Stephen Colbert’s jab at network on final Late Show

Stephen Colbert didn’t walk off quietly.

He walked off swinging. In his final Late Show, surrounded by Hollywood royalty and

late-night legends, he slipped in a seven-second joke that felt less like a gag and more like a knife twist.

The band hit the forbidden Peanuts theme. Colbert stared into the camera.

As the laughter rolled through the studio, Colbert’s face said what his contract never could.

Months of corporate spin about “financial headwinds” and “nothing to do with content” suddenly collided with one razor-edged punchline:

“Oh no, I hope this doesn’t cost CBS any money.” It was a joke, but it was also a verdict.

Viewers instantly read it as payback for a network that cashed in on controversy, paid out millions to make a Trump problem disappear, then pulled the plug on the host who dared to call it a “big fat bribe.”

That fleeting Peanuts riff became his closing argument.

In seven seconds, Colbert honored his audience, mocked corporate fear, and reminded everyone who really owned the show’s soul. CBS kept the stage, the logo, the time slot.

Colbert walked away with something bigger: the last word, and a crowd that knew exactly whose side it was on.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *