In it, a trivial incident was reported as if it were quite dangerous and serious, such as the time the pork chop a man was preparing caught fire and distressed his pet
parrot. Between pre-filmed portions, Vance would appear in the studio hiding behind various set-decorations or apparatuses, describing the events in greater frightful detail. Unlike other
Daily Show pieces, this one would be divided by a commercial break to accentuate the anticlimactic aspect. The segment first appeared in or around 1999 and was discontinued when Vance DeGeneres left the show in 2001.
Ad Nauseam Ad Nauseam was a segment in which its host played various clips of television advertisements and then made fun of them. The original host of the segment was
Michael Blieden until 1999.
Steve Carell was the host from 1999 to 2002, but when he left the show for his
movie and television career, correspondent
Ed Helms began to take his place starting in 2002. The segment was discontinued around 2003. It bears some resemblance to the "Ad Absurdum" segment on the
CBC's
Royal Canadian Air Farce.
The Decider The Decider was an animated segment done in the style of a comic book. The segment's main character was President
George W. Bush as the superhero
The Decider. The segment originated when Bush made a comment referring to himself as "
the decider" during a press conference on April 18, 2006.
The Decider was only featured on the show three times, with its first appearance on April 19, 2006 (the day after Bush's use of the term).
The Decider made an additional appearance on May 18, 2006. After a hiatus of two years, the segment was featured for the third and final on the June 19, 2008 episode, with an additional twist —
The Decider had now become
The Procastinator.
Diagnosis Diagnosis: was a segment that occurred twice, as "Diagnosis: Mystery" and "Diagnosis: Science." "Mystery" was hosted by Jason Jones in the guise of a medical interest piece, exploring cures for homosexuality. "Science" was hosted by Rob Riggle, exploring how
cloning animals will affect food choices.
Digital Watch Digital Watch was a segment hosted by
Ed Helms and focused on new technology. The segment began sometime around February 2003 and was discontinued sometime around the Summer of 2004.
Dollars and "Cents" Dollars and "Cents" was a segment where two hosts discuss economics and give financial advice. It ridiculed the format of financial news shows and included a
stock ticker and a bug in the left corner saying "MSTDSFN", mimicking the names and logos of
MSNBC and
CNN FN. The hosts and format varied somewhat. When it premiered in early 2000 it was hosted by
Steve Carell and
Vance DeGeneres, with
Nancy Walls reporting from the stock exchange as a "Money Bunny". The "Money Bunny" was usually treated poorly by the two male hosts who would make jokes at her expense. After DeGeneres left, he was replaced by
Mo Rocca. Eventually, other correspondents would appear in the rotating spots as "Host" and "Money Bunny" such as Miriam Tolan,
Matt Walsh, Campbell Smith,
Lauren Weedman and
Ed Helms. Dollars and "Cents" was last seen in 2002 when
Rob Corddry was reporting from its news desk.
Exper-teasers Exper-teasers was hosted by resident expert
John Hodgman, debuting on August 24, 2006. The segment was pre-recorded and featured Hodgman, as the show's "Resident Expert", discussing a different topic each week from a room full of books.
Samantha Bee was the voice over announcer for the segment's introduction. In each segment, a question appeared on-screen and Hodgman addressed the subject, often using doctored-up photos and other humorous visual aides. Hodgman ended each segment by saying "I'm John Hodgman, and you're welcome." While the "Exper-teasers" segment only appeared twice, Hodgman continues to appear on the show as the Resident Expert.
Great Moments in Punditry As Read By Children Great Moments in Punditry As Read By Children was a segment that featured small children reading transcripts of contentious moments from programs like
Crossfire and
Hannity and Colmes. The segment was featured prominently between 2004 and 2005 and usually aired just before a commercial break.
Guantanamo Baywatch A series of segments detailing the treatment of prisoners at the
Guantanamo Bay detention camp. It features an in-house correspondent named "Gitmo" (an
Elmo hand puppet with an added Islamic beard operated by Stewart in front of a greenscreen) who details his torture and eventual release from Guantanamo, having convinced the authorities he is in fact a
Uighur. Stewart voices Gitmo in a style similar to Elmo, but with a Middle Eastern accent.
Headlines Headlines was the segment that always opened the show for the first four years that Jon Stewart hosted the show. In the segment, Stewart would focus on the big stories of the day. The segment was abruptly dropped around 2003, and no reason was given. This was one of the three divisions of the show under Stewart's first few years; the others being "
Other News" and "
This Just In". All three were dropped in 2003. The term is still used on The Daily Show website to categorize videos of a night's leading news story.
The Jobbing of America The Jobbing of America was a segment about jobs, hosted by
Stephen Colbert.
