I've noticed that some Late Show staff writers occasionally show up for bits, 
usually to highlight some 'youth trend' that 'Steve' just doesn't understand.  
But this is done infrequently.  And when Colbert talks to someone off screen we 
rarely see a cutaway to whomever it is/was (usually Licht or whomever has 
replaced him).
Best,David

    On Thursday, September 8, 2022 at 06:25:51 PM PDT, [email protected] 
<[email protected]> wrote:  
 
  Something that I've found interesting with Colbert's Late Show is that, as 
loyal as he seems to be toward his staff, we know nothing about them.
I contrast this with Dave's version, while acknowledging that Letterman's 
late-night shows were a 30-year novel about his psychological state. Depsite 
that, we knew the staffers: writers, audio people, costumers, producers, 
directors, even (especially?) Tony Mendez and Rupert Jee. Granted, the AFLers 
knew many of them up close and personal (Tony in particular told us a lot of 
stuff he shouldn't have), but even a less-than-casual viewer would have 
recognized Pat Farmer, Kenny Sheehan, Biff Henderson, Alan Kalter, or even 
George Clark, Barbara Gaines, and Sue Hum. (Hell, even Meg Parsont ...). I have 
no idea what Fallon does (I'd imagine most of his staff would prefer not to be 
recognized as having anything to do with TTS), but certainly Kimmel mentions 
and shows his staffers, as does Meyers (especially his writers).

I don't know if they want to keep the focus on Colbert or if the staff prefers 
to stay out of the spotlight, but it does seem like a one-man show at the Ed. 
(Excepting the horrific warm-up guy. I hoped they've changed him since the last 
time I went to a taping, because he was terrible.) Does he even have cue-card 
people, or is he totally reliant on the prompter?

--Dave Sikula

    On Thursday, September 8, 2022 at 12:57:03 PM PDT, Tom Wolper 
<[email protected]> wrote:  
 
 I also feel a sense of disappointment for Colbert’s Late Show. It’s a shame 
because I think Colbert has always been a great interview subject but I don’t 
enjoy the Late Show as much as those interviews.
Like Dave Sikula, I think Kimmel does a sharper monologue and Myers does better 
political material. I don’t have a simple answer for where I think Colbert went 
wrong. I think he comes from a place of comfort and he can’t channel the anger 
a lot of his TV audience is feeling.
I think his biggest weakness is the cult who followed him from the Report into 
the Ed Sullivan Theater and they’re keeping him from challenging himself and 
his staff.
    

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