Loading summary
NPR Sponsor Announcer
This message comes from NPR sponsor Carvana Making buying a car 100% online with real transparent pricing and customizable financing that fits your budget. Browse thousands of cars and get yours delivered. Visit Carvana.com today. Delivery fees and terms may apply.
Terry Gross
This is FRESH air. I'm Terry Gross. You may know my guest, comic Josh Johnson, from his comedy specials, from his popular YouTube channel, in which he posts complete sets of his frequent performances at the Comedy Cellar and other clubs and gets millions of views, and from his work on the Daily Show. He's now one of the rotating anchors of the show after having been a writer and field correspondent for several years. He toured with Trevor Noah. Johnson also has been a writer for the Tonight show with Jimmy Fallon. He's really funny, whether it's political humor, cultural issues like his bit Drake versus Kendrick explained for white people or or personal stories like why he's an easy target for muggers, how he's been known to faint and why he sometimes feels like an alien and thinks he's on the spectrum. His new comedy special is called Symphony. He's added music to this special. Let's start with a clip from the Daily show from the most recent time he anchored in April. It's about Trump's ballroom. In addition to Johnson, this includes news clips of Senator Lindsey Graham and Katie Zachariah, who's a former Department of Homeland Security spokesperson.
Josh Johnson
What could possibly make this thing cost so much? Like, be specific. Underneath there will be a lot of military stuff. Military stuff? What military stuff? Name ten military stuffs. I'll Wait, Lindsey Graham sounds like me in fifth grade trying to convince my mom to get me an Xbox. Like, you know, they make educational games, too. Here's what I don't get. The president travels with tons of security everywhere he goes. So what problem are we trying to solve exactly? The ballroom itself will avoid the dilemma of having to leave the White House grounds. He literally could have left his bedroom, walked out the back of the White House and been at the ballroom. Wait, wait, wait. The president needs to walk out of his bedroom into the ballroom. This feels like it's Lindsey's dream. I can see Lindsey. Like, I must rise from my silk sheets and directly into the cotillion. Oh, it's a mass cotillion. Where. Where I can be my truest self. This is not what a president is supposed to be focused on unless that president is 7 years old. You know, they're writing a list like, I'm gonna have a slide that goes right from my bed to the pool. And I want a soup made out of candy. So whenever I get hungry, I, I can just eat my shirt. But still, as good as the White House is, Trump is going to have to leave.
Terry Gross
Sometimes it really does put President Trump
Josh Johnson
at risk to go around Washington, D.C. like this.
Terry Gross
The president should not have to leave
Josh Johnson
the White House to go to the Kennedy center, to go to the Hilton and venture out. People should come to him. Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, wait. The president shouldn't have to leave his house. You don't want the leader of the free world to visit anything. Hold on. Is the president depressed?
Terry Gross
Josh Johnson, welcome to FRESH air. I think you're really funny. How much of the material do you get to write yourself when you're anchoring?
Josh Johnson
It varies pretty much day to day. There are some times you come in with the full sort of arc of the idea that you have for the show. But every day that I'm working there, I work with the writers and the EPs to shape everything that you end up seeing and hearing. So I don't really, if I'm being honest, especially from my time as a writer writing there is so communal that I don't really think of it as like, how much of the pie is like mine, because I think that it's all of ours. In a way. Maybe that sounds like too diplomatic of an answer, but it genuinely is true. It's like when I was just writing before I was behind the desk or anything like that, you might pitch a joke that someone else has an idea for that sparks another idea. So by the time people see it that night, it's like a mishmash of three people's jokes all to become the funniest thing possible.
Terry Gross
Tell me one thing that's different. Writing for Jimmy Fallon versus writing opening monologues for Trevor Noah or I don't know if you were still writing when Jon Stewart came back to the show.
