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The Colbert Report

The Colbert Report (/klˈbɛər rɪˌpɔːr/ kohl-BAIR rih-por) is an American late-night talk and news satire television program hosted by Stephen Colbert that aired four days a week on Comedy Central from October 17, 2005, to December 18, 2014, for 1,447 episodes. The show focused on a fictional anchorman character named Stephen Colbert, played by his real-life namesake. The character, described by Colbert as a "well-intentioned, poorly informed, high-status idiot", is a caricature of televised political pundits. Furthermore, the show satirized conservative personality-driven political talk programs, particularly Fox News's The O'Reilly Factor. The Colbert Report is a spin-off of Comedy Central's The Daily Show, where Colbert was a correspondent from 1997 to 2005.

The Colbert Report
Genre
Created by
Directed byJim Hoskinson
Presented byStephen Colbert
Opening theme"Baby Mumbles" by Cheap Trick
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons11
No. of episodes1,447 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
  • Jon Stewart
  • Tom Purcell
  • Stephen Colbert
  • Meredith Bennett (Co-Exec)
  • Emily Lazar (Co-Exec)
  • Barry Julien (Co-Exec)
ProducerEmily Gasperak
Production locationsNew York, New York
Running time22 minutes
Production companies
DistributorViacom Media Networks
Release
Original networkComedy Central
Picture format
Original releaseOctober 17, 2005 (2005-10-17) –
December 18, 2014 (2014-12-18)
Chronology
Related

The program, created by Colbert, Jon Stewart, and Ben Karlin, lampooned current events and American political happenings. The show's structure consisted of an introductory monologue and a guest interview, in which the Colbert character attempts to deconstruct his opponent's argument. The show was taped in New York City's Hell's Kitchen neighborhood, and the program's set is "hyper-American", epitomizing the character's ego. The show was taped and broadcast Monday through Thursday, with weeks taken off at multiple points in a given year for breaks.

The Colbert Report saw immediate critical and ratings successes, leading to various awards, including multiple Emmy and Peabody Awards. The show's cultural influence often extended beyond the show's traditional viewing audience, including Colbert running for U.S. President twice, co-hosting a rally at the National Mall, presenting a controversial performance at the White House Correspondents' Dinner, and establishing a real Super PAC that raised over a million dollars. The show also inspired various forms of multimedia, including music and multiple best-selling books.

Background

 
Colbert on the set of The Colbert Report in 2011.

The Colbert Report, hosted by a fictional anchorman character named Stephen Colbert, played by his real-life namesake, satirized conservative personality-driven political pundit programs like the O'Reilly Factor and Hannity on FOX News. The character first made appearances on the short-lived sketch comedy series The Dana Carvey Show in 1996, described as "a self-important, trench-coated reporter who does on-location stories in a way that suggests his own presence is the real scoop."[1][2] His skits included “Waiters Who Are Nauseated by Food,” “Germans Who Say Nice Things” and “Skinheads From Maine.” [2]

Colbert joined Comedy Central's The Daily Show in 1997, a year following its launch, then hosted by Craig Kilborn.[3] When Jon Stewart became the program's host in 1999, The Daily Show developed a markedly different style, bringing a sharper political focus to the humor than the show previously exhibited. Colbert recalled that Stewart specifically asked him to have a political viewpoint, and to allow his passion for issues to carry through into his comedy.[4][5][6]

Colbert became a fixture on The Daily Show, occasionally hosting in Stewart's absence.[7] In 2003, the program began running advertisements for a fictional program titled The Colbert Réport, starring Colbert as a parody of cable news pundits.[1] When fellow Daily Show star Steve Carell left the show to pursue a film and television career, Comedy Central worked to keep Colbert at the network. Colbert pitched The Colbert Report to the channel in 2004. Stewart pushed Comedy Central to pick up the show, and Colbert was given an eight-week tryout. Following the show's immediate success, the show "quickly became a fixture in the late-night lineup."[1] At its peak, the show averaged 1.5 million viewers each evening.[8]

The intensity of the fictional Colbert anchorman character was gradually toned down over the course of the show's run, as the host believed he would eventually need to move beyond it.[9] He began to regard it as an act of discipline to perform as the character, later remarking, "to model behavior, you have to consume that behavior on a regular basis. It became very hard to watch punditry of any kind, of whatever political stripe."[10] With his contract set to end in December 2014, he had already decided to leave the show when he was contacted by CBS to replace David Letterman as the host of its Late Show franchise.[11] The show's ending was announced concurrently with Colbert's jump to CBS in April 2014.[12] The last episode of the Report aired on December 18, 2014.[13] The show was replaced on Comedy Central's late-night lineup by The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore, another spinoff of The Daily Show.[14][15]

History

Development

 
The show is a spin-off of The Daily Show, hosted by Jon Stewart, seen here in 2005.

The character first made appearances on the short-lived sketch comedy series The Dana Carvey Show in 1996, described as "a self-important, trench-coated reporter who does on-location stories in a way that suggests his own presence is the real scoop."[1]

When The Daily Show ran short on time, a short piece starring Colbert, advertising a fictional program titled The Colbert Réport, was added into the program. In these sketches, Colbert began to amplify his character to parody news pundits.[7] Colbert anchored many sketches in his persona, including "Even Stepvhen", in which he debated current issues with fellow correspondent Steve Carell, often devolving into petty name-calling and insults.[1] Colbert and Carell were viewed as potential breakout stars by staff, and when Carell left the series in 2004 to start a US version of The Office, Comedy Central made attempts to keep Colbert at the network.[16] Stewart and Karlin were already looking to expand the Daily Show franchise and their production company, Busboy. The duo supposedly came up with the idea for The Colbert Report after watching coverage of the sexual harassment lawsuit filed against Bill O'Reilly. Colbert met with network president Doug Herzog the day following the 2004 Emmy Awards to first discuss the concept.[16] The one-line pitch Colbert, Karlin and Stewart developed was "Our version of the O'Reilly Factor with Stephen Colbert."[17] Herzog committed to an eight-week tryout period without a pilot.[1]

By the time of the 2004 election, the character was fully developed.[7] In creating the character, which is designed to be repellant but entertaining, Colbert conferred with Stewart and Karlin. In expressing his hope that his character not be "an asshole," Stewart remarked, "You're not an asshole. You're an idiot. There's a difference."[16] Head writer Allison Silverman reiterated this trait in a later interview, commenting, "There is an essential innocence to his character."[18] Colbert initially felt the character might not be sustainable in a longer format.[1] Despite this, The Colbert Report was designed as an extension of the satiric goals of The Daily Show, combining it with general silliness and character-driven humor.[18] To make sure there was no overlap in subject matter with The Daily Show, Karlin made trips between the studios during the show's early days to supervise scripts.[16] For the first several years of the program, Colbert made an appearance at the end of each Daily Show in split-screen, having a short discussion with Stewart preceding his show.[19][20]

Production

I call the show, jokingly, "The Joy Machine", because if you can do it with joy, even in the simplest show, then it's "The Joy Machine" as opposed to "The Machine." Considering the speed at which we do it, we'll get caught in the gears really quickly unless we also approach it with joy.

Stephen Colbert describing the show's production, 2009[21]

The show's writing was grounded in improv, employing a "yes to everything" mentality.[1] Much of the humor derived from extended improv games with the show's studio and at-home audience, like Colbert's poll to name a bridge in Hungary after himself.[21] Many of the writers had improv training and at one point put together "improv evenings" at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre once a month.[1] The Report's writing staff was predominantly male and white; Colbert acknowledged this lack of diversity, but contended that he hired writers based solely on the quality of their material and had never looked at the names on writing packets submitted for employment.[22] Subjects considered too dark were not even considered for comedic material; for example, the show would poke fun at press coverage of a tragedy, rather than the tragedy itself.[23] Issues discussed on the show were later reported on actual newscasts, in turn allowing the show to comment on its own impact, creating an echo chamber of sorts.[21] This led Colbert to describe his show, "at its purest expression, [as] a pebble that we throw into the puddle of the news, and then we report on our own ripples."[21]

Ideas for each show were considered in the morning pitch meeting, which could range from "harrowing" to smooth.[23] Described as having "demanding standards", Colbert is quoted as remarking, "Let's make it perfect and then cut it."[1] Although dozens of ideas were either chosen for the show or deleted, other ideas, saved for a later date, were often forgotten because of the pace of news.[1] Ideas with considerable potential were put in the "hopper" to be developed and rewritten, while more fully formed ideas were placed in the "pantry."[23] Good jokes would still be sacrificed if they did not fit the character's specific point of view, which was deemed the inverse of what "any logical person" feels.[22] At least one writer has described the job as "all-consuming", leaving no time for outside activities.[1] Colbert himself eventually became withdrawn from morning meetings as the show continued on and he mulled a decision to leave.[11]

 
Outside the studio

Usually by 11 a.m., a rough outline for the show was completed and writers sent off in pairs to create scripts that would be polished throughout the day.[1] First, writers would scan news articles for ideas and partner together in pairs, with one "keeping track of possible jokes."[23] During an appearance at the New York Comedy Festival in 2013, some writers admitted to procrastinating until the last hour before rehearsal to complete their sections; Colbert confirmed that, in the program's early days, segments such as "The Word" were scripted entirely during the rewrite before rehearsal.[22][23] Both writers read their dialogue aloud to see whether they thought the Colbert character would say it.[18] As writers were working on their respective scripts, the show's production and graphics team compiled music, footage, and props needed for the show.[18] To collect video clips, the show cross-referenced transcripts of hours and hours of archived TiVo recordings of news programs.[24][25] In 2011, the show switched to Snapstream software, which streamlined the TV clip search and compilation process, allowing for searching closed captioning for select words.[25] In addition, a group of staff coders and independent contractors developed Scripto software to collaborate on scripts in real time.[26]

By 1 p.m., the show held a second production meeting to go over scripts and determine which pieces to edit.[18] Scripts were "hopefully" completed around 4 p.m., and a rehearsal with the entire staff would begin at 5:30 p.m. or occasionally earlier.[18] Afterward, final changes were made to the script.[7] The final rewrite would take place in a "small, red, poorly ventilated room" until 6:45 p.m.[18][22] Before interviewing his guests, Colbert met with them in the green room and acknowledged that he was playing a character, noting that the persona is "willfully ignorant of what you know and care about" and urging the guest to "honestly disabuse me of what you see as my ignorance."[21] Emily Lazar, a producer for the interview segments, advised guests to talk with Colbert as though he were a "harmless drunk at the next bar stool."[8] Guests would typically take their seats around 7 p.m., when a warm-up comedian (perhaps Jared Logan or Paul Mercurio) delivered jokes.[27] Colbert, out of character, held a brief question and answer session with the audience prior to taping.[21] Taping lasted as long as three hours[27] but usually ended around 9 p.m., at which point the show was edited and sent to Comedy Central for broadcast.[1] As the show was being edited, the staff met one last time to work through details for the next show.[18]

Set

 
Colbert on the show's set, preparing to interview First Lady Michelle Obama in 2012.

