“I Was Shocked, But Not Surprised”: Samantha Bee Calls CBS’s Cancellation of “The Late Show” a Troubling Signal for the Future of Late-Night Television
No one expected that night would be the last time the spotlight hit that familiar stage. While audiences were still laughing at Stephen Colbert’s razor-sharp monologue, chaos was quietly unfolding backstage—a final decision had already been signed. And just like that—with a single, cold click—one of America’s most influential late-night shows was abruptly shut down.
For Samantha Bee, it wasn’t just a shock—it was a clear warning: authentic voices in television are being quietly smothered under billion-dollar deals.
“I love Stephen. I consider him a friend. But I also know exactly what it feels like to be told you have ‘too much of a point of view’ in a room full of merger lawyers. I’ve lived it,” Bee shared, her words a mix of sorrow and sharp understanding.
From a Shocking Decision to a Concerning Trend

CBS’s move to pull the plug on one of the most successful and critically acclaimed late-night programs in the U.S. goes far beyond a business decision. It raises deeper questions about the state of American television, the role of creative voices, and whether authentic commentary still has a place in a media landscape increasingly governed by balance sheets and merger negotiations.
Stephen Colbert wasn’t just a host. He was a cultural cornerstone—offering sharp political satire with empathy and wit. Since taking over from David Letterman in 2015, Colbert established a unique voice, combining deep political insight, humor, and vulnerability. Yet even such a voice, it seems, can be silenced in the name of corporate streamlining.
In a post-pandemic entertainment world dominated by reorganization and consolidation, no show—however beloved—is safe.
Samantha Bee: “I’ve Been There. I Get It.”

Speaking with Variety, Bee reflected on her own experience:
“When I was hosting Full Frontal, there were at least two different mergers happening in the background. You knew what not to say on air. There were unwritten rules—don’t create waves while billion-dollar deals are being inked.”
She added:
“In any big merger, keeping things ‘quiet’ is the unspoken mandate. Shows with strong points of view, like Stephen’s, are considered a liability, not an asset.”
A longtime friend of Colbert’s, Bee admitted she was “stunned by the way it happened” but no longer surprised by the industry logic behind such decisions.
A Crack in the Wall of Network Television
Colbert’s exit—symbolic as much as literal—marks a watershed moment for late-night TV. A once-stalwart institution of American media is now in a state of existential uncertainty.
Jimmy Fallon, Seth Meyers, Jimmy Kimmel—all have faced shortened runtimes, hybrid formats, or budget cuts. But axing a tentpole show like The Late Show entirely? That’s a thunderclap moment. It signals that tradition is no longer priority.
Instead, content that is short-form, easy to license, cost-effective, and algorithm-friendly is being prioritized. Substance, apparently, is secondary.

When Laughter Is Replaced by Silence
There’s something tragic about the way Colbert’s show ended—not due to low ratings or creative burnout, but because it didn’t fit within a spreadsheet.
Bee said:
“Stephen didn’t just deliver laughs—he helped people feel seen. Especially during the chaos of recent political years. It’s heartbreaking that doesn’t matter anymore.”
In a world increasingly in need of authentic laughter and connection, losing Colbert’s voice feels like a deeper cultural loss.
The End of an Era—What Comes Next?
The Paramount–Skydance merger is expected to radically reshape American media. Executives may win in the short term with leaner, more “efficient” content portfolios. But will viewers stick around?
Samantha Bee doesn’t claim to have the answer. But with a sad smile and a flash of dry wit, she closed the interview by saying:
“Sometimes you don’t walk off the stage—the spotlight gets turned off, and you just have to learn how to step down in the dark.”