Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · May 20
CBS Ends Colbert's 33-Year Late Show Franchise as $16 Million Trump Settlement Fuels Suspicion
Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · May 20

CBS Ends Colbert's 33-Year Late Show Franchise as $16 Million Trump Settlement Fuels Suspicion

10 articles · Updated · The Washington Post · May 20
  • 21 May will mark the end of CBS's 33-year Late Show franchise, with Stephen Colbert's run closing after a celebrity-filled farewell at New York's Ed Sullivan Theater.
  • The cancellation came three days after Colbert mocked Paramount's $16 million settlement with Donald Trump and a week before regulators approved Paramount's $8 billion merger with Skydance, sharpening doubts about CBS's claim it was purely financial.
  • Colbert, 62, had turned the show into late night's top-rated program and won last year's Emmy for outstanding talk series, making the decision harder for critics to square with weak-business arguments.
  • Trump celebrated the show's demise on Truth Social, while David Letterman and other observers said CBS was masking political pressure tied to merger approval and broader attacks on anti-Trump late-night hosts.
  • The show's replacement by Byron Allen's Comics Unleashed underscores how shrinking TV economics and a tougher political climate are pushing combative comedy away from broadcast networks.
With iconic hosts departing, where will audiences now find the unique blend of political satire and civic education?
Did a new interpretation of a 1927 broadcast rule signal the end for a modern era of late-night television?