Tonight, Stephen Colbert’s run on The Late Show comes to an end, and that is why “Colbert” and “The Late Show” are trending across X in the U.S.
For a lot of viewers, this is not just another TV finale. Colbert has been behind the CBS late-night desk for 11 seasons, and his show became one of the most visible places where comedy, politics, celebrity interviews, and national anxiety all collided. His final episode marks the end of his version of The Late Show, but also the end of CBS’s 33-year Late Show franchise, which began with David Letterman.
The official explanation from CBS was economic. Late-night television is expensive, audiences are fragmented, and clips now travel faster on YouTube, TikTok, and X than they do through traditional TV schedules. But the conversation online is more complicated than that. Colbert was still a ratings leader, and many fans believe politics played a role, especially because he was such a sharp critic of Donald Trump and had recently criticized Paramount, CBS’s parent company.
That uncertainty is what gives the story its emotional charge. People are not only saying goodbye to a host. They are arguing over what his exit says about television, corporate pressure, political satire, and whether old-school late night still has a future.
The final week has leaned into the farewell energy, with major guests including Jon Stewart, Steven Spielberg, David Byrne, and Bruce Springsteen. That lineup tells you how much cultural weight Colbert still carries. Even people who do not watch every night understand that this is a real TV moment.
The bigger story is that late night is changing fast. The format that once helped define American pop culture now has to compete with podcasts, streamers, social feeds, and short-form clips. Colbert’s exit feels like a closing chapter for network TV’s version of the national conversation.
So why is it trending? Because viewers are watching a familiar institution disappear in real time, and they are trying to decide whether this is just the end of one show, or the end of an era.
