I was late to the Colbert thread before the lock, but I saw the comments about his personal quote about homelessness and his politics.
The thing that I came to really appreciate about him over 20 years is his intelligence and his open discussions on how men live with complexity. His dad and two brothers died in a plane crash when he was a kid, and he's done several podcast interviews over the years about how that experience shaped his understanding of life, made him reconcile with his Catholic faith, learned how to cope with loss (immediate and ambiguous), and so many other things that modern men don't have good facility discussing. He's a very cool guy.
Colbert is a niche comedian going back to his earliest roots. He has always been an acquired taste. Strangers with Candy, anyone? I loved it, but it's bizarre.
I didn't think he was a very good choice for that medium in general because of his niche status and his personality, which is not really a solo showman like Letterman, Carson or even Conan. He was playing a character in the Colbert Report, so it was funnier because it was material he was doing.
Also, the medium is irrelevant. I haven't watched late night TV in 15 (maybe 20?) years, because of kids and shifting media landscape. That includes SNL, Colbert, Kimmel, Fallon or any of them in real time, because you can just watch the good cuts on Youtube or some other place. I don't think that any of those shows get renewed much longer because it's much cheaper to make a game show again or put on reality.
Anyway, just came here to say Steven's a complex, interesting guy that I think most of us would really like in person.
The thing that I came to really appreciate about him over 20 years is his intelligence and his open discussions on how men live with complexity. His dad and two brothers died in a plane crash when he was a kid, and he's done several podcast interviews over the years about how that experience shaped his understanding of life, made him reconcile with his Catholic faith, learned how to cope with loss (immediate and ambiguous), and so many other things that modern men don't have good facility discussing. He's a very cool guy.
Colbert is a niche comedian going back to his earliest roots. He has always been an acquired taste. Strangers with Candy, anyone? I loved it, but it's bizarre.
I didn't think he was a very good choice for that medium in general because of his niche status and his personality, which is not really a solo showman like Letterman, Carson or even Conan. He was playing a character in the Colbert Report, so it was funnier because it was material he was doing.
Also, the medium is irrelevant. I haven't watched late night TV in 15 (maybe 20?) years, because of kids and shifting media landscape. That includes SNL, Colbert, Kimmel, Fallon or any of them in real time, because you can just watch the good cuts on Youtube or some other place. I don't think that any of those shows get renewed much longer because it's much cheaper to make a game show again or put on reality.
Anyway, just came here to say Steven's a complex, interesting guy that I think most of us would really like in person.
