Don Lemon Makes Backhanded Comment About Jon Stewart Being A Comedian During CNN Broadcast…Then Awkwardly Backtracks

Don Lemon has been accused of having a sour attitude toward his colleagues and competition, and today, he made Jon Stewart his target. The news anchor made a seemingly off-mic remark about Stewart during today’s CNN broadcast. 

While hosting the network’s morning program alongside Poppy Harlow and Kaitlan Collins, Lemon diverted to a clip of Stewart interviewing U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks about the Department of Defense’s $850 billion budget. 

Stewart criticized the allocations of those funds, telling a defensive Hicks, “I can’t figure out how $850 billion to a department means that the rank and file still have to be on food stamps. To me, that’s fucking corruption.”

The former television host isn’t new to this battle, and in the past, has expressed advocacy for 9/11 first responders and military personnel, specifically when it comes to health benefits. Stewart strongly advocated for the Honoring our PACT Act of 2022, which expanded healthcare access and funding to veterans; he received a shout-out from U.S. President Joe Biden amid the signing of the bill.

But all hell broke loose at the CNN studio when the clip concluded and Lemon was heard making a sly remark about Stewart’s expertise to his co-anchors. In a video provided by TMZ, Lemon is heard saying, “He gets a lot of leeway with the comedian thing, though.”

The broadcast proceeded with an awkward silence that lasted for a few seconds until Lemon interjected, “We were just discussing that Jon Stewart is so much more than a comedian.” He hesitated to support his comment, calling Stewart a “thought leader” before Harlow added that he “culturally needs no introduction.”

She continued to say that Stewart “has stood up so long for veteran rights and fought so loud and so hard, and uses his big platform to keep doing some.” Their co-anchor, Collins, turned the attention back to the Secretary of Defense, adding that Stewart was asking “ important questions” and Hicks wasn’t providing “sufficient answers.” 

Lemon, again, tried to add clarity to his comment: “When I said comedian and television host, I mean he’s so much more than that. But good… uh… interview there.”

Now, I don’t want to nit-pick the situation, but with Lemon already having a poor track record for his behavior toward others — especially when it comes to throwing shade at work — this doesn’t look good. It also doesn’t make sense for Lemon to be talking about the “leeway” Stewart gets for being a comedian. If the comment was meant as a compliment, what “leeway” was he addressing? On top of that, there is the common conception that over explaining is often an admission of guilt, and boy, did Lemon seem guilty.

I’d give a million dollars to know what was said over Lemon’s headset when they realized his comments were live. I suspect it was some variation of “Oh, f–k!” 

When reached for comment by Decider, CNN declined to comment on Lemon’s remarks.



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Jerry Seinfeld Hopes for “Productive” Conversation After Dave Chappelle’s Divisive ‘SNL’ Monologue

Jerry Seinfeld dipped his toe into the Dave Chappelle controversy, but avoided fulling diving into the comedian’s divisive Saturday Night Live monologue. After Chappelle delivered an SNL opener condemned by the Anti-Defamation League for normalizing antisemitism, Seinfeld offered a vague rebuke to The Hollywood Reporter, telling the outlet Chappelle’s monologue “calls for a conversation.”

When asked by THR if he thought Chappelle’s comments on SNL were funny, Seinfeld said, “I did think the comedy was well-executed, but I think the subject matter calls for a conversation that I don’t think I’d want to have in this venue.”

After interviewer commented, “But it made you uncomfortable,” Seinfeld remained neutral and replied, “It provokes a conversation which hopefully is productive.”

The comedian also denied he’s close friends with Chappelle, and dodged a question about possibly talking to Chappelle about the monologue himself. Instead, he told THR, “I don’t have a close relationship with him. We’re friends and it’s not a close relationship.”

Seinfeld’s comments come after Jon Stewart offered his own take on Chappelle’s monologue while appearing on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on Tuesday (Nov. 15). Stewart, who said he and Chappelle are good friends, defended him from critics, telling Colbert, “I don’t believe that censorship and penalties are the way to end antisemitism or to not gain understanding. I don’t believe in that, and I think it’s the wrong way for us to approach it.”

Chappelle stirred up plenty of conversation following his Nov. 12 appearance on SNL, where he opened the show by talking about Kanye West and Kyrie Irving, both of whom have come under fire for antisemitism in recent weeks.

At one point in his monologue, the comedian told the audience he understands how West could “adopt the delusion that the Jews run show business,” continuing, “not a crazy thing to think – but it’s a crazy thing to say out loud in a climate like this.”

He ended his bit with a dig at cancel culture, saying, “It shouldn’t be this scary to talk about anything. It makes my job incredibly difficult,” and adding, “I hope they don’t take anything away from me. Whoever ‘they’ are.”

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