Colbert Declares “Gloves Off” — Vows to Expose CBS After Late Show Cancellation

Stephen Colbert stunned audiences this week with a bold declaration: in the wake of CBS announcing The Late Show cancellation for May 2026, he says he will now “speak unvarnished truth” about the network, revealing years of what he describes as “suppressed frustrations and injustice.” Industry insiders view this as an act of defiance—Colbert’s attempt to retaliate against a network that quietly pulled the plug on his beloved show.

In his first broadcast since the cancellation news broke on July 17, Colbert kicked off with a biting monologue:

“I’m going to go ahead and say it… The gloves are off! I can finally speak unvarnished truth to power and say what I really think about CBS.”

Hình ảnh do meta.ai tạo từ câu lệnh Colbert Declares “Gloves Off” —

He delivered pointed criticism of CBS and its parent company, Paramount Global, questioning their claim that the decision was purely financial despite The Late Show being the network’s number-one-rated program. Colbert challenged the assertion by dissecting internally leaked figures—suggesting some costs attributed to the show were actually linked to a $16 million Trump-related settlement

The cancellation followed shortly after Colbert publicly denounced Paramount’s settlement with Donald Trump, calling it a “big, fat bribe.” The settlement came amid Paramount’s efforts to finalize an $8 billion merger with Skydance—one requiring regulatory approval from Trump-appointed FCC leaders.

Colbert’s scathing retorts included a stream of “pee jokes”—mocking the new Paramount ticker symbol “PSKY”—and sarcastic references implying content suppression by corporate leadership. Sources say his rhetoric triggered an emergency executive meeting at CBS, concerned that Colbert was ramping up defiance and pressuring them to fire him prematurely

Meanwhile, political figures and fellow creators have amplified the controversy. The Writers Guild of America and Senators Elizabeth Warren and Adam Schiff have demanded a probe into whether the cancellation was politically motivated, citing the timing—three days after Colbert’s criticism of the Trump settlement—as suspicious . Demonstrators even gathered outside the Ed Sullivan Theater and Paramount headquarters, carrying petitions with over 250,000 signatures calling for CBS to reverse its decision .

Colbert’s peers in late night responded in kind, publicly backing him in support rather than protest. Jon Stewart called the cancellation emblematic of “fear and pre‑compliance,” warning that executives were sacrificing creative independence to appease political forces . Other established figures—like Jimmy Kimmel, Seth Meyers, Jimmy Fallon, and John Oliver—have voiced admiration, solidarity, and outrage at CBS’s decision .

With his last season now a platform for unfiltered critique, Colbert appears determined to turn his final months on air into a staged resistance. As one media analyst observed: “Colbert is daring CBS to cancel him early—to confirm what he implies: that this isn’t about finances, it’s about control and censorship.”

Whether his bold tactics will yield revelations, or lead to an early termination remains an open question. For now, the stakes have never been higher—and viewers will be watching closely.

Further reading on Colbert’s exit and backlash