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Television host Trevor Noah attends an interview with Reuters in New York on July 7, 2016. Image Credit: Reuters

It has been 10 months since Trevor Noah took the helm at Comedy Central’s The Daily Show, but the South African comedian said he still agrees when people say he’s not ready to host the satirical late night news show.

“I don’t think I would ever have been ready, but that’s when you must do it, you will not be ready,” the comedian said.

“Sometimes you will wait your whole life to be ready and you’ll never do something.” The Daily Show has faced criticism for turning over the reins to Noah last September after long-time host Jon Stewart stepped down. Noah, the only millennial host in late night television, has been keenly aware of that.

“I know there are moments where I feel like I have excelled or reached where I would like to be. But I’m far from, from where I would like to end up,” he said. “For now, it is a good grade.” The 32-year-old comedian, who moved to the United States in 2011, was born in Johannesburg, South Africa, to a black South African mother and a Swiss father during apartheid.

Noah most recently garnered headlines for tackling the issue of the latest police shootings in the US, saying activists for the “Black Lives Matter” movement can also be pro-police.

“Whenever I see these shootings I realise how tough it is to be a black person in America — how tough it is to be a person living in a country that in many ways does not acknowledge your plight,” the comedian said.

“That’s something we have to continuously talk about while also acknowledging that there are people who are completely blind to what a black person lives through every day.” The key to addressing current affairs through a comedic lens lies in a comedian’s intention, Noah said, adding that he learns from his mistakes.

“How do I get the person to understand the funny that I was trying to relate to them?,” he said. “That’s how you fix that in comedy.” In July, Noah and the ‘Best [expletive] News Team’ will take The Daily Show on the road to cover both the Democratic and Republican conventions, offering viewers a first-hand account.

“I’ve travelled the world interacting with the topics that I then later use in my comedy. And now I get to do that again with the conventions,” he said.