I hadn't thought of it that way before. It now seems like the pieces are coming together, pointing to some longer-term financial issues. In the case of Batiste, it could be another situation where one action accomplishes multiple objectives. Batiste seemed somewhat confined by the conventions of the late-night talk show. He also had many side projects going. My guess is that Batiste took the job to become better known. When the gig accomplished that purpose, he may have felt it was time to move on.I've suspected that Jon Batiste's departure from the show three years ago (at the beginning of this contract cycle) was an economy move, and it's very possible that the "hand" CBS thought it had---politics aside---might have asked Stephen to give up more than he would have been willing to.
I can't dispute that Batiste and Colbert had a real chemistry going. You could even have seen it in Batiste's first appearance with Colbert, on the Colbert Report as a guest. It just isn't the same with Louis Cato. Cato's a great musician but doesn't have a foreground personality. I've also noticed that the role of the band has been cut back in the past few months. Except for a brief introduction at the start of the second segment, interaction with the band now happens only occasionally. They seem to be there solely to get the audience pumped up.
First, though, there'll be a 20-page article in the New Yorker, probably within the next few issues.Until Bill Carter writes the book, we may not know.
