Taking on your boss isn't usually the best course toward career development, but it appears to have worked wonders for Wyatt Cenac.
The usually mild-mannered comedian dropped a water balloon on the parties honoring Jon Stewart's popular "The Daily Show" reign this past summer. On Marc Maron's podcast, he revealed that his former boss once took umbrage over Cenac's negative critique of Stewart's Herman Cain impression — Stewart exploded in rage and stormed out of the writers' room.
The two have publicly made up — Cenac appeared on Stewart's final episode — but the incident remains the most prominent chapter in the 39-year-old comic's bio, despite a career that includes writing for "King of the Hill" and earning top billing in a potential sitcom from TBS. Cenac, who was more interested in making points than making jokes in a recent phone interview, hopes you'll check out his first stint at Acme Comedy Co. this week and do more than just gawk at the guy who got under Stewart's skin.
Q: If you google your name, the first thing that's going to pop up is that four-year-old fight. How does that make you feel?
A: What I took from all that, if anything, is how the story got repurposed and repackaged as click-bait for the online audience. If you listen to the entire podcast, it doesn't sound like anything … you got from the Internet. It was weird, because Jon and I spent almost five years on "The Daily Show" railing against how the media manipulates stories and turns news into entertainment. Now I was being pulled into those same chum-filled waters. It's just one of those strange things.
Q: And yet, you'll probably sell some tickets in Minneapolis to people who are only there out of interest in that incident.
A: I hope that's not the case, but at the same time, that always happens. I did a movie a few years back, "Medicine for Melancholy." People will come up to me after a set and say, "I really love that movie. When are you going to do another one?" Or "I loved you on 'The Daily Show.' Why did you leave?" It's kind of the same as saying, 'I loved you in high school. You should have never left.' I've done a lot of cool things in my life, but I hope the audience appreciates that I'm on a journey and that they'll come with an open enough mind to see where I'm at now.
Q: One issue you tackled in that podcast that didn't get as much play is how uncomfortable it is being the only black person in a writers' room. Now we've got Larry Wilmore and Trevor Noah hosting shows on Comedy Central. Has TV made progress?