Opinion This was the week that comedy pushed back

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By Eric Deggans
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Stephen Colbert during The Late Show on Monday, July 21

It was the week that comedy hit back. Hard.

Here's what I mean: When federal regulators on Thursday approved entertainment conglomerate Paramount's $8-billion merger with Skydance, media analysts like me began to wonder.

The approval came about a week after Paramount-owned CBS announced that it was cancelling The Late Show, currently hosted by Stephen Colbert — a comic who hasn't been shy in his criticism of President Trump and his administration. Many inquiring minds asked: Could moves to limit a prominent and vocal detractor of the president have helped the deal along?

But if anyone thought Colbert's cancellation — which won't come until his contract ends in May 2026 — might tamp down political commentary in other areas of Paramount's media empire, they learned differently this past week.

Jon Stewart kicked things off last Monday while hosting The Daily Show, which airs on Paramount-owned Comedy Central. He offered a blistering monologue that questioned CBS's statement asserting Colbert's cancellation was "purely a financial decision," eventually joining a gospel choir to sing "go f— yourself" to media companies, law firms, universities and other institutions that might censor themselves to avoid angering the government.

"The shows that you now seek to cancel, censor and control … a not insignificant portion of that $8 billion value came from those shows," Stewart noted, passionately. "That's what made you that money."

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"Was this purely financial?" Jon Stewart wondered on The Daily Show this week after Paramount announced the coming end of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. "Or maybe the path of least resistance for your $8-billion merger was killing a show that you know rankled a fragile and vengeful president."

But the real surprise came when another Comedy Central show, South Park, released the first episode of its 27th season on Wednesday. The show's creators, Trey Parker and Matt Stone, had just completed tough negotiations to reach a five-year, $1.5-billion deal with Paramount over new episodes and streaming rights — providing a lot of reasons to feel good about working with the company.

Anyone who has tracked Stone's and Parker's rebellious streak over the years could guess what happened next. Their season premiere "Sermon on the Mount," was a savagely pointed, often crude satire — of President Trump, Paramount's cancellation of Colbert, the rise of Christian nationalism in the United States, the demonization of woke ideology, Trump's strategy of using lawsuits to intimidate critics, and much more.

(They even lampooned stereotypes about NPR while referencing Congress' recent vote to take back previously approved funding for public media. A character — who is a fan — called the network "the funniest show ever, where all the lesbians and Jews complain about stuff." Which, I gotta admit, made me chuckle a bit.)

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On Thursday, during a panel at Comic-Con, South Park creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker were asked if they anticipated the White House's reaction to their show's new episode. "We're terribly sorry," Parker deadpanned.

While the pushback on South Park wasn't surprising to me, the intensity of the barbs were eye-opening. They showed an animated Trump propositioning Satan in bed, depicted Jesus Christ warning a crowd about the danger of a president who could sue them and presented several scenes lampooning the president's, um, anatomy – something Parker and Stone said brought some debate with Comedy Central executives.

Viewed through a show business lens, this was a classic case of South Park doing what it does best — poke a finger in the eye of what's expected and accepted. Parker and Stone know the company has already ponied up a ton of money to stay in business with them — and the one thing their fans likely wouldn't forgive is any sense that revenue from a big deal would blunt their satirical chops.

It also doesn't hurt that the first new episode of a show in its 27th season features pungent barbs focused on one of the biggest stories in show business. I have a hunch any hurt feelings at Paramount or Comedy Central will be soothed by the monster ratings the episode will likely generate, adding to the sense that South Park remains relevant and worth the dollars the company is spending. Well-played.

While all this was happening last week, Colbert also contributed to the conversation with monologues of his own. He promised "for the next 10 months, the gloves are off" — a vow he lived up to moments later, while cracking a joke about Trump's reaction to his cancellation.

Imitating the president's voice, Colbert noted: "On Friday, Donald Trump posted 'I absolutely love that Colbert got fired. His talent was even less than his ratings.' How dare you sir? Would an untalented man be able to compose the following satirical witticism: Go f*** yourself."

In that monologue this past Monday and the rest of his monologues last week, Colbert hinted he doesn't completely believe CBS' assertion that his cancellation was just a financial decision and mocked reporting, which cited anonymous sources, saying his show lost between $40 and $50 million in a year.

The previous host of The Late Show, David Letterman, also weighed in last week. Speaking in a video with former Late Show producer Barbara Gaines, Letterman called CBS' cancellation of Colbert "pure cowardice" and expressed skepticism it was purely about finances. Letterman, who famously tussled with executives at both CBS and NBC when he hosted late night shows, said the company "did not handle Stephen Colbert, the face of that network, in the way he deserves."

