@handkeezمنذ 2 سنوات"There's something liberating about fighting an obvious enemy as opposed to one you have to prove exists." - no one could have said it better. 10260
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@jasonwilkinson8784منذ 2 سنواتI want a show called "Trevor Noah Answers" and all he does is answer questions from a random audience. Poignant, funny, and witty. I love it! 5866
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@Reason1717منذ 2 سنواتAs a native American my bouts with racism are as Trevor pointed out, cloaked. Loved his answer to the differences between racism in two different nations. Much respect to Mr. Noah :) 2418
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@OfentseMwaseFilmsمنذ 2 سنواتThere’s never been a more intelligent comedian. Watch The White House Correspomdemce Dinner and tell me otherwise! 2402
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@AnnE-qd5kwمنذ 2 سنواتI’m American living in Johannesburg and have tried to explain this difference to my SA friends. I tell them that SA actively engages in the topic while America pretends it doesn’t exist. It’s like someone with skin cancer putting on a hat and saying, “All better now.” ....وسعت557
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@opiritetariahمنذ 2 سنواتThat ‘ahaa’ expression was the African side of Trevor 45
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@TheConnonedrumمنذ 2 سنواتYou got to love Trevor because he answers questions in such an elegant way and doesn't shy away from any questions being asked. 2389
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@pmwikyمنذ 2 سنواتThere is nothing more disconcerting, infuriating and disorienting then experiencing blatantly racist acts, and then getting gaslit by sections of the right id="hidden6" class="buttons"> wing print, electronic and social media essentially trolling you insinuating that you are imagining/ misinterpreting/exaggerating/overstating/overreacting/or oversimplifying what you can CLEARLY see happening. ....وسعت980
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@TawaniAnyangweمنذ 2 سنوات"There's something liberating about fighting an obvious enemy as opposed to one you have to prove exists." - excellent analogy. TN always gives brilliant answers. 128
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@channahisrael2004منذ 2 سنواتWHEN IT COMES TO RACISM IN AMERICA, THIS IS THE QUOTE THAT ALWAYS COMES TO MIND FOR ME, IT IS "THE GREATEST TRICK THE DEVIL EVER PULLED WAS TO CONVINCE THE WORLD HE DIDN'T EXIST" 52
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@thomascrownrgمنذ 2 سنواتMalcolm X was quoted as saying. (as close as I can remember) "I have far more respect for one that makes their opinion known even id="hidden9" class="buttons"> if it's contrary to mine, than to have one pretend to be on my side only for me to find out later that they couldn't be counted on." At times, our country reminds me of a child.making promises with their fingers secretly crossed. It's not about what America says. It's about what America Does. ....وسعت332
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@chocoberrymuffin3392منذ 2 سنواتAs an Asian American, I can attest to this. It is very sneaky. One example. I once dated a w girl who worked in Papa John's in a middle state id="hidden10" class="buttons"> (Midwest). Her associates looked down on her and made a fool of her by saying, "You know she likes Asians, you guys. Wink wink." "That's why she likes small." Etc etc. When she snapped, they were like, "Oh we were just kidding chill out," shamelessly turning it on her! She was very stressed. They were nice when I saw them. Not just one or two but every w guy. There is this peer pressure. Whisper attacks, verbal attacks, physical attacks, condescending attacks. Glass ceilings. ....وسعت37
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@i.t.t.منذ 2 سنوات"there''s something liberating about fighting an obvious enemy as opposed to the one that you have to prove exists" it's always how trevor words it for me. so concise and on point. 2379
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@kbrown5523منذ 2 سنواتHonestly, I would love to see a whole show that was just Trevor answering questions, no scripts, no preparation, just Trevor off the top of his head. 154
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@ProfVRandallمنذ 2 سنواتI am 74 years old. I grew up in Jim Crow in Texas. And raised my children in the North. I always felt that dealing with the South's racism was easier id="hidden12" class="buttons"> -- for the reasons you articulated. - I think my kids and grandkids have a more difficult time ....وسعت400
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@rasblackchild7679منذ 2 سنواتThat accent when Trevor says "If you are black you cannot live in this area. South Africans know 32
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@727Phoenixمنذ 2 سنوات"Privilege isn’t perks you get. Privilege is a lack of obstacles. That’s why privilege is invisible to those who are in it." I take it white privilege is not invisible to white S.Africans. Here in the states I know I have white privilege only because I'm both curious about racism and I listen to non-white friends, aquaintences and colleagues when they air their grievances about being treated so differently in public, at work, getting pulled over when they drive. And this is a country were I'm told white privilege is a lie. ....وسعت509