The Colbert Report was taped and broadcast four nights a week, Monday–Thursday.[17] The show's taping studio, at 513 W. 54th Street in New York City's Hell's Kitchen neighborhood, was used for The Daily Show until July 2005,[7] and has a capacity of 150.[27] NEP Studio 54 on 54th Street is owned by NEP Broadcasting which is New York City's largest production facility and also owns The Daily Show set at NEP Studio 52 two blocks south on 52nd Street. Aside from the set, the show's production offices have been described as "loft-like" and "all overhead pipes and exposed brick."[19] Following the show's conclusion, the building was used for The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore.[28]

The set for The Colbert Report was called "The Eagle's Nest" and reflects and facilitates Colbert's self-aggrandizing style.[29] It was designed by Jim Fenhagen, and was intended to both capture the character's ego and be "hyper-American."[29] Elements incorporated into the set included architectural lines converged to Colbert's desk, and radial beams coming out from behind his chair.[21] Colbert's main influence for the set was Leonardo da Vinci's The Last Supper,[30] with the Colbert character as Jesus Christ.[29] In the set, "virtually every inch emblazoned with Colbert's name or the initial C";[19] his name, initials and the name of the show appear on the desk's plasma screen, on the rafters above the desk, and the desk itself is shaped like a giant "C".[29] The background includes faux artifacts from the character's backstory, which are seldom seen by viewers. "I kept saying, 'People might not really notice this.' But when you're working with a comedy team, they really get into it. They couldn't help themselves," said Fenhagen. These references included the United States Constitution, a miniature Ten Commandments, and a CliffsNotes guide to American government.[29]

The set was described as "part Riefenstahlesque homage to the star, part symbologic gallery— where alert viewers are rewarded with snarky jokes at every turn."[29] Above a fireplace is a portrait of Colbert; it originally showed Colbert standing in front of the same mantel with another portrait of himself. On the show's first anniversary, the portrait was replaced by one of Colbert standing in front of the mantel with the first portrait above it,[31] and with each successive year, it became Colbert standing in front of the previous year's painting.[32][33] The graphics used throughout the show and the studio itself are saturated with American flags, bald eagles, Captain America's shield, and other patriotic imagery.[34]

Format

Typically, Colbert starts with the audience cheering and teasers regarding the show's topics and guest; each headline is structured to be a deliberate pun. The series of puns are followed by a verbal metaphor that promotes the show and is almost always finished with, "This is the Colbert Report." The show's original opening title sequence began with an eagle diving past the host, following by images of Americana, stock footage of Colbert, and words describing Colbert flying by (some of which have been used as The Word). The first word used was "Grippy", and has changed to include, among others, "Megamerican", "Lincolnish", "Superstantial", "Flagaphile", and "Factose Intolerant". The May 4 episode in 2009 featured hints planted by J. J. Abrams about when and where Colbert would be in the Persian Gulf,[35] and "Farewellison" for the final episode of former producer Allison Silverman.[36] The show's opening credits depict the Colbert character clutching an American flag.[1] On January 4, 2010, a new opening debuted. The opening begins and ends with an eagle as before, but features new background renderings, new shots of Stephen Colbert, and is now colored in an American, red white and blue motif. The show's theme music is "Baby Mumbles" by Cheap Trick. Colbert phoned guitarist Rick Nielsen during development of the show to discuss the theme, noting that he loved the band's song "I Want You to Want Me"; the show's theme music is largely that song's melody backwards.[37]

Following the opening sequence, Colbert most often proceeds with a run-through of recent headlines in a manner parodying traditional news broadcasts, similar to The Daily Show but with a faux-right-wing spin. The program typically continues with Colbert addressing a specific topic. Colbert often calls to "Jimmy", a reference to program director Jim Hoskinson, to roll video clips.[22] That topic will often lead into a "The Word" segment, which juxtaposes Colbert's commentary with satirical bullet points on-screen, a parody of The O'Reilly Factor's "Talking Points Memo".[38] On occasion he will conduct a short interview with someone having to do with the topic. The format of the middle segment varies, but it is normally a visual presentation or skit. Often, these skits are parts of recurring segments, which may include "Better Know a District", in which Colbert interviews a U.S. Representative from a certain district of the United States; "Tip of the Hat/Wag of the Finger", in which Colbert voices his approval or disapproval of prominent people and news items; "Cheating Death with Dr. Stephen T. Colbert, D.F.A.", a health segment; "The Sport Report" with the "t" in both Sport and Report silent, a sports segment; and "The ThreatDown", in which Colbert lists the five greatest threats to America, and others. His newest segment, "Thought for Food" deals with the consumption of specific foods across the world.

Sometimes, there is a "Colbert Report Special Repor-t" (the final 't' pronounced with special emphasis), or even a "Colbert Report, Sport Report, Special Repor-t", in which Colbert devotes a section of an episode, and sometimes the entire episode to a special subject. The third segment is almost always an interview with a celebrity guest, often an author or government official.[39] Unlike the late night talk show standard of the guest walking out to the host's desk, Colbert instead runs to a separate area of the set to interview his guest, basking in the applause and glory meant for the guest.[40] On the interview segment of the show, Colbert frequently attempts to nail his guest by using various rhetorical devices and fallacies to prove them wrong.[41] The real-life Colbert once remarked that his personal favorite segment of the program were the interviews, which involved more listening on his end in order for the character to "ignorantly deconstruct" his opponent's argument.[21] The third segment of the show is on occasion a musical guest. Prominent musical guests have included Metallica,[42] Paul McCartney, Rush, Green Day, Paul Simon, Crosby Stills & Nash, Pavement, Cat Stevens, Yo-Yo Ma, Radiohead and Black Star. Afterwards, Colbert ends the show with parting words to the audience or, if short for time, a simple "that's it for the report everybody, good night".

Character

It’s all about this [character] because there’s a culture of victimization of these hosts. They feel like they’re the ones who are the story, and they are being attacked by the powers that be or by some nefarious cabal. That’s all based upon one person. That’s how it came about, just me and the camera.

Colbert on the character[43]

The host of The Colbert Report is Stephen Colbert, a "self-important right-wing commentator",[44] portrayed by his real-life namesake. The character incorporates aspects of Colbert's real life, but primarily parodies cable news pundits, particularly Bill O'Reilly of Fox News' The O'Reilly Factor, whom he refers to as "Papa Bear".[45][46] To this end, the character even incorporates O'Reilly's mannerisms, described as his "pen-wielding, hand-stabbing gestures."[1] O'Reilly's use of "talking points" — illustrated onscreen text reflecting the host's opinions — are parodied on The Colbert Report with the segment "The Word".[20][46] He initially incorporated long-winded, verbose metaphors to parody CNN correspondent Aaron Brown.[20] In addition, the character was also heavily inspired by Stone Phillips, Bill Kurtis and "especially" Geraldo Rivera. "I loved the way Geraldo made reporting a story seem like an act of courage," Colbert told a reporter in 2012.[1]

The core principle of The Colbert Report is that Colbert is a "well-intentioned, poorly informed, high-status idiot."[21] The character believes that he himself is the news: rather than a vessel to deliver the news to the audience, or a general member of the media, the character sees himself as more important than the news.[21][30] He is veracious in his approach, while often ridiculously overblown in his statements.[21] The character is egomaniacal, fact-averse ("factose intolerant"), God-fearing, and hyper-patriotic. He claims to be an independent who is often mistaken for a Republican, but uniformly despises liberals and generally agrees with the actions and decisions of the Republican Party.[47] Colbert's character has been described as a "caustic right-wing bully."[48] The character exists not in opposition to political leaders, but to common ignorances; for example, his insistence that then-presidential candidate Barack Obama had Socialist leanings was based on public misconceptions.[21] In parodying the cult of personality,[30] the Colbert character also developed a real-life equivalent, creating what was dubbed the "Colbert Nation".[16] While giving the character a certain mythos was part of the show's inception, show producers did not set out to create a loyal following for the character itself; the joke was that the character thought he had an influence, but that was a figment of his ego-riddled imagination.[8]

 
The character is primarily a parody of cable news pundits, particularly Bill O'Reilly, pictured above.

Despite his appearance of always being in charge, Colbert is vulnerable: he feels deeply threatened by those wielding more power than he,[18] and he suffers from "arctophobia", the fear of bears, which he refers to as "giant, marauding, godless killing machines".[49] He will alert the audience to what he perceives as the latest national threat (the subject of a recurring bit, "ThreatDown"), only to justify his own fears and impose those onto his audience.[8]

As the show progressed, Colbert gradually began to tone down the character,[9] allowing guests in interviews to "get his or her own message across." The show's longevity created what The New York Times described as "a winking quality to the act, a sense that we’re all in on the joke."[1] Colbert himself acknowledged that he "rarely hit it as hard as I used to," noting that "You have to be vigilant to stay ignorant."[8] He noted that his own personal opinions can occasionally align with his character's, when liberal guests' agendas appeared based on dislike rather than logical argument.[21] Politician and former vice president Al Gore accidentally referred to the persona as a "character" in a 2011 interview on the show, and in 2013, Colbert further blurred the lines between his character and real life when he spoke regarding the death of his mother on the program.[50] In doing so, many commentators referred the show's longevity and the development of a "third" Colbert — one a faux pundit and one informed by the performer's own life.[50] In the show's credits, Colbert was credited with a title, which deliberately became increasingly cumbersome as the show progressed: Her Excellency The Rev. Sir Doctor Stephen Tyrone Mos Def Colbert, D.F.A., Heavyweight Champion of the World✱✱ featuring Flo Rida La Premiere Dame De France.[51]

When O'Reilly appeared on The Daily Show before the second episode of The Colbert Report aired, he commented, "Before we get started, somebody told me walking in here, you got some French guy on after you making fun of me?", and made several references in the following interview to 'the French Guy'.[52][53] In a subsequent Newsweek interview, O'Reilly said that he "feels it's a compliment" to have Colbert parody him because Colbert "isn't mean-spirited" and does not "use [his] platform to injure people". Later, Colbert replied on-air, "I like you too. In fact, if it wasn't for you, this show wouldn't exist."[54]

Themes

Colbert disagreed that the show's emphasis on politics represented a liberal bias, noting that he himself was uninterested in modern politics.[21] He believed that political issues reflect basic human behavior, which he viewed as his satirical specialty, noting, "If I thought I had a political point, I'd be in big trouble."[21] In another interview, Colbert remarked, "I'm not someone with a particular political ax to grind. I'm a comedian. I love hypocrisy."[19]

Episodes

Notable episodes

Early years

The Colbert Report premiered on October 17, 2005.[3] The first guest was Stone Phillips, a partial influence on the character.[19] In the debut episode, Colbert coined the word truthiness, defined as "a quality characterizing a 'truth' that a person making an argument or assertion claims to know intuitively 'from the gut' or because it 'feels right' without regard to evidence, logic, intellectual examination, or facts."[55] Truthiness was named the 2005 Word of the Year by the American Dialect Society and for 2006 by Merriam-Webster.[56][57] The character's forceful nature confused some in the program's early days. During an appearance on the segment "Better Know a District" in the show's first season, a frustrated Barney Frank declined to continue, deeming the conversation too dumb.[58] In one early episode, the Colbert character purported to be a former member of a 1980s new wave group, Stephen & the Colberts, and released a fictional music video from the band for the song "Charlene (I'm Right Behind You)".[59]

