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Doubt Is Cast on Reasons Behind 'Late Show' Cancellation

Doubt Is Cast on Reasons Behind 'Late Show' Cancellation

Time​ Magazine17 hours ago
Late-night TV has been on the decline for years, as viewers spend more time on streaming services and often favor late-show clips on YouTube or TikTok over nightly appointment viewing. But CBS's The Late Show was still leading the race by a mile.
Second-quarter Nielsen ratings show that the program helmed by comedian Stephen Colbert had 2.42 million viewers across 41 new episodes, taking some 9% of the audience share and besting other shows in his timeslot. It was also the only show to rake in more viewers than in the previous quarter. And earlier this week, it received a Primetime Emmy nomination for outstanding talk series.
So when Colbert told his audience at a taping on Thursday that 'next year will be our last season,' viewers were blindsided. Spectators at the Ed Sullivan Theater booed. 'Yeah, I share your feelings,' the host responded, explaining that he'd learned of the decision only the night before.
More than three decades since it first aired, The Late Show is making its final curtain call in May 2026. Colbert won't be replaced by a new host. 'This is all just going away,' he said.
The cancellation of The Late Show comes just a few days after Colbert ridiculed CBS' parent company Paramount's $16 million settlement with President Donald Trump. Trump had sued the entertainment company over the editing of a 60 Minutes interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris. Colbert, in his monologue, called the settlement a 'big fat bribe,' referencing the pending sale of Paramount to Skydance Media, which requires the approval of the Trump Administration.
'As someone who has always been a proud employee of this network, I am offended. And I don't know if anything will ever repair my trust in this company,' Colbert said Monday.
Paramount and CBS executives quickly dispelled rumors of any external influence beyond the current state of late night TV: 'This is purely a financial decision against a challenging backdrop in late night. It is not related in any way to the show's performance, content or other matters happening at Paramount.'
To be sure, even if the axing of The Late Show is the most drastic example, the show is not the only victim of the flailing state of American late-night TV. Its timeslot competitor on NBC, The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, had pared down taping days last year from five to four—with reruns aired on Fridays. NBC's Late Night With Seth Meyers bid its house band goodbye amid budget cuts. In 2023, CBS's The Late Late Show also got axed after its host James Corden left, and a less expensive After Midnight comedy game show—on which Colbert was executive producer—took over the slot. That show, too, was canceled after host Taylor Tomlinson exited to return to stand-up.
The state of late-night TV today is a far cry from the dominance of Johnny Carson beginning in the '60s, or the reign of Jay Leno and David Letterman in the '90s and 2000s. Six years ago, the viewership of The Late Show was at 3.81 million; by the 2023-2024 season, it was at 2.6 million, per the Hollywood Reporter. Producing late-night TV is also expensive—its hosts alone rake in millions in annual salaries—and Internet viewership can't fully make up lost ad revenues.
But the cancellation also comes at a time when Trump has become more iron-fisted with press freedom. He banned journalists from the Oval Office, pursued legal challenges against media organizations that report critically on him, and sought the dismantling of public broadcasters.
It's for this reason that many have cast doubt on the reasons behind the show's cancellation, given that Colbert has imbued the show with more politics since his takeover, sometimes making Trump the butt of his criticism and jokes. Friday morning, Trump celebrated the news, writing on Truth Social: 'I absolutely love that Colbert' got fired. His talent was even less than his ratings. I hear Jimmy Kimmel is next. Has even less talent than Colbert!'
Sen. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.), who was a guest on the Thursday taping, said on X: 'If Paramount and CBS ended the Late Show for political reasons, the public deserves to know. And deserves better.'
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, (D-Mass.), echoed concerns of a clampdown. 'CBS canceled Colbert's show just THREE DAYS after Colbert called out CBS parent company Paramount for its $16M settlement with Trump – a deal that looks like bribery,' she said on X. 'America deserves to know if his show was canceled for political reasons.'
''Financial reasons'' my ass,' said activist Charlotte Clymer on X. 'This is political.'
Others, meanwhile, have expressed their sadness over the loss of a late-night pillar. CNN host Anderson Cooper said he was 'shocked and truly saddened' by the news of the cancellation. He lauded Colbert for being 'at heart, an incredibly decent human being.'
On Instagram, replying to a video clip of Colbert's announcement, journalist Katie Couric said: 'I am so upset about this. I need more information. We love you @stephenathome' Filmmaker Judd Apatow said: 'My admiration and appreciation for you is bottomless. Excited to see what other brilliance you put into the world.' From Jon Batiste, former Late Show band leader: 'The greatest to ever do it.' Then from Snow White actor Rachel Zegler: 'I am extremely sad. I adore you, Stephen.' And Adam Scott of Severance wrote: 'Love you Stephen. This is absolute bullsh-t, and I for one am looking forward to the next 10 months of shows.'
One thing is for sure: the disappearance of the Late Show under the Trump Administration could not be simply swept under the rug. Bill Carter, who wrote several books on late-night television, posted on X: 'The financial side of that business has definitely been under pressure, as CBS release asserts, but if CBS believes it can escape without some serious questions about capitulating to Trump, they are seriously deluded.'
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'I'm the Che Guevara of Greenland': An evening with Trump's 'Greenlandic son'
'I'm the Che Guevara of Greenland': An evening with Trump's 'Greenlandic son'

