Another day, another redundant “Daily Show” spinoff.

Comedy Central announced on Tuesday that Jordan Klepper, a current “Daily Show” correspondent, will helm his very own talk show directly following Trevor Noah’s. The as-yet-untitled program replaces the canceled “Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore,” which starred yet another “D.S.” alum.

As the old saying goes: When all else fails, repeat the same dumb tactics.

Even before Jon Stewart retired from television in 2015 and was replaced with Noah, his spawn had already begun their conquest of late night: Stephen Colbert’s “The Colbert Report” aired on Comedy Central from 2005 to 2014 and “Last Week Tonight With John Oliver” premiered in 2014 on HBO.

Since Stewart’s exit, the pesky projects have proliferated: “The Nightly Show” began in 2015. TBS’ “Full Frontal with Samantha Bee” followed in 2016. And now Klepper will join the jam-packed lineup, too.

All of these are, like “The Daily Show,” satirical news programs. And the last thing we need is another one of those.

Clearly, it has not yet hit home with cable networks that these carbon copies embrace an identical, bone-dry, cold, monotonous style and a “behold my unassailable intellect!” liberal dogma. That is OK in moderation, like fudge. But who wants to eat two pounds of mediocre fudge? If you watch one, you’ve watched them all.

The problem isn’t so much the comics’ politics or points-of-view, but rather their step-and-repeat demeanor. Stewart was truly edgy and well-suited to his moment. The host was known for his often fiery attitude, giggly mischief and willingness to go off-script. Stewart played himself, and his correspondents were overblown parodies of newscasters — relaying the absurdity of the day’s events without batting an eye. But, since graduating, they’ve taken their automaton personas with them to new, self-righteous heights. Whereas Stewart was a whip-smart everyman, his pupils deign to be modern-day soothsayers — Oracles at Selfie.

Their elite know-it-all-ism isn’t fun, hilarious or innovative anymore. En masse, it’s actually quite cloying, like the smart-alec student who manages to irritate even the teacher with his endless monologues. Too bad lazy networks keep ordering them up with the casual of ease of saying “No. 8, medium Coke” at McDonalds.

Now, silly nerd-chic news shows feel desperately retro, obvious and frankly embittered. The key to saving this dying format isn’t by replicating “The Daily Show” in its heyday, it’s experimenting with something new.

Their Moment of Zen has passed.