Klassic Kolbert Klassic Kolbert was a segment consisting of a previously aired segment featuring former correspondent Stephen Colbert. The segment first appeared on February 8, 2006, several months after Colbert left
The Daily Show to host its spin-off,
The Colbert Report. Mark Your Calendar Mark Your Calendar was a segment in which its host went over highlights of the upcoming month. At one particular time, the segment was done on a monthly basis.
Mo Rocca originally hosted the segment,
Ed Helms hosted it from
2002 to
2003, and Samantha Bee began hosting the segment in 2003. At one point, the segment was known as '''Mark One's Calendar'''.
Money Talks A segment hosted by contributor
John Hodgman focused on financial and wealth issues. Hodgman portrays himself as an incredibly wealthy and successful author who looks down on those poorer than him.
Mopinion Mopinion was a commentary segment delivered in a
deadpan fashion by
Mo Rocca.
Other News Other News was the segment that always followed Jon Stewart's "
Headlines" segment for the first four years of his stint as host. In the segment, Stewart would focus on the less important stories of the day, which would provide a comedic contrast to the segment "Headlines". The segment was abruptly dropped around 2003, and no reason was given. This was one of the three divisions of the show under Stewart's first few years; the others being "Headlines" and "
This Just In". All three were dropped in 2003.
Out at the Movies Out at the Movies was a segment hosted by
Frank DeCaro who provided the audience with a look at new
feature films in-character as a flamboyantly
homosexual film critic who can find gay subtext in any film. During his stint on the show,
Comedy Central ran yearly extended thirty-minute-long versions of "Out at the Movies" for the
Oscars. The segment debuted in 1997 and was one of the show's longest running segments. It was discontinued when Frank DeCaro left the show in 2003.
Poll Smoking with Dave Gorman Poll Smoking with Dave Gorman was a segment in which the segment's host, Dave Gorman, credited as the show's Statistical Analyst, presents satirical views of polls and statistics pertaining to current events. In each segment, Gorman pretends not to notice the double-meaning of his segment's title (a reference to
fellatio) and makes several accidental jokes involving the title, until the October 5, 2006 segment when Gorman "found out" the meaning of the segment's title and "decided" to go along with it. This segment first appeared on April 27, 2006 and last appeared on October 5, 2006. Gorman had originally appeared on the show as a guest in December 2001, to promote his book
Are You Dave Gorman?. He was hired as a contributor four years later, making him the second contributor to be hired after appearing on the show as a guest to promote his book (after
John Hodgman).
Produce Pete with Steve Carell Produce Pete was a segment hosted by
Steve Carell, in which he gave humorous advice regarding
produce, interspersed with comments about his life's own failures. The segment was previously-taped and first came about around 2002 or 2003 when Carell became too busy with his movie career to do live segments on the show. This segment would typically air towards the end of the show, right before "
Your Moment of Zen". The segment was discontinued when Carell left the show, though it did make a brief reappearance after Carell was "discovered" to have been lost in Iraq.
The Seat of Heat The Seat of Heat debuted on the show on September 13, 2006. The segment was featured during the guest interview; Stewart would ask the guest one question thought to be particularly tough to answer. (For example, during an interview with
Johnny Knoxville: "Which member of your show will be the first to die and what will his scrotum be stapled to then?"). During the segment, the screen behind Stewart and his guest filled with images of flames.
The Seat of Heat was the first regular segment during the guest interview since "
Five Questions". However, this segment was short-lived. It was discontinued in November 2006, two days after Stewart jokingly complained to guest
Tina Fey that "for some reason, we're married to this bit now."
Slimming Down with Steve Slimming Down with Steve was a segment chronicling Carell's character's misguided attempts to lose weight. Among the methods suggested were eating vegetable shortening as a healthier alternative to ice cream (which Carell did in front of Stewart and the audience, to their obvious disgust) and undergoing surgery that apparently left him with
open wounds. Humor was also derived from Carell's extremely degrading comments about his own (very exaggerated, if even existent) weight problems, such as, "I've been trying to slim down through diet and exercise, but I still feel like 190 pounds of crap in a 175-pound bag!"–announced with a cheery smile. The segment ran five times in 2001 and featured a cheesy opening sequence with a song whose lyrics, sung by Carell, consisted only of "Slimmin' down with Steve, slimmin' down with Steve!" repeated over and over.
Slow News Day Slow News Day was a segment that debuted on the June 13, 2006 episode. The segment was a compilation of news clips, usually from
CNN,
MSNBC or
Fox News, which followed an unusually dull or trivial news event over the course of several hours. The segment was very short and was usually played before going to commercial, with no introduction.