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@SH-nc4isمنذ 2 سنواتIt's like the difference between emotional and physical abuse. If your parents beat you up it is clear cut. If they undermine you through behavior id="hidden14" class="buttons"> and gaslight you it is harder to identify. They are both horrible and leave long lasting scars, but bruises are harder to deny. ....وسعت42
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@mlggamer5296منذ 2 سنواتAnd this is why I love teachers. They don't need to ask the question straight up seriously they can come at you in all sorts of different directions id="hidden15" class="buttons"> just by the tone or phrasing. Big up Katrina for that amazingly well asked question ....وسعت2567
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@lebomatsekeمنذ 2 سنواتAs a South African living in America I totally understand what he's saying. Its difficult to explain to my American friends 546
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@Iflieمنذ 2 سنواتTrevor is also a teacher, which doesn't mean his job but way before that in comedy and when he showed up as a guest on gameshows, he's always explaining things, in a fun way too. He's got that teaching gene. 91
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@michaelpowell-ngatchou6274منذ 2 سنواتI love how Trevor has conversations with his audience. It's like he knows he is speaking to a country that doesn't know how to communicate properly and he is engaging accordingly. 87
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@pnwmaxمنذ 2 سنواتLove how Trevor always gases up everyone. It makes his show fun and inclusive feeling compared to a lot of other commentators. Most center around making id="hidden18" class="buttons"> fun of or disparaging others who don’t have the same view, instead Trevor has a way of inviting conversation to understand another view better. ....وسعت186
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@nkosinathi7645منذ 2 سنواتTrevor nailed the apartheid Afrikaaner accent and the analogy is spot on 45
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@gail2485منذ 2 سنواتI’m a South African living in USA 24 years - Trevor nailed it!! 313
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@itumelengkganare7195منذ 2 سنواتSuch a poignant answer from Trevor yet again. As a South African living in cape town. It was no mystery why my front door neighbours never greeted me when id="hidden19" class="buttons"> I moved into my new apartment. The only thing they knew about me when I moved in was that I'm black. They don't make eye contact they don't acknowledge my existence. On easter Sunday I was coming back from the gym and they were heading out to church and all 5 of them walked past me as if no one was passing them in the corridor. I am a minority in my own country simply because I have worked to earn enough to live in areas that have been and continue to be white-dominated. ....وسعت659
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@Keinish79منذ 2 سنواتI am always amazed at how Trevor thrives with an audience. 225
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@kaseywahlمنذ 2 سنواتThanks for sharing this insight, Trevor! I'm a white American guy and my fiancé is a black South African woman. I'm moving to South Africa for the wedding next week, and we've been having these kinds of conversations a lot lately about privilege, racism, and the different forms they take in our countries. This is really helpful for both of us. And thanks for talking about it in a way that makes us laugh when we might otherwise shut down. ....وسعت123
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@embreis2257منذ 2 سنواتTrevor's personality shines through this segments and it is a pleasure to watch this wonderful human. everyone lucky enough to be his friend should be in eternal bliss when around him 101
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@tyrellcobb4665منذ 2 سنواتGeez, the way Trevor can handle the darkest most serious topics while still doing comedy is something else 313
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@quaoar213منذ 2 سنوات. nothing makes me more frustrated than getting called racist for pointing out racism. Yes here in America 91
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@scottwatson8836منذ 2 سنواتTrevor Noah is a person that has the ability to make things look so self explanatory. He’s very astute. 140
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@jorgeluz9560منذ 2 سنواتWhat Trevor said is something that has been on my mind for a while now! Here in Brazil we never had an apartheid or even an official segregation after id="hidden22" class="buttons"> slavery was abolished, so to most people here there's no racism here at all, which is obviously untrue. It is just so much more hidden due to miscegenation. This also means the black community is much less united here, so there's no such thing as politicians courting the "black vote" and as such black issues tend to be ignored in politics even more than in the US. ....وسعت69
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@patrickunderhill2901منذ 2 سنواتI ❤️ your past explanation. South Africa addressed the issue (racism), where the USA had a war but never really addressed it . That’s why 150 years later were still trying to fix obvious racist problems. 18
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@efeedosio24منذ 2 سنواتTrevor's "Aha!" was so triumphant! Like "I knew it!" 6
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@-Bloomingtalesمنذ 2 سنواتWhew!!! Play this on repeat in America please! I would just like for them to acknowledge it. Instead we get gaslit to no end 15