Josh Johnson
Yes, I was for a bit, and then I got promoted. So I would say the biggest difference is when I was at Fallon, I was on the monologue team. And, you know, you're distilling pieces of the news and everything, but you're trying to get them across in this very specific way. You know, these very sort of short, punchy jokes. And I think that when it comes to Daily show and writing there, I was really able to stretch out the storytelling and stretch out the idea and how you get the idea across and making the assessment of what happened a bit more universal or coming up with an analogy that instantly makes this thing that's Happening on the other side of the world, Easy to understand. And so I think that there was a bit more writing involved that, that actually got on the show. When it comes to Daily show versus, like, even if you get like, if you get five jokes on, on the monologue, that's a huge deal. That's like that you're killing it. That means that out of this short amount of time that's the top of the show. They liked a lot of your stuff. And I think that when it comes to Daily show and writing there, it's like, how well are you working in community with the writers around you and how receptive are you both to ideas and also to apply what it is you want to say about a thing quickly.
Terry Gross
You do a lot of comedy that's self deprecating about how you're not muscular, you're not an alpha male. I just started having protein powder, so I thought this part was hilarious. That you bought the largest size of protein powder because you wanted to get more muscular, but it was so heavy you needed to work out just to carry it home. So I want to play one of your stories from your first album and it's about why you're a target for getting mugged. So let's listen.
Josh Johnson
Okay. You're looking up at me and you're like, this guy's been mugged. You be right. I have been mugged. I'm very muggable. I don't know what it is about me, but they just come right at me. Okay. I don't know if other dudes in the room do this, but when you see a dude coming towards you, looks threatening, do you think in your head, I got to take him? Cause the way I can fight my head is astounding. The way I fight in real life, not at all. I am a flailer. So you need to stand back. Cause you will get slapped. Probably by accident. I don't know what I'm doing. So this dude was coming towards me. He looked threatening in my head. I was like, pshh, looks like we're going to have to Jason Bourne this. I'm going to jump up in the air, do three flips. I only do three, but we need to do it needs to be done. You know, bring my knee down his face, crack his skull, punch him in the face until he's incapacitated. That was my plan. His plan was I'mma punch him in the face and take his wallet. We met up. He had a much better plan than I did. His plan was on fire. Execution Everything. Some of you guys will know about me if you punch me hard enough in the face, I pee. So we met up. He punched me in the face. I hit the ground, start peeing. Right on cue. I'll disappoint. Okay, but now he's trying to fit his huge, muscular hand into my pocket to take my wallet, but his hand gets stuck around my wallet. It's very full with coupons. I have no money. But now his hand is stuck. But he can see the peace thing getting bigger on my pants. So now he's like, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah, ah. He's lifting me off the ground. At this point, I weigh 125. Forget it.
Terry Gross
And he leaves.
Josh Johnson
Karate. Am I right?
Terry Gross
I guess the potent lesson from that is, like, pee is a dangerous weapon.
Josh Johnson
Yes. And everyone hates pee.
Terry Gross
So how close is that to what actually happened?
Josh Johnson
I think the order of events is correct. Like, the way that it really happened, which I don't always like talking about, because it's a lot like telling someone how a magic trick is done because they'd like to, you know, there's, like, a little less juice in it when you hear it the next time. But, like, the way that things really went is that it was all much faster than that. It was all much like, oh, my God. And then it was just over.
Terry Gross
It always seems to me it really takes a gift to tell a story like that and have people laugh and enjoy themselves and see themselves in what you're saying, as opposed to, like, oh, that's so sad. He's so weak, and he's such an easy target. Was it hard at first to figure out how to make people laugh as opposed to see you as a pathetic figure because you're not strong?
Josh Johnson
Yeah. I mean, I think most people have an insecurity about themselves, whatever it is. Some people aren't particularly strong, or some people aren't confident in their looks or something. But, like, one of the most connected attributes of the human condition to me is just, like, being flawed. I think that we gravitate towards people who have triumphant moments. It's one of the reasons we're so engaged with sports. But I also think that if we're talking, like, person to person, we really connect with people on their faults and their weaknesses. And I think if any fine line exists, it's that I was blessed with being able, from an early start into comedy, being likable on stage. And so, obviously, when people like you, they don't like when bad things happen to you. But I think the way that you overcome that is one, you're telling the story. So no matter what you tell people, you clearly lived like that. I think that that's the, that's the main thing is that I'm telling you the story now removed by years. So one, I'm over it and then two, I must have made it out or else this would be a hologram.