The show's popularity resulted in Colbert headlining the 2006 White House Correspondents' Dinner, which he performed in character. The controversial, searing routine targeted President George W. Bush and the media, and was greeted with chilly reception from the audience.[60] Although President Bush shook Colbert's hand after his presentation, several of Bush's aides and supporters walked out during Colbert's speech, and one former aide commented that the President had "that look that he's ready to blow."[61] Colbert's performance quickly became an Internet and media sensation.[62][63] According to Vanity Fair, the speech transformed Colbert as a "folk hero" for liberals, and was later described by Frank Rich as the "defining moment" of the 2006 midterm elections.[7] Adam Sternbergh of New York, a year after the show's debut, deemed the character "something very close to what he's parodying, a kind of Bill O'Reilly for the angry left."[16]

In 2006, Colbert encouraged fans to vote for his name to be the new name of a bridge in Hungary, which was being decided via an online poll, beating the runner-up by more than 14 million votes. He was, however, disqualified, as the name of the bridge was intended to be a memoriam.[7] Later that year, he began a mock feud with indie rock group the Decemberists over the subject of who was the first to challenge fans to create a green screen video; the fake conflict culminated in a guitar solo competition on the show's final episode of the year, featuring guest appearances from guitarist Peter Frampton and Dr. Henry Kissinger.[64][65] Colbert later recalled it as the show's "craziest" moment, changing the way the staff viewed the program: "Because you realize the character believes anything he thinks, says, [or] cares about is important, anything fits on the show. [...] That is the show where we said, oh, there is unlimited open field running."[66]

 
Drill sergeant SFC Chantz correcting PVT Colbert at Fort Jackson

In February 2007, Ben & Jerry's unveiled a new ice cream flavor in honor of Stephen Colbert, named Stephen Colbert's AmeriCone Dream.[67] All proceeds were donated to charity through the Stephen Colbert AmeriCone Dream Fund, which distributed the money to various causes.[68] In June 2007, Colbert broke his left wrist while performing his warm-up for the show.[69] It was the subject of an extended bit on the program, including the creation of the "Wriststrong" wrist band, based on Lance Armstrong's "Livestrong" wrist band, which donated all proceeds to the Yellow Ribbon Fund. Colbert remained on the air without writers during the Writers Guild of America strike in 2007–08.[70] Colbert modified the pronunciation of the show's name, pronouncing both of the formerly elided final "t"s (/ˈklbərt rəpɔːrt/); a similar move was made by The Daily Show which returned to air as A Daily Show.[71] During this period, he staged a mock feud between himself, Jon Stewart, and Late Night host Conan O'Brien over who made Republican Presidential candidate Mike Huckabee.[72]

In 2008, Colbert made a series of jokes directed at various towns in the United States named "Canton", with many attracting negative responses from each respective area's local government and residents.[73][74][75] The same year, the show filmed a tongue-in-cheek Christmas special titled A Colbert Christmas: The Greatest Gift of All!. In 2009, Colbert filmed a series of four episodes for the troops in Baghdad, Iraq. He had a suit tailored for him in the Army Combat Uniform pattern and went through an abbreviated version of the Army's basic training regimen. On the first of the four episodes, Colbert had his head shaved on stage by General Ray Odierno who was jokingly "ordered" to do so by President Barack Obama, who appeared on the episode via a pre-recorded segment from the White House.

Later years

 
President Barack Obama guest-hosting the show in 2014.

In 2010, while in character, Colbert appeared before judiciary subcommittee hearing on the issue of farm workers and immigration.[76] The New Yorker used Colbert's testimony before Congress as an example of the "third" Colbert: "Colbert was thoughtful and sincere—and had ruined the whole thing. By speaking honestly, he had become the very thing he was mocking, a celebrity testifying before Congress."[50] Beginning in June 2011, the show created a long-running gag that involved Colbert starting his own actual super PAC, Americans for a Better Tomorrow, Tomorrow, described by the character as "100 percent legal and at least 10 percent ethical."[77]

In 2012, Colbert interviewed illustrator/author Maurice Sendak, who managed to get him to break character; show staff and Colbert himself retrospectively labeled the segment one of the show's more memorable moments.[22] The Los Angeles Times called the September 2013 interview with political commentator and former CIA official Philip Mudd Colbert's "most awkward interview", stating Mudd "could barely disguise his contempt" for Colbert.[78]

President Barack Obama guested during the show's final month, in a show taped from George Washington University in Washington, D.C.; Obama sat in Colbert's seat and presided over "The Wørd" segment.[79][80]

The final episode aired on December 18, 2014. In the episode Stephen becomes immortal after accidentally killing "Grimmy" during the opening of the segment of "Cheating Death with Dr. Stephen T. Colbert, D.F.A.". This leads to Stephen singing "We'll Meet Again" in its entirety along with a large group of famous friends including Jon Stewart, Jeff Daniels, Sam Waterston, Big Bird, Charlie Rose, Terry Gross, Keith Olbermann, Tom Brokaw, Alan Alda, Yo Yo Ma, Ken Burns, Cyndi Lauper, Patrick Stewart, Randy Newman, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Henry Kissinger, Alex Trebek, Mandy Patinkin, Lesley Stahl, George Lucas, Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Gloria Steinem, Elijah Wood, Jake Tapper, Bob Costas, Smaug and Cookie Monster.[81]

Reception

Critical response

Initial reviews

Reviews of The Colbert Report upon its 2005 premiere were positive, although critics were generally skeptical that the character could extend beyond one season without growing tiresome.[82] While positively reviewing the program as a whole, Maureen Ryan of the Chicago Tribune echoed these sentiments: "The biggest question hanging over The Colbert Report is whether the show’s sendup of the pomposity and fear-mongering of cable news blowhards will be as appealing in the long term."[83] Melanie McFarland of the Seattle Post-Intelligencer summarized the show's early reaction: "Critics and bloggers either loved the premiere or declared themselves to be unmoved, but that's the standard reaction after any late-night program's debut. A truer measure will be seen in coming weeks, after the hype wears off and the ratings lose their exuberance."[84]

Gilbert Cruz of Entertainment Weekly noted that "Colbert proves that the line between serious TV journalism and utter nonsense is a very thin one indeed."[85] Heather Havrilesky of Salon was effusive, remarking, "Not only does Colbert maintain his persona without skipping a beat throughout the entire show, but he’s got great comic timing, the show’s writers are brilliant, and the whole thing is pure foolish, bizarre, idiotic fun."[86] Barry Garron of The Hollywood Reporter dubbed it an "auspicious debut", writing, "The new show dovetails nicely with its lead-in to present a solid hour of skewered news and punctured pomposity."[87] Variety's Brian Lowry commented that the show had an "impressive start with a topnotch premiere followed by a respectable second outing."[88] Paul Brownfield of the Los Angeles Times wrote, "In the run-up to the show it all sounded a bit hard to get your head around, but in the flesh the show zinged, at least this first week."[82]

The Boston Globe's Matthew Gilbert praised the show's wordplay, summarizing, "Colbert's a clever creation, and a necessary one, and he deserves an opportunity to offend as many people as possible with his pompous blather."[89] Alessandra Stanley of The New York Times commented that the show was a welcome addition to the Comedy Central lineup, remarking, "What puts Mr. Colbert over the top is that he is not just impersonating well known television personalities, he also uses parody to score larger points about politics and the press."[90] Nevertheless, there were more negative reviews: USA Today's Robert Bianco opined that the show "tried too hard", writing, "Unfortunately, in just two weeks on the air, this half-hour spoof of a no-spin-zone type show has already stretched Colbert's character and the artifice that supports it past its natural breaking point."[91]

Later reviews

The New Yorker remarked that the show remained funny throughout its entire run.[50] The Colbert Report currently scores favorable reviews, with 65/100 on Metacritic (first season), while its viewers' ranking on the site is higher at 8.7/10.[92]

In a 2009 academic analysis of the show's popularity, Temple University researcher, Heather LaMarre found that the show appealed to both liberals and conservatives, concluding, "there was no significant difference between the groups in thinking Colbert was funny, but conservatives were more likely to report that Colbert only pretends to be joking and genuinely meant what he said while liberals were more likely to report that Colbert used satire and was not serious when offering political statements".[93] Malcolm Gladwell discussed LaMarre's findings in his Revisionist History podcast, "The Satire Paradox" (2016).[94]

Ratings

The ratings of The Colbert Report, from its premiere, benefited from the lead-in The Daily Show provides, which at the time of the show's debut averaged 1.3 million viewers per night.[20] Comedy Central had previously struggled to produce a hit program on par with The Daily Show, and were counting on Colbert after a string of failures.[20] The Colbert Report drew 1.13 million viewers for its premiere episode, 47 percent greater than the average for that time slot over the previous four weeks,[95] and 98 percent of the viewership of The Daily Show, which had Comedy Central's second-largest viewership.[96] Averaged over its opening week, The Report had 1.2 million viewers per episode, more than double the average for the same time the previous year, when the time slot was occupied by Too Late with Adam Carolla.[97]

The show regularly began attracting over one million viewers with near immediacy. The show also drew more young men, a powerful demographic, than other late-night hosts (at that time, Jay Leno, David Letterman, and Conan O'Brien).[7] Within a year, The Colbert Report began averaging 1.5 million viewers per night.[8] In early 2008, in the midst of the writer's strike, Colbert posted an eleven-percent gain over its averages from the following fall.[98]

From 2012 to 2013, viewership decreased from 1.2 million to 1.1 million.[99] In 2013, The Colbert Report was the second most-watched late-night talk show (behind The Daily Show) among the demographic of adults 18–49, beating competition The Tonight Show with Jay Leno in that demographic for the first time.[100] That year, The Colbert Report attracted $52.1 million in advertising for an audience whose median age was 39.4, about a year younger than The Daily Show.[99] In 2014, the final year of the show's run, ratings were down three percent (coinciding with a general ratings slide for cable television).[101]

The series finale on December 18, 2014, was watched by 2.4 million viewers, making it the most watched episode ever in the show's history. The finale was the most watched cable program of the night in its time slot, beating The Daily Show which was seen by two million viewers.[102][103]

Awards

 
Stephen Colbert and the crew of The Colbert Report at the 67th Annual Peabody Awards

The Colbert Report received numerous awards and accolades throughout its run. The show was nominated for four Emmy Awards in its inaugural year, but lost to The Daily Show.[7] The Report was nominated each year for the rest of its run for Outstanding Variety, Music, or Comedy Series, but lost each time to The Daily Show until 2013— breaking the longest winning streak for a television show in Primetime Emmy Award history.[104] Colbert subsequently referenced his win on his program as the conclusion of Stewart's "reign of terror."[105] The Report also won the award the following year, and received a subsequent nomination in 2015.