USA Today

timean hour ago

  • USA Today

'I'm the Che Guevara of Greenland': An evening with Trump's 'Greenlandic son'

Special Report: Greenlander Jorgen Boassen is a man on a mission to help tap Greenland's untapped resources and economic potential. He's been called President Donald Trump's 'Greenlandic son.' NUUK, Greenland − First, Jorgen Boassen wanted to meet for a gin and tonic. Immediately. At his house. "Can you pick up tonic and limes on your way?" he said, urgency in his voice. Then Boassen wanted to hotfoot it over to a cavernous sports hall for a Thai boxing match where a DJ was playing a remixed version of the British-Nigerian singer Sade's 1980s global hit "Smooth Operator." Several hours and rounds later − not the boxing kind − Boassen showed up at Nuuk's largest hotel, where he shook a couple of hands, listened to a lounge singer run through some jazz standards, and shook off a few hostile stares. Former bricklayer. Political influencer. Would-be mining consultant. Man on a mission to help tap Greenland's untapped resources and economic potential. Traitor, some say − especially the guy who slugged him in the face in a Nuuk dive bar in late April. Boassen, 51, says he is versions of all these things. Most of them are a consequence of his championing of President Donald Trump in a place where rare support for an American president who has vowed to take over Greenland "one way or the other" tends to end in eyes rolled, or in Boassen's case, blackened. Boassen is Greenland's de facto MAGA representative. "This is about a fight for the Greenlandic people," Boassen said one evening in June as he sat on a sofa in his cozy home in Greenland's capital. "It's not because I hate Denmark. It's about the Danish power in Greenland." Boassen's mostly stopped wearing them now because of the Trump backlash in Greenland, but he still occasionally dons a MAGA cap and T-shirts with American flags with things like "American badass" emblazoned on them. He's been a fan of Trump since 2019, when the U.S. president first started talking about acquiring Greenland. Trump says the United States needs to "get Greenland" for national security reasons. It's in a strategic location in the Arctic. Due to melting ice, new shipping Arctic routes and military activity are increasing. It is also rich in commodities like oil and gold and rare earth minerals essential for manufacturing smartphones and other advanced technologies. Boassen is part of a very small but vocal minority of Greenlanders who appreciate Trump's interest, polls show. But his support for Trump hasn't always been carefree. Boassen's been teased and mocked and even faced death threats on social media. He professes to have an almost spiritual connection to Trump. He doesn't agree with every word he says. Boassen wants Greenland to be an independent country, but wants it to to have a close security and economic alliance with the United States. A Greenlandic son who's into Trump Born in Qaqortoq, a town in southern Greenland, Boassen was raised by a single mother. Money was tight. Their home was modest. Heat was in short supply. That world is a far cry from the one he now seeks to inhabit as an Arctic political player with the ear of some in Trump's inner circle. "Trump is the one who can save us, though it's hard to support him when we don't know his plan," he said. 'One way or the other': Five ways Trump's Greenland saga could play out Boassen isn't a social media influencer. But he owes some of his nascent influence to social media. He was discovered on Facebook by Thomas Dans, an American advisor to the under secretary of the Treasury for international affairs during Trump's first term. Dans was also a member of the U.S. Arctic Research Commission. Now he promotes closer U.S.-Greenland ties. "I learned of Jorgen from friends in the Greenlandic community," said Dans. "He was being called 'Trump's Greenlandic Son.' I said, 'I need to meet this guy.'" Usha Vance's Greenland adventure: Why it got derailed by a dogsled race across ice and snow Dans eventually tapped Boassen to serve as Greenland director for American Daybreak, a nonprofit organization he founded that works to educate and advance Trump's America First foreign policy, particularly in the Arctic. It was American Daybreak that, in March, sought to arrange a visit to Greenland by Usha Vance, wife of U.S. Vice President JD Vance, for Greenland's national sled dog race. But after reports of planned protests by Greenlandic activists, the visit was revised to a brief stop by the Vances at a remote U.S. military outpost on the island. A Greenlandic pugilist Boassen has an imposing build. He's a boxing enthusiast and used to box and train boxers. He wears his hair swept sharply to one side. Like more than 90% of 57,000 Greenlanders, he identifies as Inuit, the indigenous people who inhabit the Arctic region. But Boassen's father is from Denmark, which he said accounts for his light skin tone and blue eyes. Greenland was colonized by Denmark beginning in the 18th century. That era ended in 1953, when Greenland became a self-governing territory. Boassen is also a fast talker who courts publicity. 