Terry Gross
So is comedy ever a useful weapon to defuse a situation?
Josh Johnson
Oh sure. I mean that's happened countless times. I can't even think of like a good example. I mean that was basically most of high school.
Terry Gross
Uh huh.
Josh Johnson
Yeah.
Terry Gross
Where was your high school? Like, what was your high school like?
Josh Johnson
My high school was a Catholic school in Alexandria, Louisiana. And yeah, I had what I'd say were a decent amount of friends, but I think I had what is you could almost call a maybe normal amount of being picked on. I look back at it with less. I don't necessarily look back at it with a bunch of traumatic feelings, but I definitely look back at it like, oh yeah, that wasn't good. That was, that was pretty bad.
Terry Gross
I want to play another bit that you do. And this is also from your first comedy album, I Like youe, which is on Comedy Central Records. And I'm playing things from this album because I feel like this album is your this Is who I Am album. Because you talk a lot about yourself. You present this like projection for the public of your self image. And in this you talk about feeling like an alien.
Josh Johnson
I don't know what my problem is. I really don't. I'll share a secret with you guys cause we're family. I don't even feel black. Some days I feel like an alien that snatched a black bite and didn't do any research at all. Didn't do a thing, didn't read a book, didn't watch a movie. Don't know what Boyz n the Hood is, but loves trains.
Terry Gross
That is really funny. Later in the bit you talk about how you think you're on the spectrum, the autism spectrum. What makes you think that?
Josh Johnson
I mean, I, you know, I've thought that ever since I was a kid because of how, I guess because of how odd everyone always said that I was or my general, like I said before, like fixations and tendencies. I think that I've had a lot of time where. And some of this is actually probably just indicative of being alone for so much time. You know, not only am I an only child, but there were plenty of times where I didn't have like someone to play with. And so I was just like alone in my room. And you know, you get. Once you're allowed to get into your own head at any. In any degree for a number of years, you probably come out of that thing with a very singular set of ideas. Might not be the right word, but like, as soon as you sort of surface again socially, you probably seem a bit odd.
Terry Gross
Are you more comfortable on stage talking to people but not having to have a conversation with them?
Josh Johnson
I think that's a good example. It's like, I think that in doing a show and expressing my ideas and performing for, I can be incredibly comfortable. But then I think one on one or. Yeah, in like a group setting, it's like. It's not necessarily that I shrink. I have really good conversations with people that I really cherish. And sometimes they're unexpected, sometimes they are strangers. But I think that it's where I feel the most, like, disjointed sometimes, if that makes sense.
Terry Gross
And I also want to get to another part of the bit that we just heard, which is that sometimes. And you feel like an alien who snatched a black body but didn't do the research. What makes you feel that way?
Josh Johnson
You know, I think as far as being out of place and a feeling, you know, there's a. There's a lot of that that I felt growing up. And some of it was because of my interests and how maybe singular they felt at the time. And then it takes a while, you know, I didn't grow up with this version of the Internet. So I'm from an era where it took longer to find your people. And so already being a black nerd makes you feel like an alien if you're a 90s baby, like already, that is communally now, not weird at all. But for the time I grew up in such a singular experience, I was also this black kid and a lot of white spaces a decent amount of time. And so I was already around people who. Not necessarily, I won't say couldn't relate to me. Cause it's not as if they weren't trying to, but just, you know, from our basic experiences living in the south and being a black kid around a lot of white kids in different parts of my day. I think that that's another way to feel sort of like odd man out a bit. Because now I don't fulfill the expectations of some of the people around me when I'm in my neighborhood. And then I definitely don't fulfill the expectations of people who only have a frame of reference for a black person that is, like, through media or something. And so, yeah, it felt like I was, for a number of years, just, like, such an odd one out. And I think that I look back on that time as a bit of a blessing, because when you're already the odd, then it's like, what are you gonna do? You're not gonna get otter, if that makes sense. So then you can literally just engage in the things that you care about. You can be open about your interests and everything, because you're already, quote, unquote, weird just by being yourself. And so I think that that helped.
Terry Gross
What were you nerding out on?