The show received two Peabody Awards, recognizing its excellence in news and entertainment.[106][107] It also won two Grammy Awards, one for Best Comedy Album for the soundtrack to the special A Colbert Christmas, and later for Best Spoken Word Album for the audiobook to America Again.[9] Colbert and Stewart's Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear was nominated for four Daytime Emmy awards in 2011, including the Outstanding Special Class Special category and the Outstanding Special Class Writing category.[108][109]

Racism controversy

In March 2014, the show attracted controversy when Colbert used a "fatuously fake parody stereotype character, 'Ching-Chong Ding-Dong,'" to "satirize knee-jerk mockery" of Asian dialect.[110] The name had been used before without incident, but the show's official Twitter account — run by an unknown individual — tweeted the remarks without context, leading to wide outrage over social media, including a hashtag campaign, "#CancelColbert", that was a worldwide trending topic for over 24 hours, thanks in-part by Colbert himself helping make it go viral for his show.[110]

Legacy

The New Yorker wrote that "Colbert has made vital observations about the American political system, particularly about the sordid role that money plays within it. The Colbert Report and the Daily Show [...] have changed the way that young liberals of a certain class think and talk about civic culture."[50]

 
Colbert at the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear in 2010, which attracted over 215,000 people.[111]

The show also coined another word, wikiality, that means "reality as decided on majority rule." Viewers of the show also coined a word, freem, based on its inclusion in the show's opening sequence; the word refers to "'freedom' without having to 'do' anything — without any responsibility or action."[18] In response to the "Better Know a District" segment, Rahm Emanuel, then the Democratic Caucus chair, instructed incoming freshmen not to do appearances on the show in 2007.[112] In 2008, East Carolina University associate professor Jason Bond named a species of trapdoor spider Aptostichus stephencolberti in honor of Stephen Colbert.[113]

The "Colbert Bump" is defined, connotatively by the Report, as an increase in popularity of a person (author, musician, politician, etc.) or thing (website, etc.) as a result of appearing as a guest on or (in the case of a thing) being mentioned on the show. For example, if a politician appears on The Colbert Report, they may become more popular with certain voters and thus are more likely to be elected. According to the American Political Science Association, contributions to Democratic politicians rose 40% for 30 days after an appearance on the show.[114] Magazines such as GQ, Newsweek, and Sports Illustrated have all had sales spikes when Colbert appeared on their covers.[115]

Viewers of The Colbert Report were on numerous occasions cited as being more knowledgeable about current events than traditional news viewers. In April 2007, a Pew Research Center report cited both Colbert and The Daily Show viewers as more well-informed than those who gathered their information via newspapers, television news and radio.[7] Colbert's Super PAC coverage was widely lauded, and studies later found that this coverage was more effective than traditional news programs at educating the audience on campaign finance. He was awarded a Peabody Award for the parody, which was described as an "innovative means of teaching American viewers about the landmark court decision".[116] The Annenberg Public Policy Center reported in 2014 that the Colbert Super PAC segments increased viewers' knowledge of PAC and 501(c)(4) campaign finance regulation more successfully than other types of news media.[117][118]

International distribution

Outside the United States, The Colbert Report was shown in Canada on the cable service The Comedy Network, simultaneously with its original U.S. broadcast (beginning a few weeks after the series debuted). Episodes would also air in Canada on traditional over-the-air broadcaster CTV, one hour after their appearance on The Comedy Network. On September 22, 2014, due to The Comedy Network's acquisition of Canadian rights to Jimmy Kimmel Live!, the program began airing on M3 and did so for the remainder of the show's run.[119]

It airs on The Comedy Channel in Australia, Comedy Central in New Zealand, and on Maxxx in the Philippines. As of 2012, The Colbert Report has also been broadcast in Africa on DSTV's version of Comedy Central. It aired on FX in the United Kingdom until they decided not to renew their contract in May 2009.[120] In Portugal, it airs on Sic Radical.

Beginning June 3, 2008, The Colbert Report also aired on the ShowComedy channel of Showtime Arabia (Currently OSN First HD), a channel which broadcasts in the Middle East and North Africa.[121] The show is transmitted on a one-day delay from original transmission in the US.

The show was shown during prime time on Australia's free-to-air ABC2 in 2010, however the channel was outbid for rights for 2011.[122][123] The show was available directly on the colbernation.com website for part of 2011, with Australian advertisements; however, Australian access is now blocked.

Several international markets also air The Colbert Report Global Edition, which shows highlights from the previous week's shows and includes a special introduction by Stephen Colbert at the start of the program. This means a new or newly repackaged episode can be screened every weekday.

In addition, most recent episodes (usually 3 weeks back) would be available in full length on colbertnation.com. Some international audiences could not see such way. By the end of the series's run, the colbernation.com website was integrated into Comedy Central's website. As of 2021, almost seven years after the show ended, many episodes are presented in individual clips there.[124]

Related multimedia

The show spawned various merchandise and multimedia related to the show. Three books were released to accompany the show's humor, the first being I Am America (And So Can You!), released both in print and as an audiobook in 2007. In 2012, two spinoff books of the show were released. America Again is a sequel to the show's first book, and addresses topics including Wall Street, campaign finance, energy policy, healthcare, eating on the campaign trail, and the United States Constitution.[125] Another book, I Am a Pole (And So Can You!), was released the same year and purports to be a children's book telling the story of a fictional pole finding its purpose in life.

Segments from the show were also released on DVD during its run. The Best of The Colbert Report, released in 2007, contains several of the show's most memorable early moments.[126] The show's Christmas special, A Colbert Christmas: The Greatest Gift of All!, was also released on DVD the following year.[127] The soundtrack of that special also saw a digital release on the iTunes Store after its broadcast, and contains music from Feist, John Legend, Willie Nelson, Toby Keith, Jon Stewart, Elvis Costello, and Colbert himself. In 2011, Jack White's record label Third Man Records released a 7" vinyl single of Stephen Colbert and The Black Belles performing "Charlene II (I'm Over You)",[128] which they also performed together on the show.[129]

