When Is Stephen Colbert’s Final Show? Date, Time, and What to Know About His Last Late Night Show
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For years, Stephen Colbert turned the Ed Sullivan Theater into America’s nightly group chat, equal parts political roast, theater-kid chaos, and Catholic guilt wrapped inside a perfectly tailored suit. Now the cue cards are running out, the band is packing up, and CBS is dimming the lights on one of late night television’s defining eras. The final episode of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert airs on May 21, and suddenly the entire late night ecosystem feels like the last scene of Avengers: Endgame for people who still remember monologue jokes about Newt Gingrich.
Yet when Colbert’s farewell week arrived, the late night world closed ranks like an old comedy writers’ room after midnight pizza.
How to catch Stephen Colbert’s final late show
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The final episode of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert airs Thursday, May 21, at 11:35 p.m. ET/PT on CBS. Paramount+ Premium subscribers can stream the show live, while Paramount+ Essential subscribers can watch the episode the following day. Fans tuning in for the last ride can expect a farewell lineup that feels more like a late night hall of fame reunion. Jon Stewart and Steven Spielberg are set to appear, while David Byrne and Bruce Springsteen will handle the musical side of the goodbye.
The final week has already played like a love letter to the format itself. Jimmy Kimmel, Jimmy Fallon, Seth Meyers, and John Oliver all stopped by earlier this month, turning the Strike Force Five gang reunion into a strangely wholesome crossover episode. Oliver even used his own show to urge viewers to enjoy Colbert’s final broadcasts, calling him “the f****** best” in a sendoff that sounded like a man realizing the last good booth at the diner is closing forever.
And just when it seemed every modern late night host had paid tribute, the original king of the desk walked back into the picture.
David Letterman says ending The Late Show is “A huge mistake”
David Letterman, the man who built The Late Show into a television institution in 1993, did not hide his disappointment over CBS ending the franchise. Speaking with TODAY ahead of the finale, Letterman called the decision “a huge mistake” and argued that late night television still serves an important cultural purpose. His comments carried the weary wisdom of somebody who survived network wars, NBC betrayals, and decades of executives pretending they understood comedy because they once laughed at a golf outing.
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Letterman reflected on the old ritual of Americans reading the newspaper in the morning and then turning to Johnny Carson at night for perspective. Whether audiences agreed with Carson or not, Letterman argued, there was comfort in hearing somebody process the madness with humor. That tradition continued with Colbert, particularly during election years, strikes, scandals, and the kind of news cycles that made his writers probably age in dog years.
Stephen Colbert’s final signoff marks more than the end of a CBS program. It feels like the closing chapter of an entire generation of appointment television, when audiences still gathered nightly to laugh at the absurdity of the world together.
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What are your thoughts on The Late Show With Stephen Colbert ending? Share your favorite Colbert moment in the comments.
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Edited By: Hriddhi Maitra
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