Stephen Colbert Shares His Biggest Lesson From 2025 After âThe Late Showâ Was Axed
- - Stephen Colbert Shares His Biggest Lesson From 2025 After âThe Late Showâ Was Axed
Erin DoyleJanuary 2, 2026 at 2:10 AM
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(Photo by Trae Patton/NBC via Getty Images)
Stephen Colbert had a huge 2025 â and heâs got one big lesson to share after getting through it.
While speaking to Andy Cohen, 57, and Anderson Cooper, 58, during their New Yearâs Eve coverage on CNN, Colbert was asked to reflect on the past 12 months.
âSo much has happened in the last year of your life, Iâm curious what you left last year, having learned? What was the major lesson that you learned?â Cohen asked.
In response, The Late Show with Stephen Colbert host, 61, quipped, âWhat did I learn? Donât trust billionaires!â
Why Is Stephen Colbertâs âThe Late Showâ Ending? Show Cancellation Explained
Colbert teamed up with The Traitors host Alan Cumming in April 2025 to perform a parody song âBillionaires Are Actually Goodâ on an episode of The Late Show.
âAll these billionaires are having an outsized impact on our politics these days,â Colbert said on the show while introducing the song. He added, âSo you know your government understands what youâre going through, folks. They have to buy eggs too. FabergĂ© eggs. But still.â
The late-night host then questioned, âWhy do they also need political power and rocket launches and everyone to see them in magazines looking all jacked-up and horny?â
Colbert went on to suggest the wealthy were trying to fill an âemotional voidâ and that the existence of the song could help. The songâs lyric openly mocked the super-richâs interests.
âSome people say we should eat the rich/ I donât blame them, they look delish,â the pair sang. âShut up buy their self-driving cars/ And if youâre lucky youâll be their slave on Mars.â
Two months later, Colbert announced that CBS had axed The Late Show, with the final episode wrapping after the 2025/2026 season after a decade on air.
Stephen Colbert. (Photo by Michael Buckner/Variety via Getty Images)
âBefore we start the show I want to let you know something that I found out just last night. Next year will be our last season, the network [CBS] will be ending The Late Show in May,â Colbert said before the taping of the July 17 episode of the show.
As the audience booed, he continued: âI share your feelings. Itâs not just the end of our show but itâs the end of The Late Show on CBS. Iâm not being replaced. This is all just going away. I do want to say that the folks at CBS have been great partners ⊠And Iâm grateful to the audience, you, who have joined us every night, in here, out there, and all around the world.â
Co-CEO of Paramount Global and President and Chief Executive Officer of CBS George Cheeks, President of CBS Entertainment Amy Reisenbach and President of CBS Studios David Staph addressed the cancellations in a statement at the time.
âThe Late Show with Stephen Colbert will end its historic run in May 2026 at the end of the broadcast season. We consider Stephen Colbert irreplaceable and will retire The Late Show franchise at that time,â the statement read. âWe are proud that Stephen called CBS home. He and the broadcast will be remembered in the pantheon of greats that graced late night television.â
When Will Stephen Colbertâs âThe Late Showâ Air Final Episode After Controversial Cancellation?
Colbert spoke further about the end of his Late Show stint during an interview with GQ magazine in November 2025.
âListen, every showâs got to end at some time,â Colbert told GQ. âAnd Iâve been on a bunch of shows that have ended sometimes by our lights and sometimes by the decision of other people. And thatâs just the nature of show business. You canât worry about that. You got to be a big boy about that. But I think weâre the first number one show to ever get canceled.â
That being said, Colbert admitted that he loved doing the show but will also feel a âsense of reliefâ that itâs ending.
âI love what we do and I love the grind,â he said. âYou can only do one of these shows, do the jokes every night, year after year for 20 years, if you give a damn at all about what youâre talking about. And I do. But there is a sense of relief that I might not have to put on the snorkel and get into the sewer every day.â
Source: âAOL Entertainmentâ