Elliott Kalan began his career at The Daily Show as a production assistant in 2003 before moving up to producer, staff writer, and ultimately head writer.[3]
Kalan was co-founder of comedy group The Hypocrites with fellow television writer Brock Mahan.[4] He also hosted a live talk and variety stage show, The Primetime Kalan (originally The Midnight Kalan and later The New Kalan Show). The show was created by Kalan, producer
Erik Marcisak, and director Joe Guercio, and written and performed by Kalan, Marcisak, and
Dan McCoy. Many of Kalan's Daily Show co-workers appeared on the show, including
Stephen Colbert,
Samantha Bee, and
Rob Corddry.[5]
Kalan occasionally appears in bit parts on The Daily Show and has provided voice-over narration for "The Decider" comic-book segments. He was instrumental in putting together the "gay cowboy" montage (a comedic series of clips from classic westerns, illustrating that the gay content in Brokeback Mountain is nothing new), when
Jon Stewart hosted the
78th Academy Awards. Along with the writing staff of The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, Kalan has won four
Primetime Emmy Awards.[6]
From 2006 to 2009, Kalan wrote a weekly column for the free morning daily Metro. Following a column he wrote in the August 3, 2007 issue of the Metro, Kalan was fired for writing a self-deprecating joke about the increasing obsolescence of the newspaper industry. This was followed by a brief article in
New York Magazine on August 20, 2007, about the incident,[7] which was heavily publicized on internet blogs including
Media Bistro,
Huffington Post, and
Gawker. Many blog postings about the incident imply that the Metro violated basic principles of journalism and freedom of expression in firing Kalan. Perhaps as a result of this publicity, he was later re-hired. In 2009, he left the Metro of his own accord, saying "Why leave now? It just feels like the right time for me to move on creatively. Or I’m going undercover to deliver Osama bin Laden to justice. Pick whichever reason sounds cooler."[citation needed]
Kalan also performs as a stand-up comic, and in 2013 performed several
USO shows in Afghanistan along with
John Oliver,
Rory Albanese, and Adam Lowitt.[8]
In August 2015 Kalan announced that he had left his position as head writer for The Daily Show.[9] In May 2016, it was announced he was joining the writing staff of the Mystery Science Theater 3000 revival as head writer.[10]
On April 14, 2017, Kalan appeared on Episode 1103 of the Netflix production of Mystery Science Theater 3000 along with series creator
Joel Hodgson. The two portrayed characters in a "host segment" of that episode's source movie, The Time Travelers.
Kalan was a contestant on the January 25, 2021 episode of Jeopardy! He came in second place.[11]
Podcasting
Along with comedians
Dan McCoy and
Stuart Wellington, Kalan co-hosts The Flop House podcast, on which the hosts discuss and mock major movies that were either commercial or critical "flops", such as Gamer and All About Steve. One supplemental episode of the Flop House, in which Kalan improvised a rapid-fire pitch for a film based on the comic
Ziggy became a minor viral Internet success after being posted on
Gawker.[12] Dan McCoy and Kalan have also been published in comedy magazine Whim Quarterly and film zine I Love Bad Movies.
Kalan is also the co-host of the
Audible podcast Presidents Are People Too!, along with American historian Alexis Coe. The podcast examines the life and times of the
presidents of the United States.[13]
From early 2009 until April 2012, Kalan hosted the screening series Closely Watched Films[15] at
92YTribeca. These events commonly featured the screening of a rare older film followed by a discussion between Kalan and a celebrity guest who had not previously seen the film.
Comic book writing
Kalan is a comic book writer; among other titles, he has written the six-issue superhero limited series Spider-Man and the X-Men. An exchange of dialogue between the characters
Spider-Man and
Sauron from the series became a meme:
Spider-Man: “You can rewrite DNA on the fly, and you're using it to turn people into dinosaurs? But with tech like that, you could cure cancer!” Sauron: “But I don't want to cure cancer. I want to turn people into dinosaurs.”
Personal life
Kalan lives in
Los Angeles,
California with his wife Danielle and their sons. He has a twin sister and a brother.
Michael Brumm, Nate Charny, Aaron Cohen,
Stephen Colbert, Richard Dahm,
Paul Dinello,
Eric Drysdale, Rob Dubbin,
Glenn Eichler, Gabe Gronli, Barry Julien, Jay Katsir, Sam Kim, Matthew Lappin, Frank Lesser, Opus Moreschi,
Tom Purcell, Meredith Scardino, and Max Werner (2014)