This Just In This Just In was the segment that always followed Jon Stewart's "
Other News" segment for the first four years of his stint as host. In the segment, Stewart would focus on the breaking stories of the day. This was one of the three divisions of the show under Stewart's first few years, the others being "
Headlines" and "Other News." All three were abruptly dropped in 2003, with no reason given.
This Week in God This Week in God featured the "God Machine" and a satirical run-down of "everything God did this week", very similar to the earlier
Daily Show segment "God Stuff" with
John Bloom. The title "The God Machine" itself is a
parody of the theatrical device
Deus ex machina, which means "God from the Machine" and refers to an almost contrived event that saves the day in a
theatrical production.
Stephen Colbert usually did the sketch from 2003 to 2005, though occasionally it was done by other correspondents. Due to the spin-off of
The Colbert Report, the sketch was handed off to
Rob Corddry in 2005. Said Colbert on the hand-off: "God has an exclusive licensing agreement with
The Daily Show. We're trying to get the Devil for our show." After the July 31, 2006 episode,
This Week in God went off the air for three months due to Corddry's departure from the show. On October 19, 2006, "This Week in God" returned, with
Samantha Bee taking over as the show's "Senior
Religion Correspondent". Bee returned again for the segment's "Christmas Christacular" on December 18, 2006. Correspondent
Ed Helms has also filled in for the host of the segment on occasion. The God Machine normally took the form of a black post with a single large bright red button on its top, surrounded by yellow lining. It had previously appeared as the "God Lever" or the "God Rod." The host would smack the button, and it started flashing an apparently random succession of religiously themed images on a screen behind the host, while making a sound of a high-pitched voice (recorded by Colbert) saying "Beepboopboop beepboopboop boopboop. Beepboopboop beepboopboop boopboop. Beep. Boop. Boop". The images and the sound slowed down toward the end, with humorous or ironic last few images (such as
Captain Morgan,
Snuggle the Bear,
Toad or Colbert himself) appearing before the screen settled on an image that prompted the next item in the segment. A frequent subject chosen by the God Machine is
Islam. Whenever this occurred, the host would make a side comment about the religion in an attempt to placate any angry
Muslims. These statements include, "Islam! About which there is nothing funny", or "Islam! Which I respect completely." Colbert made the "God Machine" famous as an icon for irreverent and sometimes provocative examination of religious issues. When Rob Corddry first took over God Machine duties, he indicated that he is an
Episcopalian. On the April 19, 2007 episode of
The Colbert Report, during
Sean Penn's and Stephen Colbert's Meta-Free-Phor-All, a modified version of the "God Machine" sound was used to generate subjects. The "God Machine" made an additional appearance during the June 5, 2007 episode of
The Colbert Report.
Trendspotting Trendspotting was a segment hosted by comedian and "Youth Correspondent"
Demetri Martin. In this segment, Martin provides viewers with a comedic look at new, youth-targeted trends. Topics included
wine,
Xbox 360,
Myspace.com,
life coaching,
hookahs, and
credit card companies. On July 24, 2007, correspondent
John Oliver filled in for a slightly altered "Political Trendspotting" segment on the
YouTube Debates, wearing a
Demetri Martin wig and attempting to adopt his hip
vernacular. (Ironically, Oliver is 5 years younger than Martin).
We Love Showbiz We Love Showbiz was a segment hosted by
Steve Carell and
Nancy Walls (who are now married). It was a parody of
Access Hollywood,
Entertainment Tonight and similar shows; poking fun at their
sycophantic attitude towards celebrities. After Walls' departure in 2002, other female correspondents (
Lauren Weedman and
Rachael Harris) hosted opposite Carell. When Carell was not available,
Ed Helms would host.
Rob Corddry also hosted twice during the summer of 2003, once with
Steve Carell and once with
Samantha Bee. The segment was discontinued in 2003.
Wilmore-Oliver Investigates Wilmore-Oliver Investigates was a segment in which correspondents
Larry Wilmore and
John Oliver parody investigative journalism. The segment has been featured three times. The first installment explored the use of
the n word, and the second segment explored celebrities who utter offensive statements. The third looked into a Republican debate at a primarily African-American college which none of the major candidates showed up to; this segment was repeated on January 24, 2008. Most of the humor in the segment is drawn from the differences between British correspondent Oliver and African-American correspondent Wilmore. The segment debuted on March 28, 2007. This first segment was a focus of conversation when Wilmore appeared on
NPR's
Fresh Air with Terry Gross in June 2007.
