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Trevor Noah Says Farewell with Humor (and Grace) | John Baldoni




Usually, when an entertainer leaves a live show for which he has been host, there are the usual thank you’s to staff and crew, a sprinkling of hosannas to special guests, and plenty of humour. Trevor Noah’s leave-taking of the Daily Show, his television home for the past seven years, was all of that, and more.


At the top of the finale, Noah opened with characteristic humour. “When Noah started the show, “he had three clear goals: ‘he is going to make sure Hilary gets elected, he is going to make sure he prevents a global pandemic from starting and he is going to become best friends with Kanye West.’ He thinks it’s time to move on.”


In many ways, you can look at Noah’s tenure as a love letter to America. Noah, after all, is from South Africa. He is biracial, the son of a Xhosa mother and a Swiss father. His memoir, Born a Crime, tells that story in ways that show from whence his comedy, as well as his deep understanding of the human condition, stems. In fact, it is the latter that gives such measure to the former.


Lessons learned:


In his final monologue from his desk, Noah said he learned three lessons doing the show. Lesson one, “Issues are real, but politics are just an invented way to solve those issues … It’s not a binary. There are not just two ways to solve any problem.”


Noah opined that “politics is transformed into a giant game of football. And like football, it turns everybody’s brains into mush.” Better, he advises thinking of the issues facing individuals and the country through a human lens rather than a partisan lens.


Lesson two, “Never forget how much context matters… We have a lot of information but we don’t have the context to process that information. ”Noah noted that we respond to news we see through our own biases. The wider context of what we are seeing and hearing is lost.


People are “a lot friendlier than they would have you believe.” Social media may tempt us to think of the polarity between people. But for Noah, his travels throughout the country enabled him to see the better side of people, even those who may disagree with him politically.


Lesson three, said Noah, was that doing the show “taught him to be grateful for everything that he has, that he doesn’t even realize he has. Grateful to the wonderful people who helped him make every single episode.”


Special mention:


One group that taught Noah received special mention. “he has often been credited with having these grand ideas. Who do you think teaches him, who do you think has shaped him, nourished him, informed him? From his mom, his gran, his aunts, and all these black women in his life but then in America as well. He always tells people if they truly want to learn about America, talk to Black women. Because unlike everybody else Black women can’t afford to around and find out. Black people understand how hard it is when things go bad.”


Context matters and so does the heart. Trevor Noah is only 38 and he will be entertaining and yes educating us for decades more to come. His departure from the Daily Show was less a goodbye than the closing of one chapter and the opening of another. All done with style and grace.


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