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@ttabani211منذ 2 سنواتTrevor Noah = definition of INTELLIGENCE! period. 209
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@nxva8726منذ 2 سنواتBrilliant. New fan from India. Intelligent, witty, spontaneous, and some deep philosophy - all rolled into one. Glad he got to do what he loves to do. 31
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@gregoryharlston2948منذ 2 سنواتI was born in the South and lived throughout the South: Arkansas, Louisiana, Kentucky and went to college in the North: Massachusetts. Believe it or not, id="hidden25" class="buttons"> the one thing that I used to respect about the southern racists is that they would not smile in your face and then stab you in the back. If they hated you, they would gladly let you know it. They were not above calling you a nigg*r to your face. Whereas, in the North, many PRETEND they are not racists and then stab you when your defenses are down or back is turned. I agree 100% with Trevor's point that is better to know exactly where you stand and who you're dealing with rather than trying to sleuth it out by their duplicitous actions! ....وسعت58
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@HarmoniasHorizonCallsمنذ 2 سنواتbruh as a mixed brother born in MISSISSIPPI I just need to tell you that I love you and I thank you for your honesty SERIOUSLY BROTHER THANK YOU 2
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@marieashiannaevans6578منذ 2 سنواتIt still amazes me that Trevor is that type of comedian. Every now and then I always check up on his show to fill myself with Trevor's views on just about anything. Never regretted looking up to this man ♥️ 13
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@imaanadams5987منذ 2 سنواتTrevor warned us about corruption years back, now we really seeing how things are going down in our country. he's super intelligent, this is very profound. id="hidden27" class="buttons"> we all were upset when you left, but now we're following suit and those of us who can't wish that we could. pray for the people of mzansi ....وسعت13
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@thecooldesiboyمنذ 2 سنواتThis is why Trevor Noah deserves to be The Daily Show host. Even in an off the show moment, he shows such an incredible humour and depth in his answer id="hidden28" class="buttons"> deserves praise. PS: I was one of those people who doubted his capabilities when to took charge of the show after Jon Stewart but it took me many years to realise his potential. ....وسعت1109
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@tintinbanمنذ 2 سنوات"There's something liberating about fighting an obvious enemy as opposed to one you have to prove exists." Tagline of protagonists in every Ghost movie. 15
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@amen_ra6926منذ 2 سنواتTrevor broke that down to a level where even the most dense person would understand it. He seems to have a way of boiling things down to their core essence and making a point of view easier to understand. 43
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@rinzo2009منذ 2 سنواتWhen someone prefers the racism of his home country to that of the "Land of the free", you gotta start asking yourself "How did we get to this"? 64
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@DavidPerry-ui2qzمنذ 2 سنواتWow, what a great question, asked by a wonderful teacher. Trevor, please keep imparting knowledge on us. Your response was heartfelt, thoughtful, and absolutely id="hidden32" class="buttons"> the truth. Love the show, and the between the scenes!! Thank you ....وسعت8
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@carolinanvediazsanfrancisc4904منذ 2 سنواتSo nicely articulated considering the question came out of nowhere and our Trevor had to improvise! We love you, Trevor! 4
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@GodofPainBelialمنذ 2 سنواتI love his answers, they are so detailed yet he's always able to still be entertaining. 34
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@jalabi99منذ 2 سنواتGreat question, great response! Give it up one time for Katrina asking such a great question, and for all the amazing teachers in this country! 6
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@velonicatgmaildotcomمنذ 2 سنواتDeep Thoughts with Trevor! Wow. I love how he makes us think and question our perspectives. 8
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@Ghazanfierceمنذ 2 سنواتI love how intellectually sound & smart Trevor is. 9
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@ivonnkunabu7412منذ 2 سنواتSomeone once said watching Trevor Noah is like watching a Tedtalk and comedy in one. This man right here 43
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@imberrysandyمنذ 2 سنواتonly trevor can roast AND complement the same person without being disrespectful im excited to see your live show! 513
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@rutendo1424منذ 2 سنواتI just love how Trevor always makes you laugh but educates you ♥️ 6
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@divinelovepeaceمنذ 2 سنواتI'd rather blatant racism than subtle. I want to be clear on who my enemy is. This has been my perspective for years. 97
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@chansuableمنذ 2 سنواتTrevor Noah has this amazing ability to just nail any topic in its head every single time! Kudos to his thought process and eloquence! Other comedians make you laugh, but this guy forces you to think too! 8
