Jay Leno's Message to Late Night Comics
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CBS announced on July 17 that "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" is being cancelled and "The Late Show" will come to an end after a 33-year run in May 2026. While the cancellation may be surprising for those focused on Colbert's ratings success in the linear TV space,
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Seth Meyers Says He'd 'Worry About Myself, Mental Health-Wise' If His Late Show Was Canceled
Seth Meyers reflected on what the end of his late-night show would feel like to him days after CBS announced 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert' will end after next season.
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David Letterman calls out CBS' 'pure cowardice' for canceling 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert'
Former late-night host David Letterman slammed Paramount and CBS on Friday for their treatment of Stephen Colbert, suggesting the cancellation may be linked to avoiding trouble with Trump.
David Letterman slammed "gutless" CBS over 'The Late Show' cancellation in his first public comments since the network axed Stephen Colbert's show.
David Letterman delivered a fiery rant against CBS and parent company Paramount for cancelling Stephen Colbert’s “Late Show,” calling the decision “gutless” and “pure cowardice” as he labeled his successor a martyr of the network.
On Thursday, Colbert shocked his studio audience, social media and Hollywood with the news that the long-running late night talk show will end in May. Colbert, who has hosted “The Late Show” since taking over from David Letterman 10 years ago,
David Letterman took aim at his former employer, CBS, over the cancellation of 'The Late Show With Stephen Colbert.
In just the first six months of this year, the show booked 43 left-leaning political guests — and zero conservatives — leading all late-night programs in partisan tilt.
Speaking with his former executive producer, Barbara Gaines, in a YouTube video Friday, Letterman called the axing of The Late Show With Stephen Colbert “pure cowardice” and said he doesn’t believe the official line from CBS that the decision was purely about economics (the show has reportedly become a money-loser for the network).
The "King of Late Night" says network TV's after-hours desk jockeys are failing because they're beholden to "publicists and celebrities" who are too controversy-averse.