Whaaa? Whaaa? was a segment that was sometimes introduced during coverage of news stories that Stewart claimed to find particularly bewildering, such as the revelation that the Army was firing Arabic-speaking linguists for being gay, or that
AOL Time Warner had managed to lose $99 billion in a single year. The device was used during 2002 and 2003 and was identified by Stewart's turning to
camera three and the appearance of a large blue logo reading, "Whaaa?"
Worst Responders Worst Responders (a reference to
first responders) was a segment that castigated politicians' responses to disasters. Its most famous airing occurred in 2010, when Stewart brought in first responders Kenny Specht, John Devlin, Ken George and Chris Bowman in an attempt to urge passage of the
Zadroga Act. Stewart revived the bit in 2015 on Noah's show to urge reauthorization of the Act.
You're Welcome with John Hodgman On February 12, 2009, "Resident Expert"
John Hodgman began a new segment called '''You're Welcome''', in which he uses his "expertise" to permanently solve the country's most pressing problems. For instance, in the first segment, he proposed to save the struggling economy in part by making
Criss Angel the
treasury secretary (promising that he would "levitate the economy, make it disappear, then pull it out of the
belly button of a
Hooters waitress"), and instituting an "emergency Christmas" to get people shopping.
The Toss For a time, at the end of a show, just before the
Moment of Zen,
Jon Stewart "[checked] in with our good friend
Stephen Colbert at
The Colbert Report." Meant as a parody of major news shows bridging to one another on networks such as
CNN, the sequence usually consisted of either a "sneak preview" of Colbert's show or a brief discussion about something that occurred on Stewart's. Ultimately, however, the sequence often ended with Colbert's egotistical character insulting Stewart. Usually, both Colbert and especially Stewart were prone to breaking character and laughing. Once a feature of virtually every episode, the frequency of The Toss was cut back to the point where the Toss happened only once every couple of weeks. The Toss did not appear from February 2011 to November 2014, due to scheduling conflicts between the two shows. The segment reappeared for the first time in nearly four years on November 4, 2014, when both shows aired live coverage of the
2014 midterm elections. It appeared again on Thursday, December 18, 2014, when Stephen Colbert had his final episode of his show,
The Colbert Report. From January 2015 until Stewart's departure in August 2015, the segment aired every Monday with Stewart and
Larry Wilmore bantering as a bridge to
The Nightly Show.
Other segment titles As with "Indecision" and "Mess-O-Potamia," other humorous titles have been used to indicate the subject matter of various segments. Recently, these have included: •
Clusterf**k to the White House, a segment on the
2008 presidential election, the title referring to the large number of candidates (which at the time was 18) running for the position. •
Clusterf**k to the Poorhouse, which features news about the worsening US and world economies. • Variations on the theme include
Clustershag to 10 Downing on the
2010 British general election, and
Clusterf**k to the Warhouse on the Israeli and Korean crises of late May and early June 2010. • '''Gaywatch / We're Here, We're Queer, Get Newsed to It''', a segment focusing on issues relating to the
gay rights movement, such as
same-sex marriage and
Don't Ask, Don't Tell. •
Baracknophobia, referring to news outlets and other organization that have a seemingly irrational fear of President
Barack Obama. • A variant on Indecision 2008,
The Long, Flat Seemingly Endless Bataan Death March to the White House, covering the drawn-out contest between
Barack Obama and
Hillary Clinton for the
Democratic nomination. • '''You Don't Know Dick (later, "Even Dick Don't Know Dick" and "You Don't Know Richard Cheney" when Lynne Cheney was the guest)''', which chronicles Vice President
Dick Cheney's various levels of secrecy. On the February 5, 2009 episode, Stewart officially changed the name of the segment to "Why Are You Such A Dick?" • '''
¿Ay, Mami, Por Qué es El Mentiroso Todavía a Cargo de la Ley? (Mommy, Why is the Lying Man Still in Charge of the Law?)''', which features highlights from Attorney General
Alberto Gonzales's testimonies before Congress relating to the U.S. attorney firings scandal. •
America to the Rescue, which highlights arms deals between the
United States Government and the governments of Middle Eastern countries. The segment is introduced by a melange of powerful music, a brief segment of
George W. Bush speaking, and computer-generated
fighter jets. A self-compounding instance that compounded U.S. weapons deals linked to
Saddam Hussein and
Osama bin Laden, "flashback" segment introductions from the
Persian Gulf War (featuring
George H. W. Bush and the early 1980s
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan (featuring
Ronald Reagan). •
Maritime Salvage Update, which has appeared twice and chronicles current
underwater archaeological news •
I Give Up, when Stewart highlights a story which makes him upset and
hopeless. ==Past recurring Kilborn-era segments==