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Paul McCartney sends off Stephen Colbert as Donald Trump delivers scathing attack on host

News RoomBy News RoomMay 22, 2026
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The Late Show with Stephen Colbert signed off the CBS airwaves for the final time last night, concluding not just an 11-year run for the host in that storied time slot, but drawing the curtain on a 33-year franchise that began with David Letterman. In a sprawling, celebratory, and characteristically meta final broadcast from the Ed Sullivan Theater, Colbert presided over a chaotic and heartfelt farewell that was less a standard episode and more a joyous wake for an era of late-night television. True to form, Colbert began with the familiar rhythms of his opening monologue, acknowledging the weight of the moment with genuine gratitude for his eleven-year tenure. Yet, the pretense of normalcy was swiftly and hilariously dismantled as a parade of celebrity guests, beginning with Bryan Cranston, Paul Rudd, and Tim Meadows, repeatedly barged in, each feigning indignation at not being chosen as the evening’s ultimate guest—a running gag that set the tone for a night where the boundaries between performer, audience, and participant beautifully blurred.

The extended swan song became a gathering of the late-night tribe and a testament to Colbert’s standing among his peers. In a poignant moment, fellow hosts Jimmy Kimmel, Seth Meyers, John Oliver, Jimmy Fallon, and Jon Stewart assembled not for competition, but for camaraderie. Kimmel’s simple declaration—“We came to say we’re gonna miss you. Late night is not gonna be the same without you”—echoed with a sincerity that transcended the usual showbiz platitudes. This sense of community was juxtaposed with Colbert’s signature absurdist humor, exemplified in a prolonged bit where his purported “final guest,” a fictitious Pope Leo XIV, refused to emerge from his dressing room due to a contractual dispute over snack provisions, specifically hot dogs. This elaborate joke, however, served merely as the perfect setup for a genuine legend to make a stunning entrance.

That legend was Sir Paul McCartney, who offered himself as a replacement guest, stating, “I hear you’re looking for a last guest.” In a moment brimming with historical symmetry, McCartney presented Colbert with a signed photograph of The Beatles’ seminal 1964 performance on that very Ed Sullivan Theater stage, physically linking the end of this chapter to one of the most famous beginnings in television history. The gift was a profound acknowledgment of the theater’s legacy, which Colbert had stewarded. McCartney then led an all-star band featuring Colbert, Jon Batiste, Louis Cato, and Elvis Costello through a mini-concert, starting with Costello’s “Jump Up” and culminating in The Beatles’ classic “Hello, Goodbye.” As the entire Late Show staff and Colbert’s family flooded the stage to sing along, the performance transformed from a musical number into a familial hug, a celebration of the community built behind the scenes.

The final symbolic acts were perfectly crafted. Backstage, Colbert and McCartney stood before a large electrical box labeled “Late Show,” with a single lever. With a wry smile, McCartney pulled it down, cutting the power in a visual pun on CBS’s cancellation of the series. Outside the theater, the real-world impact of Colbert’s work was visible as fans gathered with signs reading “Thank You Stephen” and even “Colbert for President,” a testament to the political and cultural footprint he carved out. This heartfelt public sentiment stood in stark, deliberate contrast to the reaction from one notable viewer. Predictably, former President Donald Trump seized the moment to launch a vicious attack on Truth Social, calling Colbert “a dead person” with “no talent” and celebrating his departure. This was not merely an incidental critique; it was a direct reflection of the charged climate that surrounded the show’s end.

Indeed, the show’s cancellation was announced last July amidst reported tensions between Colbert and CBS’s parent company, Paramount, following the host’s critical coverage of a massive legal settlement involving Trump. This political subtext was made explicitly textual by one of Colbert’s final guests earlier in the week, Bruce Springsteen. In a blistering assessment, Springsteen told Colbert he was “the first guy in America who lost his show because we got a president who can’t take a joke,” and lambasted Paramount leadership as “small-minded people” who “got no idea what the freedoms of this beautiful country are supposed to be about.” Springsteen’s charge framed the cancellation not as a simple business decision, but as a capitulation to political pressure and a failure to defend creative dissent, giving the festive finale a deeper, more resonant stakes.

Thus, the final broadcast was a multifaceted farewell: a hilarious comedy revue, a moving tribute from peers, a historic musical moment, and a defiant political statement. It honored the legacy of the theater it inhabited while showcasing the unique blend of intellectual satire and heartfelt humanity that defined Colbert’s tenure. As the last notes of “Hello, Goodbye” faded—a song choice perfectly encapsulating the bittersweet nature of the evening—the message was clear. This was not just the end of a show, but the conclusion of a significant voice in American culture. The evening celebrated what was built: a space for laughter, scrutiny, music, and community. So long, The Late Show. And thank you, Stephen Colbert, for reminding us, to the very end, of the power and necessity of a good joke in the face of everything.

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