Over the past several days, conservative writers such as Jeffrey M. McCall, Tom Purcell of Townhall.com, and NRO's Armond White have celebrated the end of Late Night with Stephen Colbert.
The common denominator between these pieces is twofold.
First, that Colbert was cancelled strictly for financial reasons due to the high cost of producing his show.
Second, that Colbert's overtly political brand of comedy alienated half of America's viewers.
Nonsense.
For starters, Colbert had been the number one rated late night talk show for nine consecutive years.
Let us also remember that FOX News has a late-night show in the form of Greg Gutfeld who has an equally political brand of comedy. Yet somehow McCall, Purcell and White make no mention of him. Would that be because they agree with Gutfeld's politics and object to Colbert because he hold views contrary to their own?
Now I understand that Colbert's political humor isn't for everyone. Indeed, I pointed that out myself when I wrote a piece for NRO back in 2017 concerning the 25th anniversary of Johnny Carson's retirement from The Tonight Show.
Yet whether you agree or disagree with his brand of humor, Stephen Colbert no longer has a late-night talk show on CBS for one reason.
President Trump.
When the cancellation was announced in July 2025, I wrote:
The network cited an unspecified "financial decision" as the reason for its cancellation as it evidently will withdraw from late night TV altogether.
I would hazard a guess that its "financial decision" is to appease President Trump so the administration will approve Paramount's merger with Skydance. Earlier this week, Colbert was publicly critical of CBS' parent company Paramount for settling Trump's frivolous lawsuit against 60 Minutes and the network at the beginning of the month. That will not help Paramount's standing with Trump.
There is really no other reason for CBS to pull the plug on Colbert. It is a ratings juggernaut. But the merger is a higher priority. Giving $16 million to the Trump Presidential Library (an oxymoron if there ever was one) is but a drop in the bucket. Trump is going to want a lot more. He wants a scalp and Stephen Colbert's will do just nicely given he is a persistent thorn in the President's side.
Indeed, Trump not only celebrated Colbert's network TV demise but hoped for his other late-night colleagues to be removed from the airwaves.
Trump made similar remarks when CBS announced Colbert's cancellation last summer:
Let me put it another way. Does anyone honestly believe that CBS would have cancelled Colbert had we elected Kamala Harris?
With that, I will cede that one of my takes in that post did not age so well:
What CBS will do after the late local news is anyone's guess although I would not be shocked if someone in the MAGAverse like Charlie Kirk got a time slot.
Less than 2 months later, Kirk would be felled by an assassin's bullet.
In any event, Colbert's slot has been taken over by Byron Allen, a veteran comedian and successful media mogul. I'm old enough to remember Allen from his days on Real People. For his part, Allen has said there is enough political humor on late-night TV. I have no objection to this statement. Political humor has never been part of Allen's schtick. So, why start now? Yet it would not surprise if CBS either lured Gutfeld or eventually replaced Allen with a MAGA friendly host. After all, they've done it at their anchor desk.
Of course, Colbert will be just fine. He will be co-writing the next Lord of the Rings film with his son, Peter McGee.
But conservatives ought to stop pretending that President Trump had nothing to with Stephen Colbert's removal from CBS' late-night lineup. To do otherwise is simply dishonest and disingenuous.