See also

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External links

  • The Colbert Report at IMDb

colbert, report, ɛər, ɔːr, kohl, bair, american, late, night, talk, news, satire, television, program, hosted, stephen, colbert, that, aired, four, days, week, comedy, central, from, october, 2005, december, 2014, episodes, show, focused, fictional, anchorman,. The Colbert Report k oʊ l ˈ b ɛer r ɪ ˌ p ɔːr kohl BAIR rih por is an American late night talk and news satire television program hosted by Stephen Colbert that aired four days a week on Comedy Central from October 17 2005 to December 18 2014 for 1 447 episodes The show focused on a fictional anchorman character named Stephen Colbert played by his real life namesake The character described by Colbert as a well intentioned poorly informed high status idiot is a caricature of televised political pundits Furthermore the show satirized conservative personality driven political talk programs particularly Fox News s The O Reilly Factor The Colbert Report is a spin off of Comedy Central s The Daily Show where Colbert was a correspondent from 1997 to 2005 The Colbert ReportGenreComedy News satire Talk showCreated byStephen Colbert Ben Karlin Jon StewartDirected byJim HoskinsonPresented byStephen ColbertOpening theme Baby Mumbles by Cheap TrickCountry of originUnited StatesOriginal languageEnglishNo of seasons11No of episodes1 447 list of episodes ProductionExecutive producersJon Stewart Tom Purcell Stephen Colbert Meredith Bennett Co Exec Emily Lazar Co Exec Barry Julien Co Exec ProducerEmily GasperakProduction locationsNew York New YorkRunning time22 minutesProduction companiesSpartina Productions Busboy Productions Comedy PartnersDistributorViacom Media NetworksReleaseOriginal networkComedy CentralPicture formatNTSC 2005 09 HDTV 1080i 2010 14 Original releaseOctober 17 2005 2005 10 17 December 18 2014 2014 12 18 ChronologyRelatedThe Daily Show The Late Show with Stephen ColbertThe program created by Colbert Jon Stewart and Ben Karlin lampooned current events and American political happenings The show s structure consisted of an introductory monologue and a guest interview in which the Colbert character attempts to deconstruct his opponent s argument The show was taped in New York City s Hell s Kitchen neighborhood and the program s set is hyper American epitomizing the character s ego The show was taped and broadcast Monday through Thursday with weeks taken off at multiple points in a given year for breaks The Colbert Report saw immediate critical and ratings successes leading to various awards including multiple Emmy and Peabody Awards The show s cultural influence often extended beyond the show s traditional viewing audience including Colbert running for U S President twice co hosting a rally at the National Mall presenting a controversial performance at the White House Correspondents Dinner and establishing a real Super PAC that raised over a million dollars The show also inspired various forms of multimedia including music and multiple best selling books Contents 1 Background 2 History 2 1 Development 2 2 Production 2 3 Set 3 Format 4 Character 5 Themes 6 Episodes 6 1 Notable episodes 6 1 1 Early years 6 1 2 Later years 7 Reception 7 1 Critical response 7 1 1 Initial reviews 7 1 2 Later reviews 7 2 Ratings 7 3 Awards 7 4 Racism controversy 8 Legacy 9 International distribution 10 Related multimedia 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksBackground Edit Colbert on the set of The Colbert Report in 2011 The Colbert Report hosted by a fictional anchorman character named Stephen Colbert played by his real life namesake satirized conservative personality driven political pundit programs like the O Reilly Factor and Hannity on FOX News The character first made appearances on the short lived sketch comedy series The Dana Carvey Show in 1996 described as a self important trench coated reporter who does on location stories in a way that suggests his own presence is the real scoop 1 2 His skits included Waiters Who Are Nauseated by Food Germans Who Say Nice Things and Skinheads From Maine 2 Colbert joined Comedy Central s The Daily Show in 1997 a year following its launch then hosted by Craig Kilborn 3 When Jon Stewart became the program s host in 1999 The Daily Show developed a markedly different style bringing a sharper political focus to the humor than the show previously exhibited Colbert recalled that Stewart specifically asked him to have a political viewpoint and to allow his passion for issues to carry through into his comedy 4 5 6 Colbert became a fixture on The Daily Show occasionally hosting in Stewart s absence 7 In 2003 the program began running advertisements for a fictional program titled The Colbert Report starring Colbert as a parody of cable news pundits 1 When fellow Daily Show star Steve Carell left the show to pursue a film and television career Comedy Central worked to keep Colbert at the network Colbert pitched The Colbert Report to the channel in 2004 Stewart pushed Comedy Central to pick up the show and Colbert was given an eight week tryout Following the show s immediate success the show quickly became a fixture in the late night lineup 1 At its peak the show averaged 1 5 million viewers each evening 8 The intensity of the fictional Colbert anchorman character was gradually toned down over the course of the show s run as the host believed he would eventually need to move beyond it 9 He began to regard it as an act of discipline to perform as the character later remarking to model behavior you have to consume that behavior on a regular basis It became very hard to watch punditry of any kind of whatever political stripe 10 With his contract set to end in December 2014 he had already decided to leave the show when he was contacted by CBS to replace David Letterman as the host of its Late Show franchise 11 The show s ending was announced concurrently with Colbert s jump to CBS in April 2014 12 The last episode of the Report aired on December 18 2014 13 The show was replaced on Comedy Central s late night lineup by The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore another spinoff of The Daily Show 14 15 History EditDevelopment Edit The show is a spin off of The Daily Show hosted by Jon Stewart seen here in 2005 The character first made appearances on the short lived sketch comedy series The Dana Carvey Show in 1996 described as a self important trench coated reporter who does on location stories in a way that suggests his own presence is the real scoop 1 When The Daily Show ran short on time a short piece starring Colbert advertising a fictional program titled The Colbert Report was added into the program In these sketches Colbert began to amplify his character to parody news pundits 7 Colbert anchored many sketches in his persona including Even Stepvhen in which he debated current issues with fellow correspondent Steve Carell often devolving into petty name calling and insults 1 Colbert and Carell were viewed as potential breakout stars by staff and when Carell left the series in 2004 to start a US version of The Office Comedy Central made attempts to keep Colbert at the network 16 Stewart and Karlin were already looking to expand the Daily Show franchise and their production company Busboy The duo supposedly came up with the idea for The Colbert Report after watching coverage of the sexual harassment lawsuit filed against Bill O Reilly Colbert met with network president Doug Herzog the day following the 2004 Emmy Awards to first discuss the concept 16 The one line pitch Colbert Karlin and Stewart developed was Our version of the O Reilly Factor with Stephen Colbert 17 Herzog committed to an eight week tryout period without a pilot 1 By the time of the 2004 election the character was fully developed 7 In creating the character which is designed to be repellant but entertaining Colbert conferred with Stewart and Karlin In expressing his hope that his character not be an asshole Stewart remarked You re not an asshole You re an idiot There s a difference 16 Head writer Allison Silverman reiterated this trait in a later interview commenting There is an essential innocence to his character 18 Colbert initially felt the character might not be sustainable in a longer format 1 Despite this The Colbert Report was designed as an extension of the satiric goals of The Daily Show combining it with general silliness and character driven humor 18 To make sure there was no overlap in subject matter with The Daily Show Karlin made trips between the studios during the show s early days to supervise scripts 16 For the first several years of the program Colbert made an appearance at the end of each Daily Show in split screen having a short discussion with Stewart preceding his show 19 20 Production Edit I call the show jokingly The Joy Machine because if you can do it with joy even in the simplest show then it s The Joy Machine as opposed to The Machine Considering the speed at which we do it we ll get caught in the gears really quickly unless we also approach it with joy Stephen Colbert describing the show s production 2009 21 The show s writing was grounded in improv employing a yes to everything mentality 1 Much of the humor derived from extended improv games with the show s studio and at home audience like Colbert s poll to name a bridge in Hungary after himself 21 Many of the writers had improv training and at one point put together improv evenings at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre once a month 1 The Report s writing staff was predominantly male and white Colbert acknowledged this lack of diversity but contended that he hired writers based solely on the quality of their material and had never looked at the names on writing packets submitted for employment 22 Subjects considered too dark were not even considered for comedic material for example the show would poke fun at press coverage of a tragedy rather than the tragedy itself 23 Issues discussed on the show were later reported on actual newscasts in turn allowing the show to comment on its own impact creating an echo chamber of sorts 21 This led Colbert to describe his show at its purest expression as a pebble that we throw into the puddle of the news and then we report on our own ripples 21 Ideas for each show were considered in the morning pitch meeting which could range from harrowing to smooth 23 Described as having demanding standards Colbert is quoted as remarking Let s make it perfect and then cut it 1 Although dozens of ideas were either chosen for the show or deleted other ideas saved for a later date were often forgotten because of the pace of news 1 Ideas with considerable potential were put in the hopper to be developed and rewritten while more fully formed ideas were placed in the pantry 23 Good jokes would still be sacrificed if they did not fit the character s specific point of view which was deemed the inverse of what any logical person feels 22 At least one writer has described the job as all consuming leaving no time for outside activities 1 Colbert himself eventually became withdrawn from morning meetings as the show continued on and he mulled a decision to leave 11 Outside the studio Usually by 11 a m a rough outline for the show was completed and writers sent off in pairs to create scripts that would be polished throughout the day 1 First writers would scan news articles for ideas and partner together in pairs with one keeping track of possible jokes 23 During an appearance at the New York Comedy Festival in 2013 some writers admitted to procrastinating until the last hour before rehearsal to complete their sections Colbert confirmed that in the program s early days segments such as The Word were scripted entirely during the rewrite before rehearsal 22 23 Both writers read their dialogue aloud to see whether they thought the Colbert character would say it 18 As writers were working on their respective scripts the show s production and graphics team compiled music footage and props needed for the show 18 To collect video clips the show cross referenced transcripts of hours and hours of archived TiVo recordings of news programs 24 25 In 2011 the show switched to Snapstream software which streamlined the TV clip search and compilation process allowing for searching closed captioning for select words 25 In addition a group of staff coders and independent contractors developed Scripto software to collaborate on scripts in real time 26 By 1 p m the show held a second production meeting to go over scripts and determine which pieces to edit 18 Scripts were hopefully completed around 4 p m and a rehearsal with the entire staff would begin at 5 30 p m or occasionally earlier 18 Afterward final changes were made to the script 7 The final rewrite would take place in a small red poorly ventilated room until 6 45 p m 18 22 Before interviewing his guests Colbert met with them in the green room and acknowledged that he was playing a character noting that the persona is willfully ignorant of what you know and care about and urging the guest to honestly disabuse me of what you see as my ignorance 21 Emily Lazar a producer for the interview segments advised guests to talk with Colbert as though he were a harmless drunk at the next bar stool 8 Guests would typically take their seats around 7 p m when a warm up comedian perhaps Jared Logan or Paul Mercurio delivered jokes 27 Colbert out of character held a brief question and answer session with the audience prior to taping 21 Taping lasted as long as three hours 27 but usually ended around 9 p m at which point the show was edited and sent to Comedy Central for broadcast 1 As the show was being edited the staff met one last time to work through details for the next show 18 Set Edit Colbert on the show s set preparing to interview First Lady Michelle Obama in 2012 The Colbert Report was taped and broadcast four nights a week Monday Thursday 17 The show s taping studio at 513 W 54th Street in New York City s Hell s Kitchen neighborhood was used for The Daily Show until July 2005 7 and has a capacity of 150 27 NEP Studio 54 on 54th Street is owned by NEP Broadcasting which is New York City s largest production facility and also owns The Daily Show set at NEP Studio 52 two blocks south on 52nd Street Aside from the set the show s production offices have been described as loft like and all overhead pipes and exposed brick 19 Following the show s conclusion the building was used for The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore 28 The set for The Colbert Report was called The Eagle s Nest and reflects and facilitates Colbert s self aggrandizing style 29 It was designed by Jim Fenhagen and was intended to both capture the character s ego and be hyper American 29 Elements incorporated into the set included architectural lines converged to Colbert s desk and radial beams coming out from behind his chair 21 Colbert s main influence for the set was Leonardo da Vinci s The Last Supper 30 with the Colbert character as Jesus Christ 29 In the set virtually every inch emblazoned with Colbert s name or the initial C 19 his name initials and the name of the