On Monday, Samantha Bee will attempt something few women before her have been able to do — headline a sustained success in late night TV comedy.
The genre, which has become increasingly bloated with options, has infamously been a boys club for decades, with high profile names like Joan Rivers, Whoopi Goldberg and Wanda Sykes all failing to gain much of a foothold. And Bee’s arrival on the scene comes at a time when awareness over the lack of diversity on late night comedy shows has arguably reached its peak.
While “Saturday Night Live” has added more minorities to its cast, and Comedy Central’s late-night line-up features two black hosts, women are still wildly underrepresented, as evidenced by a controversial photo spread in Vanity Fair last year, which showed the all-male cadre of top-tier hosts yukking it up together. Bee, whose show had yet to debut at the time, had a hilarious retort via social media, which tapped into the rage many viewers felt about stubborn resistance to female voices in mainstream humor:
.@VanityFair BETTER pic.twitter.com/EfPbTQ3qZ8
— Samantha Bee (@iamsambee) September 14, 2015
Ever since her new TBS show, “Full Frontal,” was announced, Bee has not shied away from the elephant in the room: her gender. In an early promo, she lamented the “sausage party” that late-night comedy has turned into, and in the campaign leading up her show’s premiere, she appeared in several ads that acknowledge the dearth of a woman’s perspective in the genre. And the first segment from the show that’s been widely teased features her, “Daily Show”-style, doing a remote report on how poorly the Veteran’s Administration is equipped to handle female patients.
In a recent interview with TODAY, Bee conceded that being the only woman in late night “does matter” to her.
“It’s not the main focus of my life … It’s not all that the show is about, but it will be a big part of the show, because I’m steeped in womanness,” she said. Despite a historically long 12-year run as a correspondent on “The Daily Show,” she was never approached by producers to take over the reigns of that show, something her husband (and also former cast-member on the show) Jason Jones called “a little shocking, to say the least,” in the New York Times last month.
Full Frontal with Samantha Bee: now hiring fact checkers.https://t.co/iv7irMi8rc









