Thursday, July 17, 2025

"Dig-a-hole department": ten-year-old crap program, Steven Colbert late show is cancelled (next may), which cnn's Erin Burnett says is due to "criticism of cbs' Trump/60 minutes"

By Grand Rapids Anonymous
thursday, july 17, 2025 at 10:24:00 p.m. edt

"Dig-a-hole department": ten-year-old crappy program, Steven Colbert late show is cancelled (next may), which cnn's Erin Burnett says is due to "criticism of cbs' Trump/60 minutes"

GRA: Whoever heard of a program being cancelled--AFTER A YEAR?

Well a lot of speculation over WHY the decade-old (seems like longer) late show, with Steven Colbert, is being put out to pasture in may, 2026. I saw the cnn report on youtube and Erin Burnett was more shocked about this than President Trump nearly being killed, a year ago.

[It seemed like much longer to me, too, GRA. So, I checked Colbert's credits at imdb.com, and learned that before this show (1,688 episodes) he had had a five-year run with a show called the Colbert report (1,266 episodes), and from 1997-2015, had appeared 777 times on the daily show.). That's 3,731 appearances, without countin hundreds more. The guy was overexposed, as of 20 years ago. Contrast that to Johnny, who must have appeared app. 5,900 times on one show alone, and never suffered overexposure.]

"Some reports say the cancellation of the show is due to Colbert's put-down of cbs settling with P T. for millions in the 60 minutes' lawsuit."

She also mentioned, cbs thinks of late night talk as "unprofitable," which the network signaled two years ago, by disappearing the late, late show with James Corden.

late show and late, late show were perfect descriptions for these soon-to-be-deceased programs, but in reality, the reason for the lack of popularity of this type of programming anymore is simple: We have no more Carsons, Lettermans, Rickleses, Carlins, Newharts, Ann-Margrets or Suzanne Pleshettes that the public wants to stay up and see anymore (all White, by the way).

The surviving shows, including Fallon, Seth Meyer, and Kimmel will continue to flood late night talk with big-mouthed blacks and ultra-liberal scum, and viewership will also continue to drop (therefore, not profitable).

And not entertaining either for normal people. Where has all the talent gone?

--GRA



5 comments:

Anonymous said...

cbs is probably eager to install a late night news(propaganda)show opposite "Nightline".

"Someone" is destroying tv as we knew it,even a mere 20-25 years ago. "Frasier" was still on,"Drew Carey Show","Friends","House" and many more.

Music and movies are as unentertaining as they could possibly be in 2025. Why?

The industries turned from White based product to black in both areas. TV news--"they're" working on now--and prime time programming. Commercials are mostly black. These ad people don't get sick of making black ads all the time?

Incredible loss of quality in every area.

I've said it before: What used to make America great were the White people we saw on tv,the movies and listened to on radios or albums. Talented guys like Bacharach/David Rogers/Hammerstein,Wayne,Eastwood,Huntley/Brinkley,Groucho,Sinatra,Dean Martin roasts,so many top notch performers. blacks were funnier back then--Redd Foxx,Flip Eilson--but Whites were the great stars If you destroy these industries,what makes people laugh and music they can hum to,you destroy the country,which is just what happened.

--GRA

Anonymous said...

This isn't a happy country anymore,as it was in 1991, 1981,1971,1961,1951. A giant Bounty paper towel came down and absorbed the life out of it--for the reasons I listed above.

--GRA

Anonymous said...

jerry pdx
I'm surprised they haven't blacked up the late night talk show hosts. The only two black late night talk show hosts I can think of were Arsenio Hall and Byron Allen, both unfunny, which is probably why their shows failed. As long as the current White hosts stay woke and shove plenty of negroes in our faces maybe the networks will keep them White. Or maybe they've got a negro waiting in the wings to replace Colbert.

Anonymous said...

O'Reilly made a quick comment about Colbert's future firing by pointing out that "network viewership has dropped below 20% for the first time--and will head lower."

46% do streaming,20% watch cable and 19% watch network tv with the rest--"other".

"Why?"asked the host to himself.

"Because network tv is liberal and boring."

Woke tv=boring,very true. Plus the "boring" part is repetitive,constantly placing blacks as superior over Whites.The situations change but the song remains the same:blacks are portrayed as chief surgeons,big shot business people,movers and shakers,sensible,non-violent characters. Whiteys--if they're lucky--fetch coffee or get to "learn" about things by watching blackie save the world

That must be why I've seen only one black on "Jeopardy" this year. It's the complete opposite impression of what the networks want you to believe with their various show plots.




--GRA

AbolishTenure said...

1) Oh! a Nightline clone, excellent speculation. A place for the resistance yappers to yap some more without the hassle of putting weirdo Colbert at the center of everything. As well as a dumpster to put personalities they're trying to ease out. Let's see, if they want to get rid of Gayle King's $12 million salary and the friction on the morning show set, would saying "Gayle, your nation and your people need you to be there for them at 11:30pm", that might do the trick.

6) (moved up here from the bottom) OK, time to climb out on the limb. I'll predict it's Stephen A. Smith who grabs the gig as what he thinks is his ticket as a step up to a bigger platform to build his case for a presidential run in '28. That's a winner for the execs who put the deal together, too: DEI star with perceived gravitas and an established pattern of getting attention from all the rest of the media. All the big Dems will be clamoring to be his guests. Smith can mildly push back on minor points here and there and build his Centrist mystique. (Corollary prediction: The Hoft Brothers will take the bait.)

2) Someone said long ago - it was so long ago that Rush quoted them - as saying the network execs no longer intended late-night comedy shows to draw ratings or profits. So Colbert isn't being canceled because of money.

3) Yes, any replacement has to be blacker, for sure. Arsenio et al were unfunny, yes, but they probably think a hip urban vibe will get buzz and viewers. A bandleader of color, too, but central personalities of color are a must, just like the morning shows.

4) "a giant Bounty paper towel" YES! The sicker picker upper.

5) Get real, headline-writers! Nine months notice of termination doesn't count as "fired".