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@CherryJuliمنذ 2 سنواتI find this topic very interesting. I’m German and certain things that are considered normal on the USA are considered racist here. We don’t use the term “race” to describe people of different skin colors and ethnicities. It’s considered racist to do so. It’s forbidden by law to ask people for their skin color on official papers which is perfectly normal in the US. ....وسعت100
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@simpletipsforeffectivecomm5643منذ 2 سنواتThe constant psychological assault brought on to the mindset by subtle acts of racism can have a long term debilitating effect on communities . Thanks Trevor for eloquently breaking down this sensitive topic 11
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@DinoRenaldمنذ 2 سنواتAs a South African who's never been to the USA, the explanation on the South African side is on point. He says it jokingly but it's true!.. 49
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@TooLittleInfoمنذ 2 سنواتAbsolute best part of the show, so glad these are back! 24
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@darianwatson1439منذ 2 سنواتI think The Daily Show should do a full story on how Native American people are being stolen and killed. And a story on how the tribal governments refuse id="hidden36" class="buttons"> to help their people. Their are Natives being stolen and it doesn't even make the local news much less national news. It seems like most people don't know and anyone that does it seems often ignores it. And the tribal and U.S governments don't work together on trying to build homes or get people access to running water and, electricity. The governments also rarely work together enough to save any of these stolen people, they just ignore these atrocities. ....وسعت143
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@philajobeمنذ 2 سنواتNot saying Americans don't know their history though it fascinates me how Trevor is informative of their history more than Americans themselves. Not id="hidden37" class="buttons"> basing it just on this topic alone but throughout all his interviews with other guests. ....وسعت32
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@_Odyssia_منذ 2 سنوات"There is something liberating about fighting an obvious enemy as opposed to one you have to prove exists". That is so poignant and hits id="hidden38" class="buttons"> so hard. Trevor Noah is a blessing. Another thing that I'd like to point out to what he said, is that I feel like taking about racism is a lot easier than it would be in the States. It's still a very different issue to discuss, usually amongst white South Africans, and discussions are always heated and very tense, but it honestly does get brought up quite a lot. Whether if it's about the issue itself, politicians bring it up, or a situation or event that might incite it (racial moments at a school, university, business, institution, farm, community, etc), it gets people taking. Unfortunately, not a whole lot is done about it, but we can at least acknowledge that even if we live in a "free democracy and apartheid ended 28 years ago and we had our first black president", we know it's still affects us today, and not everything was solved since then. Unlike in the USA, they seem to act like racism is solved because of slavery is abolished, Martin Luther King Jr stopped racism, having and voting for Barack Obama twice ended it again. Even as non American, I know that's a lie. Also, for some strange reason, American racism angers, infuriates and gets me more impassioned than South African racism. Like I'd still get pretty outraged if a blatant racist act in SA happened and I'd be vocal about it, but American racism hits different. I think it's because my poor African American brothers and sisters have to deal with the fact that white Americans who claim that they "aren't" racist, when in fact they are and use microagressions, dog whistle terms and are ignorant to the plights and unjusticies black people face under systematic and institutional racism. At the racist white people before and after Apartheid know that they are racist and don't intend on hiding it. ....وسعت3
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@lulumbele8733منذ 2 سنواتI am a South African living in Maryland USA for more than 30 years, what I can say to Trevor is Enkosi, re ya leboha 17
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@ellengrace4609منذ 2 سنواتThis is Trevor’s most exceptional 3-minute segment ever. 4
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@phumbambalaza9672منذ 2 سنواتSo true Trevor you define it very well ..Love from South Africa 1
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@lamochila100منذ 2 سنواتFunny, amusing, informative, sad, and shocking all in 3 minutes. That's the talent of Trevor Noah. He's got a real connection with the audience. 71
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@liitboiمنذ 2 سنواتhe just took a normal statement and made it 10x funnier. this guy's a genius man 4
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@TheGiggleMasterPمنذ 2 سنواتWhat a profound take on how subtlety lets the worst of humanity fester. 176
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@lizetelliott1443منذ 2 سنوات".but I think there's something liberating about fighting an obvious enemy as opposed to one that you have to prove exists." That is so true. 3
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@carolynmcpherson2667منذ 2 سنواتOh, Trevor. You are always so wonderful to watch. I saw you live here in Charlottesville, VA, and it was a marvelous experience. Please come back!
