On Thursday, CBS dropped the news faster than a hot potato: The Late Show With Stephen Colbert will face the axe once Colbert’s contract runs out in May 2026. It’s a politically sensitive time for CBS and its elusive parent, Paramount Global, who apparently decided that the late-night comedy scene is akin to a sinking ship—full of rats. Colbert, a pioneer of the genre, might just be packing his bags as the last torchbearer of late-night political satire.
CBS offered the classic corporate excuse for the cancellation: “It’s purely financial.” Yes, because nothing screams “we love you” like a financial statement.
“We are proud that Stephen called CBS home,” the network said in a statement that felt like a breakup text. “This is purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night.” In other words, it’s not you, Stephen; it’s our account books.
The note about the cancellation not regarding “other matters happening at Paramount” seemed to be a direct dig at those conspiracy theorists who suspect CBS has been trying to dodge Trump-like tornadoes lately.
While Paramount Global juggles mergers like a circus performer, their concerns about Trump’s objections resonate louder than Colbert’s most biting punchlines. A few weeks back, CBS and 60 Minutes agreed to a $16 million settlement with Trump that was so surprising, it felt like your friend bought a sports car after losing at poker. Apparently, even the classic “just kidding” doesn’t fly in corporate America.
Just days before the cancellation bombshell, Colbert quipped on-air about the settlement, saying, “I am offended.” Great, Stephen; now we’ve got a late-night host throwing a tantrum like a toddler denied candy. He labeled the payout a “big fat bribe” in a moment that surely made the CBS executives shift uncomfortably in their chairs.
Reports emerging soon after revealed CBS was ready to pull the plug. The network’s excuse sounds plausible, given that the late-night landscape is as vibrant as a beige wall, yet Colbert’s show dominated the ratings like a toddler dominating a piñata. As media outlets speculate, it’s hard not to roll your eyes at CBS and Paramount—this duo clearly doesn’t have the best track record to warrant our trust.