Colbert had a very Report moment last night with his Myers-Briggs interview.
Colbert had a very Report moment last night with his Myers-Briggs interview.
I think that's something he'll be able to evolve from as time goes on, at least he should be able to with this show. But at the same time, there are certain aspects of the Report character that is Colbert and probably won't be apparent to most viewers.
When the hell's John Oliver come back on, I thought it was September?
I think he was taking two weeks off (with this being the second).
Wot? He had an episode on sunday.
Also, PewDiePie is coming on colbert tomorrow.
Finally saw the first Daily Show with Noah and it was very good! He seemed pretty comfortable in the first two blocs. The Kevin Hart interview was a little awkward but I think that's probably the hardest part for someone who's never hosted a show before. Anyway I'm optimistic he'll be a fine replacement for Stewart.
When Noah was on Colbert he talked about how he used to host a show in South Africa
Fair enough, maybe it was just opening night jitters then. But he still seemed quite nervous.
Plus I imagine his other show was nowhere quite as big. He said they didn't have the budget to pay for pics or videos so he would have to draw or describe anything he talked about lol
Nope.
Who or what is a PewDiePie
Wait, nope, don't wanna know
Well he's definitely playing a character again. It may be slightly different without inherent right-wing bias, but it's a character all the same. Same mannerisms, jokes, tropes and such.
Or thats just his sense of humor lol. This is how Stephen Colbert makes people laugh, and whether he's pretending to be extreme right wing or just being himself, this is what he thinks is funny.
I don't think its really fair to expect him to change his comedic style just because he dropped the character. He no longer pretends to hold crazy conservative views and thats really all thats gonna be gone. His style and delivery is still gonna be similar if not the same.
I wholeheartedly disagree.
For the first couple of weeks, he started to distance himself from that line of comedy. He went for a more intelligent, thoughtful and analytical approach -- channeling Jon Stewart's style to a very large degree. It seemed like this would be closer to The Daily Show than The Cobert Report, and it was the perfect blend of old-style late-night with the Comedy Central spin. There were many things about the show that needed a little tweaking but that was not one of them. It was grand and thought-provoking, and it was the perfect tribute to Letterman's legacy as an insightful and cunning host, comedian and interviewer.
The reversion into the (modified) character is just cheap laughs. And that's not nearly as entertaining.
Colbert himself summed up the differences between him and Stewart as
Even without the political bias, the "falsely constructing the news" approach does not have the same legs and will not be as successful long term. It will very likely be successful, but it will not have the same impact.“Jon [Stewart] deconstructs the news, I falsely construct the news,” explained Stephen Colbert at the New Yorker Festival.
On phone so can't post more: http://www.polygon.com/2015/10/5/945...bert-late-show
I think the writers and him are definitely going back and forth on how to write his jokes. They've been for 5+ years doing jokes as the "knowledgeable idiot" character so it comes easy to them. They definitely revert back to it as part of their comfort zone during weaker sketches.
But to a degree it is also Colbert's personality/humor. I think the jokes he makes about "playing a character his entire life" and the "Who is me" segment have some profound truths that both Stephen and the writers are trying to figure out. It'll take some time before the balance is perfect, and we'll see some back and forth on him being "himself" or the likeable idiot, or the mix of both.