The Stephen Colbert last show CBS viewers watched in May 2025 was not a finale in the traditional sense. There were no parting shots, no score-settling, no mention of Trump. Just a man who loved his job, loved his audience, and chose to go out with something close to grace.
If you’ve ever wondered whether it’s possible to be genuinely funny and genuinely good at the same time, Colbert was the answer. And CBS cancelled him anyway.
Stephen Colbert Last Show CBS: Taking the High Road
On the final episode, Colbert mentioned none of it. No grievances. No list of things CBS got wrong. No digs at the network or anyone who pushed him out.
He went artistic. He went funny. He leaned into the absurdity of saying goodbye and made it genuinely fun to watch. His guest was Paul McCartney. He closed the show by singing “Hello, Goodbye” by The Beatles with McCartney right there on stage. You say goodbye, and I say hello.
It was perfect. Not in a packaged, produced way. In the way of a man who understood what the moment called for and chose to meet it with something better than anger.
Who Stephen Colbert Is, Beyond the Desk
Most people know the comedian. Fewer know the backstory that shaped him.
Stephen Colbert grew up in Charleston, South Carolina, the youngest of eleven children. When he was ten years old, his father and two of his brothers died in a plane crash in 1974. He has talked about that loss many times over the years, and what’s remarkable is how he talks about it. Not with bitterness. With something more like gratitude. He once told Anderson Cooper on CNN that the grief taught him to love what he had, because nothing was guaranteed.
He’s a practicing Catholic. Not the bumper-sticker kind. He taught Sunday school for years in New Jersey. He has quoted Tolkien in the same breath as scripture. He once said he had come to believe that sorrow was a gift, because it opened up a space in you that joy could then fill. That is not a comedian talking. That is somebody who has actually thought about how to live.
The Colbert Report, the Farmworkers, and Testifying Before Congress
Before The Late Show, Colbert spent nine years at Comedy Central hosting The Colbert Report, a sharp political satire where he played a right-wing blowhard loosely modeled on Fox News pundits. The show ran from 2005 to 2014 and became one of the most culturally significant things on television during the Bush and Obama years.
In 2010, he did something no one expected. He spent a day picking vegetables alongside migrant farmworkers in upstate New York as part of a United Farm Workers campaign called Take Our Jobs, which challenged unemployed Americans to apply for agricultural positions that immigrants typically filled. Then he testified before the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Immigration, partly in character, partly not. He talked about what it felt like to spend hours bent over in the sun doing work most Americans would never do. He ended his testimony by stepping briefly out of the bit to say, simply, that the issue mattered to him because Christ said whatever you do to the least of my brothers, you do to me. The room went quiet.
That moment is worth watching if you’ve never seen it. It was covered around the world at the time, and it still holds up.
How He Got Through the Hard Years With Us
When The Late Show with Stephen Colbert launched in September 2015, he inherited David Letterman’s chair and the weight of an institution. The first year was rocky. CBS pushed him toward softer content. Ratings lagged. Pundits wrote him off.
Then 2016 happened, and something shifted.
Colbert found his footing by being honest about what he was watching, what he felt about it, and what he thought was at stake. Night after night during the Trump years, he walked out on that stage and said the thing that a lot of people at home were thinking but couldn’t quite say. He did it with jokes. He also did it with real emotion, and sometimes the emotion showed through the jokes in ways that felt unexpectedly moving. He cried on air. He prayed on air, in his way. He showed you his wife. He showed you his grief.
That kind of voice is rare. In America, we have a habit of silencing it. We do it with media consolidation, with cost-cutting, with the logic that what gets cancelled is what didn’t perform well enough. What actually gets cancelled is joy. Love. God.
CBS Cancelled: What the Stephen Colbert Last Show CBS Finale Really Meant
The Stephen Colbert last show CBS aired was the end of something that cannot be easily replaced. CBS made the decision to end The Late Show in a cost-cutting move, part of broader layoffs at Paramount Global. The announcement came in early 2025.
What CBS removed when they cancelled that show was not just a time slot. They removed one of the few people on television who talked about faith without being preachy, who talked about politics without being cruel, and who showed up every night as something close to a full human being.
He got us through a lot. The pandemic. The election. The grief of watching institutions fail that were supposed to hold things together. He did it with jokes, yes, but underneath the jokes there was something real. A man who had lost people young. Who believed in something. Who loved his wife enough to talk about her. Who loved his audience enough to be honest with them.
Think about what that means in the context of who we are now. As we explored in our piece on faith, humanity, and what we’re reaching for, the voices that remind us we are more than what the worst moment asks us to be are the ones we need most, and the ones we seem least willing to protect.
The man was a joker. He was also a good Catholic, a devoted husband, a grieving son, and a genuine patriot. He was the example. We just didn’t notice until he was gone.