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@DidiMuseriمنذ 2 سنواتI love Trevor i'm so happy that Between the scenes is back :) 5
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@Tlhakxzaمنذ 2 سنواتMan that “There’s something liberating about fighting an obvious enemy as opposed to one where you have to prove that it exists”. man a response like that can only come from a mind that consumes pages of a book for a living.a brilliant response that was. Trevor’s on another level of intelligence shem stru nasi ✌✊ ....وسعت3
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@shara-leerobertsمنذ 2 سنواتLove his Humor and his point of view on the subject 36
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@ayeshaali864منذ 2 سنواتSo true Trevor you nailed it in a funny way . Hats off to you 3
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@ricardoneves7307منذ 2 سنواتGreat answer, in this era most issues aren't always obvious yet equally challenging. You deserve an Emmy! 1
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@kieranfester3296منذ 2 سنواتTrevor, all the way from Bellville, Cape Town, South Africa: Much Love
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@neilmichael2676منذ 2 سنواتSuch clarity of thought. it's just amazing how he articulates such complex issues with perfect analogies.all the time!! 1
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@momomo12310منذ 2 سنواتThis is a vital issue to cover. There is not many people talking about it. Thank you Mr. Noah. Most xenophobic people are fearful of anyone that looks different than them. 5
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@annamolibeli1532منذ 2 سنواتCan I get a loan? Chuckles This killed me 22
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@denvyzhang4006منذ 2 سنواتLove his explanation. Simple and straightforward with great analogy and KUDOS to Ms Katrina, the teacher who ask that.
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@joeldayrit101منذ 2 سنواتOh how I missed these segments. So glad there's a studio audience again. 1
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@dannywaya7347منذ 2 سنواتQuestion well put and well answered. Well done Katrina and well done Trevor for your answer and your recognition of Katrina’s skills and professionalism. You both gave me a teaching moment in many different ways. 1
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@firstgmailمنذ 2 سنواتTrevor is incredibly bright, witty, and articulate. WOW! 17
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@lovekingjames9201منذ 2 سنوات✨That was absolutely brilliant, very thoughtful, funny, yet poignant ✨ 1
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@thulz1516منذ 2 سنواتThat "Ahaa!!" was sooo South African 5
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@camholdren4657منذ 2 سنواتI appreciate how you word your answers. The way you put it is so true it’s exhausting being discriminated against and then sounding crazy for it
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@archerinfinityofficial4438منذ 2 سنواتat Trevor looks at the camera thinking, "I KILLED IT" 1
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@OMGitsShrimpمنذ 2 سنواتIt’s interesting his perspective on American racism being more covert because that’s what a lot of people of color in the UK say about Britain. I’ve heard a lot of black Brits say racism is more overt in America compared to the UK. The UK is more insidious. Since I’ve grown up in America it’s hard to imagine a more overtly racist place but I guess South Africa was/is it. ....وسعت28
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@lillianbell8798منذ 2 سنواتI love the between the scenes. So Trevor Noah at his spontaneous BEST. 23
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@ALee5.7منذ 2 سنواتTrevor you are Amazing and I love watching your comments that make me laugh at the same time introduce serious topics that the people should know
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@theolimourii4792منذ 2 سنواتThe way he answered this questions reminds of Loyisi gola live a the Apollo in the UK . He said the same thing about racism in the UK being Subtle and he’s used to top shelf racism 12
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@habibibrahim3495منذ 2 سنواتTrevor ! ..your answer is also simple yet very articulating !