Josh Johnson
It seems so commonplace now, but truly, it's like anime puzzles. I would get fixated on certain sections of a story. Like, I would read a piece of a story over and over again, never mind, like, finishing the story. Like, there'd be a section. There'd be a chapter of a book that I thought was just, like, amazing. And I would just read that over and over again. I also had. I had, like, a real obsession with Legos, longer than is probably average. So I definitely was like, building and rebuilding and rebuilding and rebuilding over and over again with.
Terry Gross
What were you building?
Josh Johnson
I mean, I'd just build different structures or I would. I'd try to figure out how to build. I'd try to draw a thing and then figure out how to build it with the. With the Legos. And that is not a bad thing. That's not necessarily a weird thing, but it is a thing that, you know, start to get picked on about around 15. That is when, if you've brought the Legos to school and you are trying to finish the Dragon head in front of people, you're gonna get some notes
Terry Gross
from your peers in the end of the bit that we most recently heard you mention trains that you haven't seen Boyz n the Hood, but you're into trains. Where do trains come in?
Josh Johnson
I think. I mean, it could have been trains, it could have been sharks, it could have been any number of things. But I picked trains at the time because in my mind, it flowed the best with the rest of what I was saying. So sometimes also, whether it's you're writing or performing, it's like you try to pick the funniest word that also completes the idea, because I have a different joke that is of a similar sort of line of thinking. And I say sharks in that one. So I think trains literally was. Because it was gonna be the funniest word at the end of the sentence.
Terry Gross
Well, we need to take another break here, so let me reintroduce you. If you're just joining us, my guest is Josh Johnson. He's one of the rotating anchors on the Daily show, and he has a new special streaming on HBO Max called Symphony. We'll be right back. I'm Terry Gross, and this is FRESH air.
Josh Johnson
This is Ira Glass on this American Life, one that we like is a good mystery sometimes about really big things, but most times the little mysteries are the best. Our lost and found is currently filled with pants. I don't know. I've never seen this happen.
Terry Gross
This is true.
Josh Johnson
This is true. Mysteries of every size each week. This American Life, wherever you get your podcasts.
Terry Gross
So you grew up in Alexandria, Louisiana. Would you describe your neighborhood?
Josh Johnson
Yeah. So we moved a few times within Alexandria, and I look back on some of the places that we lived as, you know, obviously not the best neighborhood, especially from the stories if you watch my stuff or have been following me and everything. But there was a time where when my parents were still together and we were, I believe, on like, Albert street, and that was the nicest house I lived in with my parents and everything. And when they got divorced, you know, my mom and I lived with my grandmother. And then when we moved out of my grandma's house, the places were, you know, like, modest and everything. But the actual neighborhoods had their had their troubles.
Terry Gross
You want to elaborate on the troubles?
Josh Johnson
You know, there'd be, like, shootings or police calls. There'd be a decent amount of violence in the area. And, you know, I was very blessed that a lot of it passed me by in a way, like I didn't have to experience a deep closeness with all those things, even though I was in close proximity. And so, yeah, there's definitely a lot of pain in the things that happen in the neighborhoods that I lived in because I see so many of them as I won't say inevitable, but they are definitely products of situations that people found themselves in that are much bigger than one individual squabble with another person. I think that from an early age I had a bit of an understanding of what it means to be stripped of resources and what people will do when they don't feel like they have real options. It's very easy to say to a person who might be living on the street, oh, go get a job. And it's like, okay, sure, sure. Logically, that is the next step. But the person saying that, are you gonna give them a job? Are you gonna employ them and help them get out of this situation, and even with a job, I think it's lost on a lot of people. How many working people are unhoused? How many working people live in their car, maybe, or are just scraping to get by? And so that was a decent amount of some of the things that I saw growing up, especially in that specific couple of areas.
Terry Gross
So you went to Catholic school. Was that from grade school through high school?
Josh Johnson
No, I went to Catholic school from, like, junior high to through high school.
Terry Gross
So what was grade school like? Was that a neighborhood school?
Josh Johnson
No, no. So great. Grade school was actually my mom, my aunt, my grandma, and my grandfather. Yeah. Like, all pooled their money together and sent me to, like, a Montessori school.
