“You Can’t Spell CBS Without BS.”
David Letterman Didn’t Leak a Memo. He Dropped a Montage. And When One of the Network’s Oldest Titans Publicly Torched His Former Employer Over Colbert’s Cancellation, CBS Finally Realized the Fire Was Coming From Inside the Building

No press conference.
No apology tour.
No anonymous “sources familiar with the matter.”
Just six words and twenty years of televised receipts.
And that’s all it took for David Letterman — the king of late night, the man who built the very stage Colbert stood on — to eviscerate CBS in a single, meticulously edited, 9-minute montage that has already been called the most damning strike against a major network since Edward R. Murrow.
🕯️ The Silence Was Deafening — Until It Wasn’t
Following the explosive moment when Stephen Colbert uttered 8 unscripted words on air (“They told me to lie. I refused. Live.”) and was mysteriously pulled off the air just hours later, the internet was ablaze. Speculation turned into outrage. Outrage turned into confusion.
CBS remained silent.
Colbert disappeared from the network’s lineup.
No explanation. No farewell. No closure.
It was the textbook corporate quieting — until David Letterman showed up.
📹 The Video: Posted with No Warning
August 6, 2025 – 11:04 a.m. EST.
A video appeared on YouTube under an unverified channel titled “GoodNightGoodLuck.”
The title:
“You Can’t Spell CBS Without BS.”
The thumbnail: a vintage photo of Letterman at his Late Show desk, smiling knowingly.
There was no tweet. No Instagram post. No late-night teaser.
But within 17 minutes, the video had 1.2 million views.
🧨 What Was in It?
The video opens in silence.
Then, Letterman’s unmistakable voice, from a 2005 monologue:
“This isn’t comedy. This is corporate compliance dressed in jokes.”
Then: footage of Les Moonves, CBS executives dodging press, archival clips of network censors, and Colbert’s most biting — now-flagged — segments.
Cut to:
A 1998 Letterman interview with Warren Beatty, where Letterman quips:
“When they start telling you what not to say, you start realizing what they’re scared of.”
Cut to:
A 2012 moment when Colbert (then on The Colbert Report) joked:
“CBS: The ‘C’ stands for Censorship.”
Cut to:
A staff meeting recording leaked (never aired) where a CBS producer warns about “editorial limitations on politically sensitive segments,” dated March 2025.
The final minute of the video is a rapid-fire supercut — Colbert mocking billionaires, criticizing Super PACs, exposing pharmaceutical lobbying, all now scrubbed from CBS’ online archives.
The final shot: a black screen, with six words in white letters:
“You can’t spell CBS without BS.”
Then silence.
The Fallout Was Immediate
News outlets picked up the video within hours.
TikTok flooded with reactions.
#LettermanStrikes trended worldwide.
Former CBS writers and staffers began quietly resharing the video — some anonymously, some openly.
Even Colbert’s critics — those who once accused him of partisan comedy — now found themselves defending him. Because if Letterman, the icon of balance, sarcasm, and subtlety, had taken a side… something was wrong.
“Letterman never jumps into a fight unless he’s sure who started it,” said late-night rival John Oliver in an off-the-cuff statement. “If he’s speaking now, it’s because they left him no choice.”
🧠 Why It Matters
This wasn’t just a defense of Colbert.
This was a warning shot across the bow of legacy media.
David Letterman, long considered retired from the war, had stepped back onto the battlefield — not with jokes, but with evidence. And CBS — the very network that once called him its crown jewel — was now his target.
More than just a takedown, the video has become a digital monument — to artistic resistance, to free speech in media, and to the dangers of institutional silencing.
🔚 A Network on Fire — From the Inside
“You don’t fire the host,” one anonymous CBS staffer reportedly told The Intercept,
“when the building’s already burning.”
And now, CBS is learning that the flames aren’t coming from outside criticism.
They’re coming from the legends they helped create.
Final Thought
David Letterman didn’t call a press conference. He didn’t write a memoir.
He just posted a video.
And when the man who once redefined late-night TV turns his mic against the very system he built, you’d better believe he’s not bluffing.
Because once again, he said what millions were already thinking — only better, and more brutally:
“You can’t spell CBS without BS.”