show appear on the desk s plasma screen on the rafters above the desk and the desk itself is shaped like a giant C 29 The background includes faux artifacts from the character s backstory which are seldom seen by viewers I kept saying People might not really notice this But when you re working with a comedy team they really get into it They couldn t help themselves said Fenhagen These references included the United States Constitution a miniature Ten Commandments and a CliffsNotes guide to American government 29 The set was described as part Riefenstahlesque homage to the star part symbologic gallery where alert viewers are rewarded with snarky jokes at every turn 29 Above a fireplace is a portrait of Colbert it originally showed Colbert standing in front of the same mantel with another portrait of himself On the show s first anniversary the portrait was replaced by one of Colbert standing in front of the mantel with the first portrait above it 31 and with each successive year it became Colbert standing in front of the previous year s painting 32 33 The graphics used throughout the show and the studio itself are saturated with American flags bald eagles Captain America s shield and other patriotic imagery 34 Format EditSee also Recurring segments on The Colbert Report This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Typically Colbert starts with the audience cheering and teasers regarding the show s topics and guest each headline is structured to be a deliberate pun The series of puns are followed by a verbal metaphor that promotes the show and is almost always finished with This is the Colbert Report The show s original opening title sequence began with an eagle diving past the host following by images of Americana stock footage of Colbert and words describing Colbert flying by some of which have been used as The Word The first word used was Grippy and has changed to include among others Megamerican Lincolnish Superstantial Flagaphile and Factose Intolerant The May 4 episode in 2009 featured hints planted by J J Abrams about when and where Colbert would be in the Persian Gulf 35 and Farewellison for the final episode of former producer Allison Silverman 36 The show s opening credits depict the Colbert character clutching an American flag 1 On January 4 2010 a new opening debuted The opening begins and ends with an eagle as before but features new background renderings new shots of Stephen Colbert and is now colored in an American red white and blue motif The show s theme music is Baby Mumbles by Cheap Trick Colbert phoned guitarist Rick Nielsen during development of the show to discuss the theme noting that he loved the band s song I Want You to Want Me the show s theme music is largely that song s melody backwards 37 Following the opening sequence Colbert most often proceeds with a run through of recent headlines in a manner parodying traditional news broadcasts similar to The Daily Show but with a faux right wing spin The program typically continues with Colbert addressing a specific topic Colbert often calls to Jimmy a reference to program director Jim Hoskinson to roll video clips 22 That topic will often lead into a The Word segment which juxtaposes Colbert s commentary with satirical bullet points on screen a parody of The O Reilly Factor s Talking Points Memo 38 On occasion he will conduct a short interview with someone having to do with the topic The format of the middle segment varies but it is normally a visual presentation or skit Often these skits are parts of recurring segments which may include Better Know a District in which Colbert interviews a U S Representative from a certain district of the United States Tip of the Hat Wag of the Finger in which Colbert voices his approval or disapproval of prominent people and news items Cheating Death with Dr Stephen T Colbert D F A a health segment The Sport Report with the t in both Sport and Report silent a sports segment and The ThreatDown in which Colbert lists the five greatest threats to America and others His newest segment Thought for Food deals with the consumption of specific foods across the world Sometimes there is a Colbert Report Special Repor t the final t pronounced with special emphasis or even a Colbert Report Sport Report Special Repor t in which Colbert devotes a section of an episode and sometimes the entire episode to a special subject The third segment is almost always an interview with a celebrity guest often an author or government official 39 Unlike the late night talk show standard of the guest walking out to the host s desk Colbert instead runs to a separate area of the set to interview his guest basking in the applause and glory meant for the guest 40 On the interview segment of the show Colbert frequently attempts to nail his guest by using various rhetorical devices and fallacies to prove them wrong 41 The real life Colbert once remarked that his personal favorite segment of the program were the interviews which involved more listening on his end in order for the character to ignorantly deconstruct his opponent s argument 21 The third segment of the show is on occasion a musical guest Prominent musical guests have included Metallica 42 Paul McCartney Rush Green Day Paul Simon Crosby Stills amp Nash Pavement Cat Stevens Yo Yo Ma Radiohead and Black Star Afterwards Colbert ends the show with parting words to the audience or if short for time a simple that s it for the report everybody good night Character EditMain article Stephen Colbert character It s all about this character because there s a culture of victimization of these hosts They feel like they re the ones who are the story and they are being attacked by the powers that be or by some nefarious cabal That s all based upon one person That s how it came about just me and the camera Colbert on the character 43 The host of The Colbert Report is Stephen Colbert a self important right wing commentator 44 portrayed by his real life namesake The character incorporates aspects of Colbert s real life but primarily parodies cable news pundits particularly Bill O Reilly of Fox News The O Reilly Factor whom he refers to as Papa Bear 45 46 To this end the character even incorporates O Reilly s mannerisms described as his pen wielding hand stabbing gestures 1 O Reilly s use of talking points illustrated onscreen text reflecting the host s opinions are parodied on The Colbert Report with the segment The Word 20 46 He initially incorporated long winded verbose metaphors to parody CNN correspondent Aaron Brown 20 In addition the character was also heavily inspired by Stone Phillips Bill Kurtis and especially Geraldo Rivera I loved the way Geraldo made reporting a story seem like an act of courage Colbert told a reporter in 2012 1 The core principle of The Colbert Report is that Colbert is a well intentioned poorly informed high status idiot 21 The character believes that he himself is the news rather than a vessel to deliver the news to the audience or a general member of the media the character sees himself as more important than the news 21 30 He is veracious in his approach while often ridiculously overblown in his statements 21 The character is egomaniacal fact averse factose intolerant God fearing and hyper patriotic He claims to be an independent who is often mistaken for a Republican but uniformly despises liberals and generally agrees with the actions and decisions of the Republican Party 47 Colbert s character has been described as a caustic right wing bully 48 The character exists not in opposition to political leaders but to common ignorances for example his insistence that then presidential candidate Barack Obama had Socialist leanings was based on public misconceptions 21 In parodying the cult of personality 30 the Colbert character also developed a real life equivalent creating what was dubbed the Colbert Nation 16 While giving the character a certain mythos was part of the show s inception show producers did not set out to create a loyal following for the character itself the joke was that the character thought he had an influence but that was a figment of his ego riddled imagination 8 The character is primarily a parody of cable news pundits particularly Bill O Reilly pictured above Despite his appearance of always being in charge Colbert is vulnerable he feels deeply threatened by those wielding more power than he 18 and he suffers from arctophobia the fear of bears which he refers to as giant marauding godless killing machines 49 He will alert the audience to what he perceives as the latest national threat the subject of a recurring bit ThreatDown only to justify his own fears and impose those onto his audience 8 As the show progressed Colbert gradually began to tone down the character 9 allowing guests in interviews to get his or her own message across The show s longevity created what The New York Times described as a winking quality to the act a sense that we re all in on the joke 1 Colbert himself acknowledged that he rarely hit it as hard as I used to noting that You have to be vigilant to stay ignorant 8 He noted that his own personal opinions can occasionally align with his character s when liberal guests agendas appeared based on dislike rather than logical argument 21 Politician and former vice president Al Gore accidentally referred to the persona as a character in a 2011 interview on the show and in 2013 Colbert further blurred the lines between his character and real life when he spoke regarding the death of his mother on the program 50 In doing so many commentators referred the show s longevity and the development of a third Colbert one a faux pundit and one informed by the performer s own life 50 In the show s credits Colbert was credited with a title which deliberately became increasingly cumbersome as the show progressed Her Excellency The Rev Sir Doctor Stephen Tyrone Mos Def Colbert D F A Heavyweight Champion of the World featuring Flo Rida La Premiere Dame De France 51 When O Reilly appeared on The Daily Show before the second episode of The Colbert Report aired he commented Before we get started somebody told me walking in here you got some French guy on after you making fun of me and made several references in the following interview to the French Guy 52 53 In a subsequent Newsweek interview O Reilly said that he feels it s a compliment to have Colbert parody him because Colbert isn t mean spirited and does not use his platform to injure people Later Colbert replied on air I like you too In fact if it wasn t for you this show wouldn t exist 54 Themes EditColbert disagreed that the show s emphasis on politics represented a liberal bias noting that he himself was uninterested in modern politics 21 He believed that political issues reflect basic human behavior which he viewed as his satirical specialty noting If I thought I had a political point I d be in big trouble 21 In another interview Colbert remarked I m not someone with a particular political ax to grind I m a comedian I love hypocrisy 19 Episodes EditMain article List of The Colbert Report episodes Notable episodes Edit Early years Edit The Colbert Report premiered on October 17 2005 3 The first guest was Stone Phillips a partial influence on the character 19 In the debut episode Colbert coined the word truthiness defined as a quality characterizing a truth that a person making an argument or assertion claims to know intuitively from the gut or because it feels right without regard to evidence logic intellectual examination or facts 55 Truthiness was named the 2005 Word of the Year by the American Dialect Society and for 2006 by Merriam Webster 56 57 The character s forceful nature confused some in the program s early days During an appearance on the segment Better Know a District in the show s first season a frustrated Barney Frank declined to continue deeming the conversation too dumb 58 In one early episode the Colbert character purported to be a former member of a 1980s new wave group Stephen amp the Colberts and released a fictional music video from the band for the song Charlene I m Right Behind You 59 The show s popularity resulted in Colbert headlining the 2006 White House Correspondents Dinner which he performed in character The controversial searing routine targeted President George W Bush and the media and was greeted with chilly reception from the audience 60 Although President Bush shook Colbert s hand after his presentation several of Bush s aides and supporters walked out during Colbert s speech and one former aide commented that the President had that look that he s ready to blow 61 Colbert s performance quickly became an Internet and media sensation 62 63 According to Vanity Fair the speech transformed Colbert as a folk hero for liberals and was later described by Frank Rich as the defining moment of the 2006 midterm elections 7 Adam Sternbergh of New York a year after the show s debut deemed the character something very close to what he s parodying a kind of Bill O Reilly for the angry left 16 In 2006 Colbert encouraged fans to vote for his name to be the new name of a bridge in Hungary which was being decided via an online poll beating the runner up by more than 14 million votes He was however disqualified as the name of the bridge was intended to be a memoriam 7 Later that year he began a mock feud with indie rock group the Decemberists over the subject of who was the first to challenge fans to create a green screen video the fake conflict culminated in a guitar solo competition on the show s final episode of the year featuring guest appearances from guitarist Peter Frampton and Dr Henry Kissinger 64 65 Colbert later recalled it as the show s craziest moment changing the way the staff viewed the program Because you realize the character believes anything he thinks says or cares about is important anything fits on the show That is the show where we said oh there is unlimited open field running 66 Drill sergeant SFC Chantz correcting PVT Colbert at Fort Jackson In February 2007 Ben amp Jerry s unveiled a new ice cream flavor in honor of Stephen Colbert named Stephen Colbert s AmeriCone Dream 67 All proceeds were donated to charity through the Stephen Colbert AmeriCone Dream Fund which distributed the money to various causes 68 In June 2007 Colbert broke his left wrist while performing his warm up for the show 69 It was the subject of an extended bit on the program including the creation of the Wriststrong wrist band based on Lance Armstrong s Livestrong wrist band which donated all proceeds to the Yellow Ribbon Fund Colbert remained on the air without writers during the Writers Guild of America strike in 2007 08 70 Colbert modified the pronunciation of the show s name pronouncing both of the formerly elided final t s ˈ k oʊ l b er t r e p ɔːr t a similar move was made by The Daily Show which returned to air as A Daily Show 71 During this period he staged a mock feud between himself Jon Stewart and Late Night host Conan O Brien over who made Republican Presidential candidate Mike Huckabee 72 In 2008 Colbert made a series of jokes directed at various towns in the United States named Canton with many attracting negative