Terry Gross
So that's like an alternative school kind of.
Josh Johnson
Yeah, yeah. I'm not the best at describing the, like, Montessori method. It's just we didn't have specific grades in the way that you would at your regular public school. What we had were sort of like evaluations on where we were every year at each given discipline. And so it led to what I at least think, for me ended up being a deeper understanding of my strengths and weaknesses in school, because especially once I got to junior high and high school, when I just had regular grades, sometimes I would get a low grade on something that I really felt like I understood. But what I was actually failing at was, like, a piece of the lesson. Like, for example, with algebra, it's like, I was better at word problems than I was at actual equations, you know? And so I think that something like in a Masori method would have maybe point that out a bit more specifically than just a general, like, you get a C overall because you don't grasp the whole of the thing.
Terry Gross
In my experience, having interviewed a lot of comics, a lot of comics, and I'll include you in this, are like, they're so smart and so perceptive and, like, you know the right word to use to get a specific coloration of an emotion or an experience. And it's like, for me, like, you're a comedic short storyteller. You know, like, you know how to build a story. So you're a very good writer. But comics don't necessarily do well in school, and they don't necessarily care about school. Did you care. Did you care about your grades? Did you care about, you know, wanting to learn? Because your parents were both teachers. Your mother was a special ed teacher, at least for a while. Your father was a teacher. I'm not sure what he taught.
Josh Johnson
Yeah. So my care was in the fact That I had a general understanding from a really young age that everyone was, like, putting everything into me, if that makes sense.
Terry Gross
Oh, yeah. Yeah.
Josh Johnson
And so I wanted to do well because of that. You know, I think that when it came time for me to get grades back, I cared about getting a good grade for the reasons that we've just been talking about. But I think that as far as real interests go, I usually only have two or three classes a year that I look back on as being, like, heavily invested in.
Terry Gross
What were they?
Josh Johnson
So English was one of them.
Terry Gross
Makes sense.
Josh Johnson
I really, really loved the stories. I remember one of my teachers was going through Chaucer with us, and I just remember being so blown away that this entire world got created. Like, that was the idea of. To me, that was like, the original Marvel comics almost, because it's all this world building in all of these different tales. And, you know, my grandma would read to me a lot, so I was familiar with Aesop and fables and everything like that, but there was something about the Canterbury Tales that, yeah, I was just taken with, and Shakespeare as well. So English was always one of them. And then it would flip between other things. So it'd be English and psychology. Like, I took a psychology class in high school. English and philosophy. I got to take a philosophy class. And so it was always English plus something.
Terry Gross
Your mother was a special ed teacher. And then after neurosurgery became a librarian, what happened that required the neurosurgery?
Josh Johnson
So, yes, she got really. She got really sick. And the neurosurgery basically was to save her life. You know, she was in a situation where even with the surgery, they said that she wouldn't walk again, that she'd have trouble speaking, that, like, her cognitive ability would be declined and everything. And truly, like the work of the doctors and genuine miracles, she was completely fine. Like, she was walking soon after, she was talking like there wasn't any issue prior, and she wasn't having the headaches that she was having before. I was really young when it happened, and I was. Yeah, I was so genuinely horrified at the idea of losing her. And I don't even really, if I'm being honest, think about it as often I think about how grateful I am that it all turned out so well. And I'm very grateful for her. Every time, you know, she comes to a show or I get to, you know, get to see her, I'm always grateful. But, yeah, once she became a librarian, it was just something that would be less of a strain on her. Anyone who's taught special ed knows the workload involved and just the toll it takes on even a teaching career to a degree. You know, there's like, a saying that teaching one year of special ed is almost like teaching five years, you know, and she needed something that was a different pace. And so she got this job at the library. And it really benefited both of us because she would pick me up from school, and then I would just hang out at the library until it was time to go home.
Terry Gross
Well, that's nice. You're surrounded by books.
Josh Johnson
You could read easily, Easily. So it was fantastic. And it was some of my first outside of school. It was some of my first engagement with the Internet because we couldn't afford a computer, so I had to do all my schoolwork on the computer at the library. And then if I finished early, then I just had that extra time to myself on the computer in the library. And so I was surrounded by books. I was around computers. I was like in heaven.
