According to its parent company, Paramount, the cancellation was purely a financial decision. Certainly, budgetary concerns played a significant role. With more than 200 staffers, The Late Show represented a conspicuous bulge in the budget.
But financial strain alone does not seem to be the whole story. Why not implement cost-cutting measures? Other similar shows operate quite effectively and efficiently with only a fraction of the overhead.
Colbert’s fans believe deeper forces are at play. Some allege that the move was pushback against Colbert’s left-leaning, anti-Trump commentaries—a way to kowtow to the president. That theory has its holes. Colbert’s political tone aligns closely with CBS’s broader news programming.
If Trump wanted to reduce criticism from the network, there were arguably better targets. Moreover, there’s no evidence that Trump ever demanded Colbert’s firing. That decision appears to have come solely from Paramount’s leadership.
Another theory centers on CBS’s settlement of a lawsuit Trump filed over a 60 Minutes interview with Vice President Kamala Harris during the campaign. The network resolved the case by promising to donate $16 million to Trump’s future presidential library. Trump himself claimed the settlement was worth $35 million, sparking speculation that other indirect financial concessions may have been included but not disclosed.
Colbert also used his show to sharply criticize CBS for settling the lawsuit. His pointed remarks likely raised eyebrows in Paramount’s boardroom. While this alone might not justify cancellation, it could be a contributing factor.
Then there is the looming merger between CBS and Skydance Media—a deal that must be approved by Trump. Some have speculated about a “backroom arrangement” — fire Colbert, and the merger goes through. Others wonder whether CBS acted unilaterally, sacrificing Colbert as a goodwill gesture – putting his head on the platter. While this theory circulates among left-leaning pundits, no concrete evidence has surfaced. Still, without the merger, Paramount’s financial stability could be on shaky grounds.
Critics also say the show was losing popularity. Some claim Colbert wasn’t funny anymore—if he ever was. Personally, I’ve never found Colbert particularly hilarious. But then, I lump all the current hosts into the same category. None of them strike the right tone for broad audience appeal the way trailblazers like Johnny Carson, David Letterman, Conan O’Brien, and Jay Leno once did. Today’s crop is too political, too tiresome. They rarely spark that deep, involuntary, “Oh my God that’s funny!” kind of laughter.
A drop in ratings combined with high production costs delivers a classic budgetary one-two punch. But … of the four major late-night hosts—Greg Gutfeld, Jimmy Kimmel and Jimmy Fallon—Colbert consistently ranked second, with Gutfeld in the top spot. So, while Colbert may have lost some luster, he wasn’t exactly falling off the ratings cliff.
It is also noteworthy that Paramount did not simply remove Colbert and scout for a replacement. They shut down The Late Show entirely. That suggests it is about more than just him—perhaps what some analysts are calling “viewer fatigue.”
Personally, I don’t see a single decisive factor driving Paramount’s decision. Not even a combination of pressures seems fully convincing. Yet they went ahead and did it—leaving fans and critics puzzled, and some very angry. Maybe we’ll be able to divine more when we see what replaces The Late Show.
So there ‘tis.
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Author: Larry Horist
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