responses from each respective area s local government and residents 73 74 75 The same year the show filmed a tongue in cheek Christmas special titled A Colbert Christmas The Greatest Gift of All In 2009 Colbert filmed a series of four episodes for the troops in Baghdad Iraq He had a suit tailored for him in the Army Combat Uniform pattern and went through an abbreviated version of the Army s basic training regimen On the first of the four episodes Colbert had his head shaved on stage by General Ray Odierno who was jokingly ordered to do so by President Barack Obama who appeared on the episode via a pre recorded segment from the White House Later years Edit President Barack Obama guest hosting the show in 2014 In 2010 while in character Colbert appeared before judiciary subcommittee hearing on the issue of farm workers and immigration 76 The New Yorker used Colbert s testimony before Congress as an example of the third Colbert Colbert was thoughtful and sincere and had ruined the whole thing By speaking honestly he had become the very thing he was mocking a celebrity testifying before Congress 50 Beginning in June 2011 the show created a long running gag that involved Colbert starting his own actual super PAC Americans for a Better Tomorrow Tomorrow described by the character as 100 percent legal and at least 10 percent ethical 77 In 2012 Colbert interviewed illustrator author Maurice Sendak who managed to get him to break character show staff and Colbert himself retrospectively labeled the segment one of the show s more memorable moments 22 The Los Angeles Times called the September 2013 interview with political commentator and former CIA official Philip Mudd Colbert s most awkward interview stating Mudd could barely disguise his contempt for Colbert 78 President Barack Obama guested during the show s final month in a show taped from George Washington University in Washington D C Obama sat in Colbert s seat and presided over The Word segment 79 80 The final episode aired on December 18 2014 In the episode Stephen becomes immortal after accidentally killing Grimmy during the opening of the segment of Cheating Death with Dr Stephen T Colbert D F A This leads to Stephen singing We ll Meet Again in its entirety along with a large group of famous friends including Jon Stewart Jeff Daniels Sam Waterston Big Bird Charlie Rose Terry Gross Keith Olbermann Tom Brokaw Alan Alda Yo Yo Ma Ken Burns Cyndi Lauper Patrick Stewart Randy Newman Doris Kearns Goodwin Henry Kissinger Alex Trebek Mandy Patinkin Lesley Stahl George Lucas Kareem Abdul Jabbar Gloria Steinem Elijah Wood Jake Tapper Bob Costas Smaug and Cookie Monster 81 Reception EditCritical response Edit Initial reviews Edit Reviews of The Colbert Report upon its 2005 premiere were positive although critics were generally skeptical that the character could extend beyond one season without growing tiresome 82 While positively reviewing the program as a whole Maureen Ryan of the Chicago Tribune echoed these sentiments The biggest question hanging over The Colbert Report is whether the show s sendup of the pomposity and fear mongering of cable news blowhards will be as appealing in the long term 83 Melanie McFarland of the Seattle Post Intelligencer summarized the show s early reaction Critics and bloggers either loved the premiere or declared themselves to be unmoved but that s the standard reaction after any late night program s debut A truer measure will be seen in coming weeks after the hype wears off and the ratings lose their exuberance 84 Gilbert Cruz of Entertainment Weekly noted that Colbert proves that the line between serious TV journalism and utter nonsense is a very thin one indeed 85 Heather Havrilesky of Salon was effusive remarking Not only does Colbert maintain his persona without skipping a beat throughout the entire show but he s got great comic timing the show s writers are brilliant and the whole thing is pure foolish bizarre idiotic fun 86 Barry Garron of The Hollywood Reporter dubbed it an auspicious debut writing The new show dovetails nicely with its lead in to present a solid hour of skewered news and punctured pomposity 87 Variety s Brian Lowry commented that the show had an impressive start with a topnotch premiere followed by a respectable second outing 88 Paul Brownfield of the Los Angeles Times wrote In the run up to the show it all sounded a bit hard to get your head around but in the flesh the show zinged at least this first week 82 The Boston Globe s Matthew Gilbert praised the show s wordplay summarizing Colbert s a clever creation and a necessary one and he deserves an opportunity to offend as many people as possible with his pompous blather 89 Alessandra Stanley of The New York Times commented that the show was a welcome addition to the Comedy Central lineup remarking What puts Mr Colbert over the top is that he is not just impersonating well known television personalities he also uses parody to score larger points about politics and the press 90 Nevertheless there were more negative reviews USA Today s Robert Bianco opined that the show tried too hard writing Unfortunately in just two weeks on the air this half hour spoof of a no spin zone type show has already stretched Colbert s character and the artifice that supports it past its natural breaking point 91 Later reviews Edit The New Yorker remarked that the show remained funny throughout its entire run 50 The Colbert Report currently scores favorable reviews with 65 100 on Metacritic first season while its viewers ranking on the site is higher at 8 7 10 92 In a 2009 academic analysis of the show s popularity Temple University researcher Heather LaMarre found that the show appealed to both liberals and conservatives concluding there was no significant difference between the groups in thinking Colbert was funny but conservatives were more likely to report that Colbert only pretends to be joking and genuinely meant what he said while liberals were more likely to report that Colbert used satire and was not serious when offering political statements 93 Malcolm Gladwell discussed LaMarre s findings in his Revisionist History podcast The Satire Paradox 2016 94 Ratings Edit The ratings of The Colbert Report from its premiere benefited from the lead in The Daily Show provides which at the time of the show s debut averaged 1 3 million viewers per night 20 Comedy Central had previously struggled to produce a hit program on par with The Daily Show and were counting on Colbert after a string of failures 20 The Colbert Report drew 1 13 million viewers for its premiere episode 47 percent greater than the average for that time slot over the previous four weeks 95 and 98 percent of the viewership of The Daily Show which had Comedy Central s second largest viewership 96 Averaged over its opening week The Report had 1 2 million viewers per episode more than double the average for the same time the previous year when the time slot was occupied by Too Late with Adam Carolla 97 The show regularly began attracting over one million viewers with near immediacy The show also drew more young men a powerful demographic than other late night hosts at that time Jay Leno David Letterman and Conan O Brien 7 Within a year The Colbert Report began averaging 1 5 million viewers per night 8 In early 2008 in the midst of the writer s strike Colbert posted an eleven percent gain over its averages from the following fall 98 From 2012 to 2013 viewership decreased from 1 2 million to 1 1 million 99 In 2013 The Colbert Report was the second most watched late night talk show behind The Daily Show among the demographic of adults 18 49 beating competition The Tonight Show with Jay Leno in that demographic for the first time 100 That year The Colbert Report attracted 52 1 million in advertising for an audience whose median age was 39 4 about a year younger than The Daily Show 99 In 2014 the final year of the show s run ratings were down three percent coinciding with a general ratings slide for cable television 101 The series finale on December 18 2014 was watched by 2 4 million viewers making it the most watched episode ever in the show s history The finale was the most watched cable program of the night in its time slot beating The Daily Show which was seen by two million viewers 102 103 Awards Edit Main article List of awards and nominations received by Stephen Colbert Stephen Colbert and the crew of The Colbert Report at the 67th Annual Peabody Awards The Colbert Report received numerous awards and accolades throughout its run The show was nominated for four Emmy Awards in its inaugural year but lost to The Daily Show 7 The Report was nominated each year for the rest of its run for Outstanding Variety Music or Comedy Series but lost each time to The Daily Show until 2013 breaking the longest winning streak for a television show in Primetime Emmy Award history 104 Colbert subsequently referenced his win on his program as the conclusion of Stewart s reign of terror 105 The Report also won the award the following year and received a subsequent nomination in 2015 The show received two Peabody Awards recognizing its excellence in news and entertainment 106 107 It also won two Grammy Awards one for Best Comedy Album for the soundtrack to the special A Colbert Christmas and later for Best Spoken Word Album for the audiobook to America Again 9 Colbert and Stewart s Rally to Restore Sanity and or Fear was nominated for four Daytime Emmy awards in 2011 including the Outstanding Special Class Special category and the Outstanding Special Class Writing category 108 109 Racism controversy Edit In March 2014 the show attracted controversy when Colbert used a fatuously fake parody stereotype character Ching Chong Ding Dong to satirize knee jerk mockery of Asian dialect 110 The name had been used before without incident but the show s official Twitter account run by an unknown individual tweeted the remarks without context leading to wide outrage over social media including a hashtag campaign CancelColbert that was a worldwide trending topic for over 24 hours thanks in part by Colbert himself helping make it go viral for his show 110 Legacy EditMain article Cultural impact of The Colbert Report See also Vandalism on Wikipedia Stephen Colbert The New Yorker wrote that Colbert has made vital observations about the American political system particularly about the sordid role that money plays within it The Colbert Report and the Daily Show have changed the way that young liberals of a certain class think and talk about civic culture 50 Colbert at the Rally to Restore Sanity and or Fear in 2010 which attracted over 215 000 people 111 The show also coined another word wikiality that means reality as decided on majority rule Viewers of the show also coined a word freem based on its inclusion in the show s opening sequence the word refers to freedom without having to do anything without any responsibility or action 18 In response to the Better Know a District segment Rahm Emanuel then the Democratic Caucus chair instructed incoming freshmen not to do appearances on the show in 2007 112 In 2008 East Carolina University associate professor Jason Bond named a species of trapdoor spider Aptostichus stephencolberti in honor of Stephen Colbert 113 The Colbert Bump is defined connotatively by the Report as an increase in popularity of a person author musician politician etc or thing website etc as a result of appearing as a guest on or in the case of a thing being mentioned on the show For example if a politician appears on The Colbert Report they may become more popular with certain voters and thus are more likely to be elected According to the American Political Science Association contributions to Democratic politicians rose 40 for 30 days after an appearance on the show 114 Magazines such as GQ Newsweek and Sports Illustrated have all had sales spikes when Colbert appeared on their covers 115 Viewers of The Colbert Report were on numerous occasions cited as being more knowledgeable about current events than traditional news viewers In April 2007 a Pew Research Center report cited both Colbert and The Daily Show viewers as more well informed than those who gathered their information via newspapers television news and radio 7 Colbert s Super PAC coverage was widely lauded and studies later found that this coverage was more effective than traditional news programs at educating the audience on campaign finance He was awarded a Peabody Award for the parody which was described as an innovative means of teaching American viewers about the landmark court decision 116 The Annenberg Public Policy Center reported in 2014 that the Colbert Super PAC segments increased viewers knowledge of PAC and 501 c 4 campaign finance regulation more successfully than other types of news media 117 118 International distribution EditOutside the United States The Colbert Report was shown in Canada on the cable service The Comedy Network simultaneously with its original U S broadcast beginning a few weeks after the series debuted Episodes would also air in Canada on traditional over the air broadcaster CTV one hour after their appearance on The Comedy Network On September 22 2014 due to The Comedy Network s acquisition of Canadian rights to Jimmy Kimmel Live the program began airing on M3 and did so for the remainder of the show s run 119 It airs on The Comedy Channel in Australia Comedy Central in New Zealand and on Maxxx in the Philippines As of 2012 update The Colbert Report has also been broadcast in Africa on DSTV s version of Comedy Central It aired on FX in the United Kingdom until they decided not to renew their contract in May 2009 120 In Portugal it airs on Sic Radical Beginning June 3 2008 The Colbert Report also aired on the ShowComedy channel of Showtime Arabia Currently OSN First HD a channel which broadcasts in the Middle East and North Africa 121 The show is transmitted on a one day delay from original transmission in the US The show was shown during prime time on Australia s free to air ABC2 in 2010 however the channel was outbid for rights for 2011 122 123 The show was available directly on the colbernation com website for part of 2011 with Australian advertisements however Australian access is now blocked Several international markets also air The Colbert Report Global Edition which shows highlights from the previous week s shows and includes a special introduction by Stephen Colbert at the start of the program This means a new or newly repackaged episode can be screened every weekday In addition most recent episodes usually 3 weeks back would be available in full length on colbertnation com Some international audiences could not see such way By the end of the series s run the colbernation com website was integrated into Comedy Central s website As of 2021 almost seven years after the show ended many episodes are presented in individual clips there 124 Related multimedia EditThe show spawned various merchandise and multimedia related to the show Three books were released to accompany the show s humor the first being I Am America And So Can You released both in print and as an audiobook in 2007 In 2012 two spinoff