"The Late Show With Stephen Colbert" wrapped up its last episode on Thursday, after what felt like months of goodbyes. Colbert didn't manage to land that interview with the Pope he was hoping for, but plenty of others dropped by for cameos and performances. If you didn't like the final show, which featured Paul McCartney playing the Ed Sullivan theater again, the return of Jon Baptise, and a silly science-fiction storyline, that's fine. Colbert and company made plenty of others that could stand in for a finale that you might like better - Colbert taking his own Colbert Questionert on Wednesday, the "Worst of the Late Show" program on Monday that spotlighted the contributions of members of the "Late Show" staff, the big President Obama interview from the week before, or the "Strike Force Five" reunion of all the current late night television hosts the week before that.
My favorite was easily last Friday's return of David Letterman, the previous "Late Show" host, who Colbert took over from in 2015. Letterman, always the anti-establishment figure, was one of the only final guests who really displayed any sign of being upset about the whole situation. He dressed down CBS several times during the interview, and then made them the literal target of a resurrected bit from his own version of the show - dropping random stuff off the roof of the Ed Sullivan theater to smash on the asphalt below. In this case, Letterman and Colbert dropped chairs from the set - including Colbert's desk chair - trying to hit a giant CBS eye logo on the ground. A few watermelons and a multi-tiered cake were also hurled over for good measure. The clip was later released on Youtube as a video titled "Wanton Destruction of CBS Property."
Stephen Colbert has also been doing a good amount of press to promote these final programs - interviews with Hollywood Reporter, Entertainment Tonight, the Today Show, People Magazine, and others. He's clearly got mixed feelings about the end of the show, but he's leaving on a high note, despite the fact that he's being pushed out by the network. What's more, he's at the height of his popularity and everybody in town seems to be on his side. His fellow hosts Jimmy Kimmel and Jimmy Fallon ran reruns on Thursday in solidarity, while his old colleagues at "The Daily Show" and "Last Week Tonight" have delivered shoutouts and encouragement. The outpouring of support and good wishes is wonderful to see, and I suppose it's better to focus on that than the grim reality of why "The Late Show" was cancelled - the Paramount Skydance merger and the pettiness of the Trump administration. Say what you want about Disney, but they only pulled "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" for a week.
I've been watching Stephen Colbert since his appearances on "The Daily Show," and I'll be very sad if he decides to stop performing. Colbert has been one of our most reliable satirists, and even though helming a big network show softened his edge, he proved far more watchable than his competitors. His keen intelligence, steady faith, and winning wholesomeness never clashed with his killer sense of humor or willingness to be ribald and ridiculous. Then again, if writing "Lord of the Rings" movies and sleeping in late will make Colbert happy, all the best to him. I'm more worried about the staff of "The Late Show," who are all now unemployed. CBS is ending their late night talk programs entirely, opting to replace "The Late Show" with a program called "Comics Unleashed with Byron Allen." Allen has already made it clear he will be avoiding political commentary.
Of all the finales and cancellations this year, "The Late Show" is the toughest to reckon with, because it shouldn't have happened, and the fact that it did indicates that things are very wrong at CBS and Paramount right now. I know the end of "The Late Show" was an inevitability, considering the decline of network television, but Colbert easily could have gone on many more years as host. He might make a return to late night on another show, the way Jon Stewart did, but it won't be the same. This is the end of an era, not just for Colbert, but for television. And as wonderful as these last weeks of "The Late Show" have been, there is nothing that is going to make this ending sit right.
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