Terry Gross
Your grandmother had Alzheimer's. And you talk about this in one of your performances that she said to you, I know I'm losing my memory. I will never forget who you are, because you always worried you'd go there and she'd not know who you are. You can't control your brain like that, and you can't control it, especially if you have any form of Alzheimer's or other related, you know, other form of dementia. Did she always remember you?
Josh Johnson
I mean, she really did until the end there. You know, I think that one thing that she did do was use every moment of being completely lucid to communicate her feelings as accurately as possible. And I think that that's why it always felt like that. Even though, like, you know, like you said, sometimes maybe that genuinely wasn't the case, but I really felt like I was missing this time with her by being in college or even after college, moving to Chicago and seeing her less. It's like it's a known thing that when you are around less, you're harder to remember when someone has dementia. And so I always worried about that day that I'd come back and she wouldn't really know who I was. But there was such a genuine excitement. She would rush to hug me, she'd rush to talk to me and catch up. And it was really like she. It was really like she wasn't experiencing or living with dementia whenever I was with her. And I know that that probably just means I got incredibly lucky over those last few years of being with her on some of her best days. But I also think that there's a there's an unspoken thing around what love can do. And I think that love does defy sometimes what is medically sound. You know, I find that sometimes you hear these stories of people who, whether it's being really sick and holding on just long enough for someone to make it back or, you know, I know plenty of things don't work out this way, but I don't know what else to chalk it up to other than that.
Terry Gross
Well, let me reintroduce you again. We have to take a break here. If you're just joining us, my guest is comic Josh Johnson. He has a new comedy special that's streaming on HBO Max. It's called Symphony. We'll be right back. This is FRESH air.
NPR Sponsor Announcer
This message comes from Thumbtack Avoiding your unfinished home projects because you're not sure where to start. Thumbtack knows homes. So you don't have to don't know the difference between matte paint finish and satin paint or what that clunking sound from your dryer is. With thumbtack, you don't have to be a home pro. You just have to hire one. You can hire top rated pros, see price estimates and read reviews all on the app.
Josh Johnson
Download Today, millions of people in the
Terry Gross
US get their flu shot each year, but a new scientific innovation could turn that routine into a one shot stop a universal flu vaccine which would protect not only against seasonal influenza but also
Josh Johnson
will prevent pandemic influenza.
Terry Gross
Learn about the revolution in fighting the flu on shortwave. Listen in the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. When you were growing up, did you listen to a lot of comedy or watch a lot of comedy?
Josh Johnson
Yes, as much as I could. Like everything. Everything.
Terry Gross
What made you think you should try it yourself?
Josh Johnson
I think just a love for it. I just really enjoyed it. And I figured why not? Like, I had an obsession with writing and I had an obsession with comedy. So why not try to put those two things together and just see? And then even when I was starting out and it wasn't going according to plan, like I wasn't exactly killing every time I was going up. I still enjoyed the lesson that came out of not doing well, that I wanted to get up again.
Terry Gross
What was your first time at the mic like? Do you remember any of the stories or jokes that you told?
Josh Johnson
So my first open mic in Chicago was like the night that I got there, like the night that I landed. And I don't.
Terry Gross
That's so disorienting.
Josh Johnson
Yeah. But I Don't know. It's like, why waste time? You know? It's like, you have the chance right now. I tried to do the same thing when I moved to New York. I got to New York and immediately just went out and started going to Mike's and went to a show, and, yeah, I think you just have to dive in. I don't remember my first sets really that well, but I definitely remember the feeling of being able to do, like, three that night. Like, Chicago had and has so many open mics and so much comedy that I was able to do three open mics the first night because I could just take the bus, go to the next place, take the bus, go to the next place and everything. And I remember the first one went really well, and then the second one went even better. And then the third one was horrible. Like, I thought I was on a real streak, and then the third one was just terrible.
Terry Gross
Was it the. Do you think it was the audience's fault? Like, they didn't get you?
Josh Johnson
No, it was me.
Terry Gross
It did you?
