cover story Oliver slays ‘Last Week Tonight’ is a perfect blend of news and humor By Kenneth Andeel TV Media W hen John Oliver accepted correspondent duties at “The Daily Show” as a fresh- faced British youngster in 2006, he could not have dreamed that he would eventually adapt and perfect that show’s formula to create a series that would ulti- mately eclipse its progenitor. That’s exactly what he’s done with “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” — he has inherited the cable comedy news throne that was once occupied by Jon Stewart and “The Daily Show.” Oliver’s version of the late-night comedy news genre heads into its sixth season on Sunday, Feb. 17, when its milestone 150th episode airs on HBO. “Last Week Tonight” follows in the footsteps of “The Daily Show,” exposing the absurdity of traditional news media, the 24-hour news cycle, and both niche political factions and the political elite, while avoiding cheap-shot accusations through diligent research and a funda- mentally journalistic approach. Oliver got his first serious taste of hosting duties in 2013, when Stewart took a 12-week leave of absence to direct the film “Rosewater” (2014). Audi- ences were largely impressed with Oliver’s fill-in duties, and executives across the TV world raced to see who could land him as a headliner for their own news comedy show. HBO turned out to be the best fit, and a mere three months after his stint as temporary host, it was announced that Oliver would be creating a brand new show for the premium cable network. In April 2014, “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” pre- miered, and in the time since its debut, the show has become a cultural touchstone and a critical darling. It has also won multiple Emmy and Peabody awards for its humorous-yet-informative treatment of serious issues — most recently, the show took home the 2018 Emmy for Out- standing Variety Talk Series. 2 | Screentime John Oliver as seen in “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” “Last Week Tonight” is espe- apart from similar series in a few allowed them to scour the news cially notable for taking extra specific ways. Rather than rush- landscape for underreported deep dives into serious issues. If ing through a number of diverse stories and identify niche sub- “The Daily Show” was a satiri- topics, he chose to produce ject matter that had been over- cal version of the archetypical longer, more in-depth segments looked by traditional outlets. It nightly news broadcast, then about issues he and his writ- also meant that when they did “Last Week Tonight” is more ers felt strongly about. The fact cover big news, they were able like an off-kilter newsmaga- that “Last Week Tonight” is a to offer a more comprehensive zine. It’s not uncommon for a weekly show also influenced and considered take after segment on Oliver’s show to its tone and content. Oliver and several days of development, run between 15 and 20 min- his colleagues realized that by differing significantly from the utes, which is a vast chunk of the time they got their Sunday reactionary coverage necessi- time for a half-hour show to night shot at the week’s news, tated by the 24/7 late-breaking dedicate to a single topic. Seg- it would have already gone stories format peddled by other ments on a serious newsmaga- through countless iterations in newsmongers. zine heavyweight such as “60 the traditional news media, and Oliver’s influence has become Minutes” tend to run between “Last Week Tonight” might be so pervasive that people have 11 and 13 minutes, and the fact hard-pressed to come up with coined the phrase “the John that Oliver and his writers can something unique. Oliver effect,” which refers to outdo that is impressive. Rather than being discour- real-world policy decisions that From the very beginning, aged by that prospect, Oliver are influenced by the show’s Oliver intended to set his show and his staff felt freed by it. It dedicated and very loud fan- February 13, 2019 | East Oregonian and Hermiston Herald base. There are a number of credible examples of this occur- ring: after Oliver ran a segment on net neutrality legislation and encouraged his viewers to send their disagreements to the Fed- eral Communications Commis- sion, the FCC’s servers received such a deluge of comments that they were overloaded. Similarly, after Oliver railed against the unfair and unjust bail system in New York, the state relaxed its bail requirements for people charged with nonviolent crimes. And after a widely watched seg- ment skewered the corrupt lead- ership of FIFA, its long-standing president resigned in disgrace shortly thereafter. Even when Oliver’s segments don’t result in specific changes, “Last Week Tonight” has an un- canny knack for becoming part of the cultural discourse. One of the show’s most recent bits — the “we got him” segment, which pointed out that Presi- dent Trump never seems to pay a lasting political price, no matter how many fibs he’s caught in — became a ubiquitous internet meme in 2018. That segment, as well as other popular offerings, are almost sure to return when Season 6 of “Last Week Tonight” starts rolling. Make sure to catch Oliver’s unique brand of satirical news- flavored comedy (or comedy- flavored news?) when “Last Week Tonight with John Oliver” returns for a sixth season on Sunday, Feb. 17, on HBO.