The thing about jokes is that they require a shared base of knowledge. A shared reality. If I tell a joke about a commercial and you’ve never seen that commercial, the joke isn’t going to go over very well. Losing late night shows is one more step toward losing a shared reality, and that to me is terrifying.
There is a moment every New Yorker knows. It happens when you’re on the subway and someone does something particularly insane: an 83-year-old white lady raps, or a man in a three-piece suit publicly clips his toenails. And then you catch the eye of someone across the train – they raise their eyebrows and you raise your eyebrows back. And then you feel a little better. Because someone else saw what you saw and they can confirm that it’s something.
Late night hosts like Stephen Colbert do that on a larger scale. They’re our way of saying: “Hey, this is crazy, right? RIGHT?” In this world of algorithmic bubbles and blatant lies and deepfakes, late night television is a place you can gather at night and say: “Yes, this happened and it is fucking weird.”
Here’s another thing I like about jokes: the basis of jokes is truth. I’ve written books, speeches, game shows and news articles and I’ve never been fact-checked as hard as I was when writing late night television. Jokes just don’t work if they’re not based on something true.
I don't mean to beat the Colbert drum (and, trust me, I'm perhaps posting 5% of what I run into about this imbroglio), but what this cancellation suggests is very, very dark for the media.
Colbert and gang have the resources and connections to build their own network and I certainly hope they do. Hell, hire me guys!
Stewart took some time away, and I can't fault him for that, but that was a bit of a self inflicted A/B test for Republicans to operate out of the spotlight. I have no doubt they are scheming that far ahead. Under all the chaos of Donny dumbass, is a lean, sophisticated cruelty machine. There are plans in the works Colbert is a threat to.