'Buy us!': Greenlanders shocked, intrigued, bewildered by Trump zeal for Arctic territory He has not shied away from the relative fame that his association with the Trump cause has brought him Greenland. Most days he fields requests from journalists from around the world who want to see or talk to the guy they see as Trump's unofficial local "Greenland envoy." More than a few journalists have been to his house. "He's a natural leader with a deep love for Greenland and its people, coupled with a bold and gregarious personality and expert communication skills," Dans said of Boassen. "He's also a true fighter, both as a former boxer as well as a modern Inuit man, formed in his people's great Arctic traditions." 'We are different from Denmark' Over the course of an evening spent with a USA TODAY reporter this summer, Boassen's phone constantly pinged. He called Dans and put him on speakerphone. He video-called a friend in Greenland's high North, not far from the Pituffik Space Base the Vances visited, because he wanted to prove there were Greenlandic fellow-travelers when it came to support for Trump. Boassen is considering whether he wants to grant a Danish filmmaker access to his life story for a documentary. 'Crazy beautiful place with dark side': Greenland, but not as you know it Boassen's wife did not want to participate in the interview but she occasionally sighed deeply as her husband spoke and gave him a knowing side-eye. She sometimes tried to shush him from the other end of the sofa if his comments wandered too closely into their personal lives. "We are different from Denmark even if the Danes have been here for 300 years," said Boassen, as he held forth on all the ways he believes that Greenland's Inuit population has suffered under Danish rule: sterilization scandals from colonial times, poor job prospects, elevated rates of suicide and alcoholism. Boassen insisted on sharing a selection of his "greatest hits," preserved in YouTube video clips saved on his TV. There he was at the arrivals door at the airport in Nuuk when Donald Trump Jr. visited Greenland in January, a trip he helped coordinate. It came about after Boassen spent a few weeks canvassing for the former president on the streets of Pittsburgh during the November 2024 U.S. presidential election. Boassen went to an election night party in Palm Beach, Florida, near Trump's Mar-a-Lago residence. He attended Trump's inauguration, along with Kuno Fenker, an opposition lawmaker who is a member of Greenland's nationalist Naleraq party. It too wants closer relations with the United States, though it seeks independence for Greenland. On his cellphone, Boassen had photos of himself with the American musician Kid Rock, MMA fighter Conor McGregor, Canadian psychologist Jordan Peterson, political commentator Ben Shapiro and other MAGA-affiliated personalities. Greenland not for sale: It is welcoming Americans with direct flights "He has a very good feeling for how ordinary people in Greenland are feeling about the issues that impact their lives day-to-day," said Fenker, the lawmaker, who is a close friend of Boassen's. In his home, while sipping a gin and tonic, then a beer, then coffee, Boassen said of himself, "I'm the Che Guevara of Greenland." It was a reference to the Argentine doctor and revolutionary who fought for social change in Latin America before he was killed in a Bolivian jungle with the help of the CIA. That characterization, of course, is a stretch and was made partly in jest, which Boassen admitted, but it still speaks to how serious he takes his dream of one day seeing an independent Greenland. MAGA in Romania A few weeks earlier, Boassen had been in Romania with Dans. Boassen said they were invited to observe Romania's election by George Simion, a far-right candidate in that country's presidential election. Simion, Boassen said, was a big believer in Trump's MAGA ideology. (Simion lost the vote, and later alleged it was due to foreign interference.) When Boassen's wife spied an opportunity, she grabbed the TV remote and switched channels to a rerun of a music festival where some of her favorite bands, such as Green Day, the American punk rockers, and Radiohead, a British alternative rock band, were playing. She came along to the boxing match, too. Reluctantly. On the walk to the sports hall from their house, Boassen said he was trying to form more partnerships with Greenlandic officials to be useful to Trump's White House, but it's been difficult lately to get the attention of the U.S. administration because it is preoccupied with other crises in Ukraine, Iran and the Israel-Hamas war in the Gaza Strip. He said he's convinced his phone is being tapped by the Danish authorities. He admitted that he is not making a living from his work with American Daybreak. He that said people often ask him if he's concerned that maybe Trump is just "using him" in a way that isn't in Greenland's best interests, in ways he doesn't appreciate. "I don't know," was Boassen's answer to that question. "But I'd rather have Trump as the U.S. president right now than Kamala Harris," he said. "And anyway, bricklaying wasn't making me much money. It's too honest. No one will hire me because I support Trump." Kim Hjelmgaard is an international correspondent for USA TODAY. Follow him on Bluesky, Instagram and LinkedIn.