books of the show were released America Again is a sequel to the show s first book and addresses topics including Wall Street campaign finance energy policy healthcare eating on the campaign trail and the United States Constitution 125 Another book I Am a Pole And So Can You was released the same year and purports to be a children s book telling the story of a fictional pole finding its purpose in life Segments from the show were also released on DVD during its run The Best of The Colbert Report released in 2007 contains several of the show s most memorable early moments 126 The show s Christmas special A Colbert Christmas The Greatest Gift of All was also released on DVD the following year 127 The soundtrack of that special also saw a digital release on the iTunes Store after its broadcast and contains music from Feist John Legend Willie Nelson Toby Keith Jon Stewart Elvis Costello and Colbert himself In 2011 Jack White s record label Third Man Records released a 7 vinyl single of Stephen Colbert and The Black Belles performing Charlene II I m Over You 128 which they also performed together on the show 129 See also EditList of late night American network TV programs CNNNN The Daily Show Tooning Out the News Newstopia Rick Mercer Report This Hour Has 22 Minutes The Beaverton Hot Seat Last Week Tonight with John Oliver Real Time with Bill Maher Inside Washington Washington WeekReferences Edit a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r McGrath Charles January 4 2012 How Many Stephen Colberts Are There The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2014 a b Kilkenny Katie March 29 2018 Dana Carvey Recalls Hiring Nobodies Steve Carell and Stephen Colbert on The Dana Carvey Show The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved November 3 2022 a b Ryan Patrick December 17 2014 Timeline Stephen Colbert files last Report USA TODAY Retrieved November 3 2022 Gross Terry January 20 2005 A Fake Newsman s Fake Newsman Stephen Colbert Fresh Air Retrieved July 4 2008 Plume Ken August 11 2003 An Interview with Stephen Colbert IGN Archived from the original on February 20 2009 Retrieved July 4 2008 Schneider Jacqueline May 6 2003 So What Do You Do Stephen Colbert Mediabistro com Retrieved July 4 2008 a b c d e f g h i j Mnookin Seth October 2007 The Man in the Irony Mask Vanity Fair Retrieved June 20 2014 a b c d e f Spitznagel Eric October 16 2012 Playboy Interview Stephen Colbert Playboy Archived from the original on June 28 2014 Retrieved June 20 2014 a b c Carter Bill April 10 2014 Colbert Will Host Late Show Playing Himself for a Change The New York Times Retrieved November 21 2014 Berman Eliza August 27 2015 What Didn t Make It Into TIME s Cover Story on Stephen Colbert Time Retrieved September 6 2015 a b Itzkoff Dave September 2 2015 Stephen Colbert the Late Night Hope The New York Times Retrieved September 6 2015 Stephen Colbert Named New Late Show Host Deadline Hollywood April 10 2014 Retrieved April 10 2014 Now Trending column SIGNING OFF item Globe and Mail Toronto October 31 2014 Retrieved October 31 2014 Carter Bill May 9 2014 A Successor to Colbert Is Named The New York Times p B1 Retrieved May 9 2014 Carter Bill November 20 2014 Late Success for Latecomer to Late Night The Nightly Show With Larry Wilmore Premieres Jan 19 The New York Times p C1 Retrieved November 22 2014 a b c d e f Sternbergh Adam October 16 2006 Stephen Colbert Has America by the Ballots New York ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved October 27 2007 a b Levin Gary October 13 2005 First Stewart now Colbert USA Today Retrieved September 2 2008 a b c d e f g h i j Sacks Mike January 25 2011 An Extended Interview with Former Colbert Report Head Writer Allison Silverman Splitsider Archived from the original on December 2 2014 Retrieved October 14 2014 a b c d e Kurtz Howard October 10 2005 TV s Newest Anchor A Smirk in Progress The Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved June 6 2014 a b c d e Steinberg Jaques October 12 2005 The News Is Funny as a Correspondent Gets His Own Show The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved June 5 2014 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Strauss Neil September 17 2009 The Subversive Joy of Stephen Colbert Rolling Stone No 1087 pp 56 61 110 ISSN 0035 791X Retrieved June 5 2014 a b c d e f McGlynn Katla November 11 2013 15 Things You Might Not Know About The Colbert Report The Huffington Post Retrieved June 21 2014 a b c d e Li Shirley November 8 2013 Stephen Colbert at the New York Comedy Festival Ten things we learned Entertainment Weekly Retrieved June 21 2014 Maglio Tony June 11 2014 The Secret Weapon Behind Daily Show Colbert Report and The Soup The Wrap Retrieved October 14 2014 a b Lawler Richard December 24 2009 The Daily Show and Colbert Report changing video capture tech for the switch to HDTV Engadget Retrieved October 14 2014 Brustein Joshua June 17 2014 The Colbert Report s TV Production Software Is No Joke Bloomberg Businessweek Bloomberg L P Retrieved October 14 2014 a b c Simon Clea November 21 2013 Waiting for the punchline In the audience at The Colbert Report The Boston Globe Retrieved June 21 2014 Levin Gary November 20 2014 Comedy Central sets date for Colbert replacement USA Today Retrieved December 18 2014 a b c d e f Tischler Linda November 2006 Telly Visionary Fast Company Retrieved September 2 2008 a b c Rabin Nathan January 25 2006 Stephen Colbert interview The A V Club The Onion Archived from the original on February 2 2006 Retrieved July 10 2006 Colbert Report celebrates first anniversary Today com Associated Press October 16 2006 Retrieved September 2 2008 Kutner Max December 19 2014 A Stephen Colbert Portrait Returns to the Smithsonian With Even More Stephens Retrieved September 6 2015 Stephen Colbert His SC connections through the years The State Columbia South Carolina April 12 2014 Retrieved August 21 2020 November 2006 Charleston s Sticky Fingers restaurant wins an auction to buy a portrait within a portrait of Colbert that was displayed on the set of his show You can still see the portrait at the restaurant on King Street Verb brands The Colbert Report Studio Daily October 28 2005 Retrieved September 2 2008 http www argn com 2009 05 stephen colbert speaks with jj abrams gets ideas JJ Abrams http www tv com shows the colbert report trivia season all 10 Farewellison DiCrescenzo Brent December 9 2009 Rick Nielsen of Cheap Trick Interview Time Out Retrieved June 5 2014 Nolan Ryan November 16 2006 Mock News Becomes Very Real Success Long Island Press Retrieved September 2 2008 Colbert Report to Get Best Of DVD The Oklahoman Associated Press July 30 2007 Retrieved May 21 2020 Silverman Allison December 17 2014 The Colbert Report s First Head Writer Remembers the Show s Early Days and the Correspondents Dinner Vulture Retrieved December 17 2014 Colbert Stephen December 7 2005 Bluster and Satire Stephen Colbert s Report Fresh Air Interview Interviewed by Terry Gross WHYY Retrieved September 2 2008 Metallica on The Colbert Report 09242013 Vimeo Retrieved January 31 2017 Rose Lisa October 26 2009 Stephen Colbert interview Speaking several decibels lower than expected Retrieved October 26 2009 Prof Evan Apfelbaum A blind pursuit of racial colorblindness Research has implications for how companies manage multicultural teams MIT Sloan Experts October 17 2011 Retrieved July 22 2012 Day Patrick Kevin February 19 2007 Bill O Reilly snarks on Stephen Colbert s new gig Los Angeles Times Retrieved April 16 2013 a b Papa Bear Is Just Lashing Out in Grief Bill O Reilly Mourns Stephen Colbert April 15 2014 Interview with Barney Frank Boston Globe November 10 2005 Retrieved July 29 2007 Sternbergh Adam October 16 2006 Stephen Colbert Has America By the Ballots New York Retrieved October 10 2006 Stephen Colbert Enters the No Spin Zone name Fox News January 19 2007 Archived from the original on September 17 2008 Retrieved September 2 2008 a b c d e The Real Colbert Will Triumph on Late Night The New Yorker April 11 2014 Retrieved November 21 2014 Gray Sarah December 11 2014 The fake biography of Stephen Colbert Salon Retrieved September 4 2015 Dowd Maureen November 16 2006 America s Anchors Rolling Stone Archived from the original on January 6 2007 Retrieved September 2 2008 Donovan Bryce April 29 2006 Great Charlestonian Or the Greatest Charlestonian The Charleston Post and Courier Archived from the original on June 2 2008 Retrieved September 2 2008 Peyser Marc February 16 2006 The Truthiness Teller Newsweek MSNBC Archived from the original on April 25 2006 Retrieved February 18 2006 Meyer Dick December 12 2006 The Truth of Truthiness CBS News Retrieved December 14 2006 Truthiness Voted 2005 Word of the Year by American Dialect Society PDF Retrieved June 4 2006 Merriam Webster s Words of the Year 2006 Merriam Webster Retrieved December 8 2006 Sheryl Gay Stolberg February 22 2006 Laugh and the Voters Laugh With You or at Least at You The New York Times Retrieved November 21 2014 Stephen Colbert Jack White team up to release new single Charlene II I m Over You New York Daily News June 24 2011 Retrieved September 6 2015 Guess Who s Coming to Dinner NPR May 5 2006 Archived from the original on January 30 2012 Retrieved June 3 2006 Bedard Paul May 1 2006 Skewering comedy skit angers Bush and aides U S News amp World Report Archived from the original on October 26 2012 Retrieved July 27 2012 Sandoval Greg May 3 2006 Video of Presidential roast attracts big Web audience CNET Retrieved May 8 2006 Rich Frank November 5 2006 Throw the Truthiness Bums Out The New York Times Retrieved November 22 2006 Wu Annie October 12 2006 Stephen Colbert s green screen challenge has a winner Retrieved September 2 2008 Maher Dave November 30 2006 Video Stephen Colbert Vs The Decemberists Pitchfork Media Archived from the original on October 24 2007 Retrieved June 28 2007 Czajkowski Elise November 8 2013 Behind the Scenes of The Colbert Report with Colbert and His Writers National Public Radio Archived from the original on December 14 2014 Retrieved October 14 2014 Freydkin Donna March 6 2007 As AmeriCone as ice cream USA Today Retrieved March 6 2007 Ben amp Jerry s names new flavor for Colbert Today com Associated Press February 15 2007 Retrieved March 4 2007 The Truth Behind Stephen Colbert s Broken Wrist Injury on the set of The Colbert Report July 26 2007 Retrieved November 8 2012 Daily Show to return in January BBC December 21 2007 Retrieved September 2 2008 Andy Dehnart January 16 2008 Colbert Stewart make do without writers Today com Retrieved December 19 2014 Slayton David February 6 2008 Who Created Huckabee Conan Stewart and Colbert Fight it Out Fox News Archived from the original on March 18 2008 Retrieved March 23 2008 Gumbrecht Jamie July 23 2008 Colbert s crappy Canton comment puzzles mayor The Atlanta Journal Constitution Schenectady to Colbert Drop in February 3 2010 Retrieved May 21 2020 Then there was Canton S D North Dakota s dirty ash tray Stader Megan July 31 2008 Canton Reacts to Colbert Comments Wichita Kansas KWCH TV permanent dead link Jaffe Matthew September 24 2010 Stephen Colbert Takes On Congress Sarcastically Argues for Farm Workers ABC News Retrieved December 10 2014 Stephen Colbert isn t really running for president CBS News January 13 2012 Retrieved November 21 2014 Blake Meredith September 13 2013 Stephen Colbert s most awkward interview ever Los Angeles Times Retrieved December 25 2015 Somanader Tanya December 9 2014 President Obama Takes Over the Colbert Report whitehouse gov via National Archives Obama steals the show on The Colbert Report CBS News December 9 2014 The list of celebrities in the Colbert Report musical finale is mind blowing Mashable December 19 2014 a b Brownfield Paul October 21 2005 It s all the news that s fit to mock Los Angeles Times Retrieved October 18 2014 Ryan Maureen October 19 2005 Colbert Report is full of hot air and that s point Chicago Tribune Retrieved October 18 2014 McFarland Melanie October 26 2005 Colbert country You ll love it or leave it Seattle Post Intelligencer Retrieved October 18 2014 Cruz Gilbert November 4 2005 The Colbert Report Review Entertainment Weekly No 848 p 67 Havrilesky Heather October 18 2005 All spin zone Salon Retrieved October 18 2014 Barry Garron October 19 2005 Bringing Out the Absurdity of the News The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on May 27 2007 Retrieved 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Weaponized Hashtag The Wall Street Journal Retrieved June 20 2014 Montopoli Brian October 30 2010 Jon Stewart Rally Attracts Estimated 215 000 CBS News Kaplan Jonathan E March 14 2007 Emanuel tells freshmen to avoid Stephen Colbert The Hill Retrieved April 11 2014 Spider to be named for Stephen Colbert Celebrities Today com Retrieved August 10 2009 James H Fowler July 2008 The Colbert Bump in Campaign Donations More Truthful than Truthy PDF PS Political Science amp Politics 41 3 533 539 doi 10 1017 s1049096508080712 S2CID 153952070 Should Vanity Fair Put Stephen Colbert on the Cover VF Daily Vanity Fair Archived June 15 2011 at archive today Stephen Colbert s Super PAC Satire Lands Him a Peabody NewsFeed TIME com Newsfeed time com April 5 2012 Retrieved October 5 2012 Wood Sam June 2 2014 Penn study Colbert s civics lesson not just a proliferation of jokes The Philadelphia Inquirer Hardy Bruce W Gottfried Jeffrey A Winneg Kenneth M Jamieson Kathleen Hall 2014 Stephen Colbert s Civics Lesson How Colbert Super PAC Taught Viewers About Campaign Finance Mass Communication and Society 17 3 329 353 doi 10 1080 15205436 2014 891138 S2CID 144765494 The Colbert Report Is Coming To M3 M3 Retrieved September 19 2014 FX UK drops The Colbert Report Late Show UK May 2 2009 Retrieved May 6 2009 Showcomedy welcomes The Colbert Report exclusively on Showcomedy Arabian Business May 27 2008 Retrieved May 27 2008 Colbert coming to ABC2 TV Tonight Retrieved on July 21 2013 ABC2 Farewells Colbert White Noise Blogs crikey com au January 6 2011 Retrieved on July 21 2013 The Colbert Report Season 1 Episodes News Videos and Cast Comedy Central Retrieved December 6 2021 Glueck Katie Stephen Colbert looks at U S A in new book Politico Retrieved September 6 2015 McCutcheon David October 2 2007 Colbert Report s DVD Threatdown IGN uk Retrieved September 2 2008 Lambert David August 11 2008 The Colbert Report The Greatest Gift of All Comes to DVD with A Colbert Christmas tvshowsondvd com Archived from the original on August 14 2008 Retrieved August 11 2008 Third Man Records online store Archived June 24 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved June 25 2011 Stephen Colbert Debuts Charlene II Rolling Stone June 24 2011 Retrieved December 6 2021 External links EditThe Colbert Report at Wikipedia s sister projects Media from Commons Quotations from Wikiquote Data from Wikidata Look up wikiality or truthiness in Wiktionary the free dictionary The Colbert Report Web site The Colbert Report at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The Colbert Report amp oldid 1129874976, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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