What I think we've learned this week is that comedians and satirists have a more direct and dramatic way to push back against real or perceived corporate pressure — showing fans right away they will not be intimidated.

News outlets targeted with similar pressures might have to wait for the next high-profile news story to show their independence — staffers at 60 Minutes still face skepticism from the public, after tensions over Paramount's $16-million lawsuit settlement with President Trump led two executives at CBS News to resign.

But comics and satirists, like Stewart, Colbert, Parker and Stone, can step up while the world is watching to make their points — well aware that, if their shows are canceled, they're gonna need loyal audiences who value their voices to follow them wherever they land next.
 
Colbert hasn't been funny in decades and arguably peaked with Harvey Birdman.
Oh shit I forgot about that, he is great on that show! Phil Sebben is obviously not a stretch for him, but he also voiced Reducto which is a pretty solid bit of acting.
 
How come South Park's "anti-semitic" character has never once mentioned the Rothschilds in both London's Banking system and America's FED? Sure seems like something Cartmann would talk about - yet he's only written to say things like kike, he never once mentions the FED or the Jews who created it. Hell I can't even remember him going off on disproportionate Jewish ownership of media monopolies like..... Comedy Central...... Hmmmm......
Well it is a Comedy Central/Paramount product, not fucking Murdoch Murdoch.
 
Why are they trying to turn the death of a failed TV Show that 20 people watched, into a social movement? Does the corporate left really have nothing better to do right now?

Who is actually going to bat for Stephen Colbert?
 
Colbert's show had the axe dropped on it because the merger with Skydance demanded they lose weight and Colbert alone is like a $50 million drag on CBS, over $100 million if you just count raw numbers and not what he “brings in”. His trying to appeal to his audience and get them to help him OWN DRUMPF over this and the protest of CBS getting such an anemic turnout is just icing on the cake.
 
I love that the journoroach tried to spin a few washed up Gen-X comedians having public tabtrums as "BLOMPFLER GETTING LE EBIG PWNED". After Skibidi Biden, the only shocker here is it took a year for them to run your ass out.
 
While the pushback on South Park wasn't surprising to me, the intensity of the barbs were eye-opening. They showed an animated Trump propositioning Satan in bed, depicted Jesus Christ warning a crowd about the danger of a president who could sue them and presented several scenes lampooning the president's, um, anatomy – something Parker and Stone said brought some debate with Comedy Central executives.
Wow! "Trump has small dick and fucks Satan" what a stunning display of wit!
 
What gets me is that the fact that a shift in political landscape leading to these cancellations should give these people pause. Like, does it not imply that these shows were already partisan, captured propaganda, those making them are cynical corporate shills, and that they lack the actual popularity and support to stand without being propped up?
No. It's the children who are wrong.
 
I'm going to laugh so hard if Colbert end up getting shit-canned before may because his narcissistic ego keeps pushing him to be a bitter twat. He clearly believes he's far more important than he really is. Jay Leno was asked about the situation recently, and he clearly sees what the problem is: late night hosts like Colbert no longer see themselves as comedians or entertainers, they see themselves as mouthpieces for one political party, and it's alienating half the potential audience. That's bad for business.
 
Wow the south park guys made fun of Dolan Blumpf just like they make fun of everyone (except Joe Biden), surely this will deal a great blow to Cheeto Hitler

I haven't watched it in a long while but apparently South Park was mostly on hiatus for the duration of the Biden presidency. There were like 12 episodes total and a couple of specials because there was a fight over the streaming rights between HBO and Paramount.

So it's no too surprising that they didn't get a chance to bag on Biden.
 
How come South Park's "anti-semitic" character has never once mentioned the Rothschilds in both London's Banking system and America's FED? Sure seems like something Cartmann would talk about - yet he's only written to say things like kike, he never once mentions the FED or the Jews who created it. Hell I can't even remember him going off on disproportionate Jewish ownership of media monopolies like..... Comedy Central...... Hmmmm......
God forbid someone realizes just how much the average jew despises the average White goy.
It's million times more than the other way around, and the last time a Nation realized this fact, a few thousand of them went home in ashtrays :tomgirl:
 
I saw the headline, misread it at face value, instantly realized it must actually be about the late shows rallying for Colbert...

...and these shows collectively got their first genuine laugh out of me.
 
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