He had Jeff Dunham once.Does Gutfeld have big-name guests on his show?
He had Jeff Dunham once.Does Gutfeld have big-name guests on his show?
That sounds like it would be a disaster.It actually depends on the how the format of the show would be in the event of moving it to a cheaper city (And it does not need to be a city that requires union rates) where if it decided to do away with celebrity interviews altogether the expenses that would needed to be spent on those guests if any would be eliminated. If it had decided to make all of the celebrity interviews be virtual (With the celebrities appearing virtually from where ever he or she is at at the time) the expenses if any would be limited to the cost of Online Bandwidth.
Back from a day in Alameda at the California Historical Radio Society's Radio Day by the Bay (see that thread in the SF board for pictures), so just catching up:
1) IF Colbert got reckless, his staff (more than 100 people) would get hurt. Stephen Colbert paid his writing staff out of his own pocket during the strikes. He's not gonna screw them over in a fit of pique now. And---if he's going anywhere else for some other project, he's likely going to want a lot of those people (some of whom have been with him since The Colbert Report) to come along. He needs to have their backs more than anything at this point, and from everything I've ever heard about him, that'll be his priority.
2) If CBS is losing $40 million a year on a show that costs $100 million to produce and gets a $30 million tax credit, there's not really a there there for a cheaper "Late Show". Especially as revenues for the timeslot continue to decline. If they can't make money being number one in late night, the answer is to get out of late night.
Okay, so what are we talking about here?
"From Fort Smith, Arkansas, it's Late Night with whoever'll work for a hundred grand. Tonight---live via Zoom---"
Who'd watch?
And as the audience numbers decline what guests are you going to get to agree to appear---even from their living room?
The thing about show business, is to get the business, you gotta put on a show. When the money dries up for that kinda show (vaudeville, big splashy prime-time variety hours), you stop doing that kind of show.
Not the one I watched (this past Thursday, the most recent available on Friday afternoon.Does Gutfeld have big-name guests on his show?
It's indeed a bit of The Five, but The Five is news content driven and Gotfeld! is news curiosity driven.Not the one I watched (this past Thursday, the most recent available on Friday afternoon.
It’s not that kind of show. I really can’t come up with a better description than the one I gave earlier: a sloppier, smutty version of The Five.
Will he remain under Trump's radar?I suspect Colbert will be fine in the long run. He will reappear on a different platform and won't be hamstrung by CBS's stupidity.
at least outside of sportsThe days of the big budget network TV show are over.
It's indeed a bit of The Five, but The Five is news content driven and Gotfeld! is news curiosity driven.
There are 4 guests, some almost always there and some occasional. They pick up themes Gutfeld poses, and then toss them around until commercials kick in. Repeat with new theme, new discussion, and more ads. A couple of segments have names, but are basically politically incorrect titles under which more current events can be shoved in.
There is a lot of calling the best known Democrats byHigh SchoolJunior High School nicknames.
so it's something Fox news viewers can watch with their grandchildren?There is a lot of calling the best known Democrats byHigh SchoolJunior High School nicknames.
But, for the Republicans, a bit of Letterman, Carson and even Leno and Steve Allen. Different formatics, but a lot of throwback elements.So, nothing at all like Tonight, Late Show or Late Night. A different kind of show.
But, for the Republicans, a bit of Letterman, Carson and even Leno and Steve Allen. Different formatics, but a lot of throwback elements.
Corporate bean counters: "That will still cost us money when ad revenue is declining."
Kimmel makes noises about retirement every year, but if he gets an infusion of eyeballs from Colbert's departure (he has 1.7 million viewers now) and ABC is supportive, I can see him renewing just to be a thorn in Trump's side.
Not the one I watched (this past Thursday, the most recent available on Friday afternoon.
It’s not that kind of show. I really can’t come up with a better description than the one I gave earlier: a sloppier, smutty version of The Five.
I won't disagree. The question is what would be considered "reckless" when late-night hosts have poked fun of/made jokes against their own network since ... gosh ... Jack Paar? Let alone if CBS standards and practices will now be monitoring and censoring jokes/content altogether, particularly in the monologue and especially if the show just continues as-is. I guess we'll find out soon enough.1) IF Colbert got reckless, his staff (more than 100 people) would get hurt. Stephen Colbert paid his writing staff out of his own pocket during the strikes. He's not gonna screw them over in a fit of pique now. And---if he's going anywhere else for some other project, he's likely going to want a lot of those people (some of whom have been with him since The Colbert Report) to come along. He needs to have their backs more than anything at this point, and from everything I've ever heard about him, that'll be his priority.
And FOX claims that such is funnier than CBS' and the other networks' liberal anti-Trump comedy-- hardly
(I wouldn't touch a minute of it, and never plan to).
It's basically his old show RedEye but without libertarian sidekick Andy Levy as an "ombudsman". And THAT show was "The Five, but in the middle of the night".Not the one I watched (this past Thursday, the most recent available on Friday afternoon.
It’s not that kind of show. I really can’t come up with a better description than the one I gave earlier: a sloppier, smutty version of The Five.
I won't disagree. The question is what would be considered "reckless" when late-night hosts have poked fun of/made jokes against their own network since ... gosh ... Jack Paar? Let alone if CBS standards and practices will now be monitoring and censoring jokes/content altogether, particularly in the monologue and especially if the show just continues as-is. I guess we'll find out soon enough.
I just have doubts about the show lasting until May because that itself is a risk for everyone involved, and especially for their morale. You'd have to think morale would be terribly low because they all know that what they have now—a big-budget, big-ticket late-night show on network television—will most likely never happen again. Evenifwhen Colbert gets a streaming deal somewhere he won't be able to take his entire staff with him, and he knows it.