Josh Johnson
No, it was definitely me. And I think I will say this. I sort of walked into the third one with the confidence that I literally just landed in Chicago, and the first two went so well that, like, obviously, the third one has to go even better. And then when I was getting nothing off of a couple of the same jokes I had done, I was, like, so flustered by it that it was. It was me.
Terry Gross
What did your parents and your grandmother think after having invested so much of their, you know, time and money and emotional thinking into schooling you, into sending you to the Montessori school? I don't know if they helped you pay for college, but, you know, you went to college, and now you're pursuing this really risky profession. How many people really make it as a comic? Were they wringing their hands and thinking, oh, all of that for nothing? He's throwing his life away?
Josh Johnson
No, they were weirdly supportive. But I will also say that I did spend my time getting real jobs, never asking them to send me money or anything like that. Never. If anything, I tried to send money back when I could. And I think that I kept it under wraps enough that first maybe, what, six, seven months or something like that that they didn't even know. And so I don't even really think that they KN how much I was pursuing comedy until I got passed at my first few clubs and started getting paid. And by then, it was like, oh, okay, if this is gonna be your little hobby, at least you're making a Little money off of it. And as it progressed and as there was more success, I think it became harder to be like, okay, well, this was a bad idea. You know what I mean? And so, you know, even my dad, like, that's one of my biggest. I don't even know how to describe it as anything but a regret, because it wasn't fully in my control. But I suppose some of it was. My dad never got to see me go up, and he was. From the time I told him I was doing comedy, he was so excited, and he wanted me to succeed so much. And I think that, for the most part, my family was mainly interested in giving me my best shot at being successful and able to take care of myself.
Terry Gross
In college, you were studying theater with a focus on lighting design, which is very specialized. Did you already think you wanted to do comedy and this was the closest you were gonna get in college?
Josh Johnson
That's a really good question. I think that it was the closest thing outside of actually performing, which I think would have been terrible for me at the time that I could do that kept me close to live performance. You know, I didn't really have the ear for sound design and sound engineering, and I found that lighting really gave me that outlet where I could both be a part of the show and watch the show and help the show, but I didn't have to be on stage performing, because I think that as far as the type of acting that we were learning in college, I don't think it's something that I would have been adept at. And so I got to watch my friends, who are very talented, get better and better at their. Their chosen craft. And then for me, I got to watch how the whole production comes together and gain appreciation for it while doing something that's sort of on the side. And so, yes to your question initially. But then when I moved to Chicago, you know, I told everyone it was to pursue lighting design, but it was really to pursue comedy.
Terry Gross
So being a theater major and working in theaters, doing lighting design, that must have helped you feel comfortable in comedy clubs. You were used to being in theaters, and this was even, you know, comedy cellar's gonna be even smaller than a theater and more informal as well.
Josh Johnson
Yeah, I mean, it was so much less about the number and more about getting my ideas across, which I felt like I've been writing for so long. And then it just became about taking the leaps of saying what it is you want to say.
Terry Gross
Josh Johnson, it's been a pleasure to talk with you. Thank you so much.
Josh Johnson
Thank you. I appreciate your time. Thanks so much for having me on.
Terry Gross
Josh Johnson's new comedy Special Symphony is streaming on HBO Max. After we take a short break, jazz critic Martin Johnson will review a new album by trumpeter and composer Adam o', Farrell, who's the son of musician Arturo o'. Farrell. This is FRESH air.
Josh Johnson
The world is a lot, but hearing the right song at the right time can make it all better. This week in the NPR Music Podcast, listeners tell us about the songs that help them hit reset, songs that lift them up, change their outlook or even give their whole life a new direction. Listen on All Songs Considered in the NPR Music Podcast.
Terry Gross
Trumpeter and composer Adam o' Farrell has a special set of bloodlines. His father is composer, pianist and impresario Arturo o', Farrell, and his mother is concert pianist and educator Allison Dean. And that's not all. His grandfather is Afro Cuban jazz pioneer Chico o'. Farrell. Adam went into the family business. And despite the long shadows of his family, jazz critic Martin Johnson says he quickly established himself as one of the most important musicians of the 21st century. He's been a sideman in some of the key groups of recent vintages. And on his new recording Elephant, at the age of 31, which is young and Jazz Years, he's begun mentoring the next wave of virtuosos. Martin says the future is in good hands.