How China hounds pro-democracy activists in Boston
How China hounds pro-democracy activists in Boston

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

How China hounds pro-democracy activists in Boston

'It was heart-wrenching to see my aging parents suffer from this targeted repression,' Hui told me. 'I felt guilty for bringing this on them.' Advertisement Hui's case is an example of what the FBI describes as transnational repression — when authoritarian governments such as those in Russia, Iran, Belarus, and China hire people to intimidate, harass, or spy on dissidents in the United States. China's surveillance network is considered one of the an independent network of hundreds of reporters around the world, found evidence that in recent years Beijing had targeted dissidents like Hui in 23 countries. Advertisement For years, the United States was a global leader in countering this kind of repression on American soil. But that commitment appears to be wavering under the Trump administration. In February, the Justice Department quietly Glenn Tiffert, a distinguished research fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution who focuses on Beijing's influence operations, said the administration's actions signal that it does not consider transnational repression a priority. 'It may make people who are acting as foreign agents even bolder,' he said. The administration's freeze of Advertisement 'The Chinese government prefers the plausible deniability of recruiting people who appear to be ordinary citizens and residents, as they can present themselves as simply expressing personal opinions,' Tiffert said. Those recruits observe and report back to Beijing about the activities of dissidents in the United States — and sometimes harass them. Joey Siu is another Hong Kong pro-democracy activist who fled to the United States in 2020 and now faces an arrest warrant back home. Since that warrant was issued in 2023, Siu, who lives in exile in Washington, D.C., has received dozens of threatening emails and social media messages. ' I tried reporting them, blocking them, but it just wouldn't stop,' she said. Messages sent to Joey Siu in December of 2023 after Hong Kong's national security police placed arrest warrants for five overseas activists, placing HK$1 million bounties on their heads. Handout American prosecutors argued that Liang Litang, a 65-year-old naturalized American from China, worked as an agent of the Chinese government in the Boston area. He was In August 2019, Hui, then an Emerson College student, organized a rally in downtown Boston to support efforts in Hong Kong to fight a bill that would have made it easier to extradite critics of the Chinese government in Hong Kong to China. Little did she know that Liang was observing the rally. Court documents later showed that he exchanged at least five calls with two Chinese officials during the event and took photographs of participants, including her. 'I didn't even notice him at the rally,' Hui told me. Liang, it turns out, was also being watched by US officials. In 2023, he was arrested on charges of Advertisement Federal charging documents alleged that Liang acted as an agent of the Chinese government for years. He cofounded the New England Alliance for the Peaceful Unification of China, whose mission was to make Taiwan part of China. He organized events at the direction of the Chinese government, including a counterprotest against pro-democracy dissidents; met several times with Chinese officials; and hung Chinese flags in Boston's Chinatown, court records alleged. Perhaps more significantly, he provided photos and videos of pro-democracy dissidents in Boston to Chinese officials based in New York. He also identified potential recruits to a Chinese man listed in Liang's contacts under 'DC Ministry of Public Security Shanghai,' according to In February, a federal jury The US attorney's office in Boston declined to comment on the verdict. Legal experts say there is no clear legal definition of 'acting as a foreign agent,' making it hard for juries to hold individuals accountable. Still, a few cases have led to convictions. One of those involved a Berklee School of Music student who was convicted of Liang did not respond to a request for comment for this article. During the trial, his lawyer, Derege Demissie, argued that the federal government had merely showed Liang to be a motivated and spontaneous activist whose political views happened to align with those of the Chinese government. In a recent interview, Demissie acknowledged that Liang had communicated with several Chinese officials but denied that he worked for the Chinese government. Advertisement But Liang's acquittal has had a chilling effect on dissidents. Several told the Globe that they felt less confident the US government could protect them from being harassed or spied upon by the Chinese government. Che Chungchi, a 75-year-old Chinese American, told me he is 'afraid to live in Boston' and has avoided visiting Chinatown in the wake of Liang's acquittal. Che's image in photos and videos was sent to Chinese officials by Liang, according to Frances Hui (center, holding white paper) and Che Chungchi (with megaphone) joined a counter-protest against a Chinese government flag-raising ceremony outside Boston City Hall on Sept. 29, 2019. Courtesy Che Chungchi While Hui said she respected the jury's decision in the Liang case, she worries about whether dissidents facing surveillance, harassment, and worse will have any recourse to seek justice or protection from the US government. Still, when compared to her fellow activists in Hong Kong who are in prison and have little hope of receiving a fair trial, Hui believes the prosecution of Liang was an important step forward in exposing the harassment of Chinese and Hong Kong dissidents in the United States. The Chinese government 'thinks they could do these things to silence and break us,' Hui said. 'But they have only made me stronger.'

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