If I'm allowed to offer an opinion... yeah, I know, there are people who think opinions are like belly buttons, when they're actually something more stinky, dirty and full of - - * well, you know.
Stephen Colbert was quoted saying that the network changed the way it looked at The Late Show. There's back and forth over whether the network is cowering and cow-towing to Trump. That may be true. I think Letterman summed it up: The bottom line is the bottom line. Colbert and The Late Show are "overhead". Rule Numero Uno is: keep costs down, so money stays in the White-Collar pockets.
I liked The Colber' Repor'. I thought he and Jon Stewart were funny. I don't agree with the politics. I'm not sure I agree with Bill Maher, either. But the dialogue and the witty skewering of the news was funny.
I wondered how Stephen Colbert, best known for Political Commentary was going to transition to Entertainment Interviews. That's traditional late-night programming. Late-night programming is putting people to sleep by promoting the latest trend or fad. Riding the wave of popular culture. As a viewer, I gave Colbert a try, then life got in the way and I moved on.
I never stayed up late enough for Craig Ferguson, but in catching up on videos and reels, he seemed kind of hilarious by flipping the format and convention. Maybe, that's just me.
Kimmel is something else. He was funny. Past tense. He was funny with bits like Chewie in the audience while interviewing Harrison Ford and Tom Holland asking who Chris Pratt's favorite "Tom" was. My favorite was the faux-Friends skit he did with Jennifer Aniston and Courtney Cox. Three bits that've watched in reels or YouTube.
I think we might be able to agree that Kimmel changed his tone.
There's a surge in nostalgia for Johnny Carson. He was apparently a class act. Legend has it he never had a sitting president - or maybe even a politician in office - as a guest. He wasn't political. There's a clip circulating with Carson hosting the Oscars when Reagan was shot.
The upshot seems to be Carson didn't rage-bait at 10:30 or 11:30pm. He put people to sleep with a laugh. He entertained. As a host, he focused the spotlight on guests.
I'm not inviting a Trump-Biden debate. Go somewhere else for that. There's a difference between The Late Show, The Tonight Show and Kimmel Live! and The Daily Show and The Colbert Report. Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert were part of a Political Commentary for Comedy. Traditional late night seems to be shifting over into that area and away from their original premise. I'd say they seem to be "Jumping the Shark". There are programs that cater to the political junkie audience. Traditional late night is more of a promotional platform. Which seems to be why there's nostalgia for the golden era of Carson.
My feeling on politics is this: all candidates lie or fudge the truth. At least the ones that get elected. It's hard to get elected if you're honest. We usually pick our party and candidates like our sports teams. But again, I'm not inviting a political debate, simply because it just boils down to MY team is better than YOUR team and YOU'RE both wrong and dumb if you don't agree with ME.
But that's just my stinky, dirty two cents.

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