Martin Johnson
The idea of a young trumpet player making his mark on the scene is one of the cherished narratives in jazz. But Adam o' Farrell is different from his predecessors. He's not a flashy player who stuns audiences with his flamboyance. Instead, he's a more introspective player whose solos insinuate themselves to listeners rather than blow them away. This, too, has a lineage, from Booker Little to Ron Miles. Adam o' Farrell's the next virtuoso on this path, and his new recording, Elephant, allows more space than any of his others to showcase his style, which occasionally employs electronic distortion, as he does here
Josh Johnson
on Bebo Nose or Sam.
Martin Johnson
As is the case with many young musicians, o' Farrell is eager to integrate what he hears in other genres into his music. The beat on Eleanor's Dance Here might be as germane to a nightclub as it would be to a dance studio, but the trumpeter and his band of young up and comers navigate like old pro.
Josh Johnson
Sam.
Martin Johnson
After a decade of typically being one of the youngest members of any band in Elephant, o' Farrell is mentoring some players younger than he, most notably pianist Yvonne Rogers, a brilliant stylist who is still new to the scene. She's capable of matching the range of styles in Oferrell's arsenal and tangling with them in the thorny parts, as they do on a section of C triptych, which is dedicated to the great novelist Iris Murdoch. It shows that o' Farrell is as adept at matching wits with his peers and elders as he is nurturing his proteges. Elephant could be the start of a pivotal group in jazz.
Terry Gross
Martin johnson writes for the wall street journal and downbeat. He reviewed adam o' farrell's new album, ele. Fresh Air's executive producer is Sam Brigger. Our technical director and engineer is Audrey Bentham. Our interviews and reviews are produced and edited by Phyllis Myers, Roberto Shorrock, Ann Marie Boldonado, Lauren Krenzel, Teresa Madden, Monique Nazareth, Susan Yakundi, Anna Bauman and Nico Gonzalez Whistler. Our digital media producer is Molly CV Nesper. Thea Chaloner directed today's show. Our co host is Tanya Mosley. Hi, I'm Terry Gross.
NPR Sponsor Announcer
This message comes from thumbtack Avoiding your unfinished home projects because you're not sure where to start. Thumbtack knowshomes so you don't have to don't know the difference between matte paint, finish and satin or what that clunking sound from your dryer is. With thumbtack, you don't have to be a home pro. You just have to hire one. You can hire top rated pros, see price estimates and read reviews all on the app.
Josh Johnson
Download Today, the fatal shooting of a teenager at a protest in Seattle has gone unsolved for six years. This is open in your face. How are there no answers? Our investigation has uncovered new evidence and witnesses who say they've never talked to police. Did police ever call you? Not once. Listen to We Keep Us Safe, a new true crime series on the Embedded podcast from npr.
Date: June 11, 2026
Host: Terry Gross
Guest: Josh Johnson, comedian and ‘Daily Show’ rotating anchor
Episode Title: 'Daily Show' comic Josh Johnson
In this episode of Fresh Air, Terry Gross interviews comedian Josh Johnson, exploring his comedic process, personal history, self-image, and his journey from growing up in Louisiana to becoming a rotating anchor on The Daily Show. The discussion blends humor with candid reflection on identity, family, education, and the role of vulnerability in comedy. Johnson also shares stories from his stand-up, discusses his new HBO Max special "Symphony," and delves into deeper social issues, including the effects of poverty and experiences in diverse communities.
The episode’s tone is warm and humorous, but grounded in honest discussion about self-doubt, identity, family hardships, and Johnson’s tender appreciation for those who supported him. Johnson’s humility and sharp observational humor shine while Terry Gross’s questions are sensitive, insightful, and occasionally playful.
Josh Johnson’s conversation offers a nuanced view into the craft of comedy and the lived experience behind the jokes. He weaves stories of vulnerability and self-doubt into both his humor and his personal narrative, showing that connection through flaw and honesty is at the heart of his comedy—and, perhaps, of resilience and joy in life.
End of Summary