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@tachiebillano6244منذ 2 سنواتWow. Trevor is sharp. He quickly recognized the woman's depth and skill in questioning and -- "Aha!" -- thus found his instincts were right, id="hidden46" class="buttons"> because she was a teacher. That means Trevor has great skill in assessing other people. ....وسعت2
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@rgnandanshetty2950منذ 2 سنواتI think very few people can switch between emotions and take the audience with it and trevor has that ability to give that incredibly wise answer and switch to being funny (funny-wise-funny again) in the flow 1
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@alexia3552منذ 2 سنواتI love his banter with the audience member, he's so funny. Excellent insights by the way! 1
مقاطع الفيديو ذات الصلة على South African Racism vs. American Racism - Between the Scenes | The Daily Show:
Watch The White House Correspomdemce Dinner and tell me otherwise! 2402
"THE GREATEST TRICK THE DEVIL EVER PULLED WAS TO CONVINCE THE WORLD HE DIDN'T EXIST" 52
"I have far more respect for one that makes their opinion known
even id="hidden9" class="buttons"> if it's contrary to mine, than to have one pretend to be on my side
only for me to find out later that they couldn't be counted on." At times,
our country reminds me of a child.making promises with their fingers
secretly crossed.
It's not about what America says. It's about what America Does. ....وسعت 332
One example. I once dated a w girl who worked in Papa John's in a middle state id="hidden10" class="buttons"> (Midwest). Her associates looked down on her and made a fool of her by saying, "You know she likes Asians, you guys. Wink wink." "That's why she likes small." Etc etc. When she snapped, they were like, "Oh we were just kidding chill out," shamelessly turning it on her! She was very stressed. They were nice when I saw them.
Not just one or two but every w guy.
There is this peer pressure. Whisper attacks, verbal attacks, physical attacks, condescending attacks. Glass ceilings. ....وسعت 37
it's always how trevor words it for me. so concise and on point. 2379
South Africans know 32
I take it white privilege is not invisible to white S.Africans. Here in the states I know I have white privilege only because I'm both curious about racism and I listen to non-white friends, aquaintences and colleagues when they air their grievances about being treated so differently in public, at work, getting pulled over when they drive. And this is a country were I'm told white privilege is a lie. ....وسعت 509
I'm a white American guy and my fiancé is a black South African woman. I'm moving to South Africa for the wedding next week, and we've been having these kinds of conversations a lot lately about privilege, racism, and the different forms they take in our countries. This is really helpful for both of us.
And thanks for talking about it in a way that makes us laugh when we might otherwise shut down. ....وسعت 123
PS: I was one of those people who doubted his capabilities when to took charge of the show after Jon Stewart but it took me many years to realise his potential. ....وسعت 1109
That is so poignant and hits id="hidden38" class="buttons"> so hard. Trevor Noah is a blessing.
Another thing that I'd like to point out to what he said, is that I feel like taking about racism is a lot easier than it would be in the States. It's still a very different issue to discuss, usually amongst white South Africans, and discussions are always heated and very tense, but it honestly does get brought up quite a lot. Whether if it's about the issue itself, politicians bring it up, or a situation or event that might incite it (racial moments at a school, university, business, institution, farm, community, etc), it gets people taking. Unfortunately, not a whole lot is done about it, but we can at least acknowledge that even if we live in a "free democracy and apartheid ended 28 years ago and we had our first black president", we know it's still affects us today, and not everything was solved since then. Unlike in the USA, they seem to act like racism is solved because of slavery is abolished, Martin Luther King Jr stopped racism, having and voting for Barack Obama twice ended it again. Even as non American, I know that's a lie.
Also, for some strange reason, American racism angers, infuriates and gets me more impassioned than South African racism. Like I'd still get pretty outraged if a blatant racist act in SA happened and I'd be vocal about it, but American racism hits different. I think it's because my poor African American brothers and sisters have to deal with the fact that white Americans who claim that they "aren't" racist, when in fact they are and use microagressions, dog whistle terms and are ignorant to the plights and unjusticies black people face under systematic and institutional racism. At the racist white people before and after Apartheid know that they are racist and don't intend on hiding it. ....وسعت 3
That is so true. 3
Trevor’s on another level of intelligence shem stru nasi ✌✊ ....وسعت 3
Chuckles
This killed me 22
Since I’ve grown up in America it’s hard to imagine a more overtly racist place but I guess South Africa was/is it. ....وسعت 28