Conan O’Brien Defends Stephen Colbert as CBS Faces Firestorm Over Trump Settlement and ‘Late Show’ Cancellation

(L-R) Conan O'Brien; Stephen Colbert

Late-night television is once again at the center of a cultural earthquake — and this time, it’s not just about ratings. With CBS announcing that The Late Show with Stephen Colbert will end in May 2026, the fallout has been nothing short of explosive. Between whispers of backroom deals, a multimillion-dollar settlement with Donald Trump, and speculation about the future of television itself, the story is spiraling far beyond entertainment.

And in the middle of this storm stands Conan O’Brien.


Conan’s Hall of Fame Moment

On Saturday night, O’Brien — the flame-haired comic genius who redefined late-night over three decades — was inducted into the Television Academy Hall of Fame. Instead of basking in his own career accolades, the 5x Emmy winner turned his spotlight toward Colbert.

“Stephen Colbert is too talented and too essential to go anywhere,” O’Brien declared to thunderous applause. “Yes, late-night television as we’ve known it since the 1950s may disappear. But those voices? They’re not going anywhere.”

It was both a tribute and a warning: networks may walk away from their stars, but the talent — and the audience — will follow them elsewhere.


Paramount’s $16 Million Trump Problem

Conan O'Brien Says Late Night TV is Dying, But Stephen Colbert Is 'Too  Talented and Too Essential to Go Away' : r/entertainment

The cancellation of The Late Show might have been framed by CBS as a financial decision, but the timing has fueled conspiracy theories. Paramount, CBS’s parent company, recently agreed to a $16 million settlement with Donald Trump, a deal now being scrutinized by lawmakers as potential hush money or bribery.

That settlement came on the heels of Colbert’s relentless monologues mocking the former president — and almost immediately before the announcement that his show was being axed. Trump, never one to miss a victory lap, publicly celebrated the cancellation, telling supporters Colbert had “finally been silenced.”

Coincidence? Critics aren’t so sure.


CBS on the Defensive

George Cheeks, CBS’s Chair of TV Media, tried to pour water on the fire, insisting that economics — not politics — doomed The Late Show.

“The economics made it a challenge for us to keep going,” Cheeks explained. “The costs of producing late-night no longer match the revenue streams.”

Jeff Shell, now Paramount president under its controversial Skydance acquisition, echoed the sentiment. “Late-night has a huge problem right now,” he said flatly. “You just can’t make it work economically anymore.”

But if that’s true, why Colbert? His show wasn’t just another late-night entry. It was the number one network talk show, consistently drawing millions of viewers and dominating his competitors.


A Scorched-Earth Colbert

If CBS expected Colbert to quietly accept his fate, they badly miscalculated. As he signed off for summer hiatus, he turned his monologue into a scorched-earth farewell tour.

“Netflix, call me — I’m available in June,” Colbert joked, drawing roars of laughter. “Amazon, I’ll entertain offers. Hulu, don’t be shy.”

The subtext was unmistakable: he won’t be unemployed for long, and CBS may regret letting him walk away. Insiders speculate that Colbert could spark a bidding war among streamers eager to harness his razor-sharp satire and loyal fan base.


The Bigger Picture: The End of Late-Night?

O’Brien’s remarks highlight what many in the industry already fear: late-night television, as Americans have known it for 70 years, is on life support. Viewers have shifted to streaming and social media. Viral clips matter more than Nielsen ratings. And traditional advertisers are reluctant to bankroll political comedy in a polarized era.

But as O’Brien argued, the genre’s voices are too valuable to disappear. They’ll simply migrate — to Netflix, YouTube, or platforms that haven’t yet been invented. The question isn’t whether Colbert will return, but where.


Trump in the Spotlight

Meanwhile, the shadow of Trump looms over everything. For years, Colbert made the former president the centerpiece of his nightly takedowns. His jokes became cultural events, drawing both praise and fury. To see Trump celebrate the show’s demise only reinforces the suspicion that politics — not “economics” — pushed CBS to pull the plug.

“Stephen Colbert mocked me night after night,” Trump crowed at a rally. “Well, look who’s laughing now.”

But if Trump thinks he’s silenced Colbert, he may be in for a rude awakening.


Fans Refuse to Let Go

Online, fans are rallying around Colbert with hashtags like #ColbertUncanceled and #FollowColbert trending daily. Many vow to follow him wherever he goes. One viral post read:

“CBS thinks they can shut him down? Wrong. We’ll watch him on Netflix, YouTube, even TikTok. Colbert is bigger than CBS.”

The groundswell suggests that Colbert’s exit could become a cultural flashpoint, much like when David Letterman left NBC in the 1990s — only with far higher stakes in today’s hyper-political climate.


What Happens Next?

With nearly two years before Colbert’s official departure, CBS faces a long, messy goodbye. Every episode will now be dissected for clues, every joke interpreted as a coded jab at his soon-to-be-former bosses. Meanwhile, rival networks and streaming giants are circling, waiting to pounce.

As Conan O’Brien made clear, the networks may abandon late-night, but its stars will not vanish. “People like Stephen Colbert are too essential,” he said.

And perhaps that’s the ultimate irony: CBS may have canceled The Late Show, but in doing so, they may have unleashed something far more powerful.

Colbert isn’t disappearing. He’s just getting started.