Discussion about this post

User's avatar
Cernunnos's avatar

Another reason it's hard for modern comedians to attain the dizzying heights of glorious silliness reached by Late Night with Conan or its Letterman predecessor is because with the passage of time we remember the memorable bits and forget the rest. Those shows cranked out a ton of comedy five nights a week for years, and while we can credit the wild anarchic glee of its creators for the stuff that hit, we should also credit the sheer desperation of constant deadline pressure. And the show-biz rule, best exemplified by punk rock, that if "unpolished" is the best you can manage on the production schedule and budget you have, present it as a stylistic choice.

Stephen Colbert's in-character performance at the 2006 Correspondent's Dinner was a thing of beauty, because it was at a time and place where it felt like comedians were the only people who could get away with criticizing the Bush administration. It was a brave move and a logical extension of Colbert's clueless conservative persona. But after it got a great response, subsequent attempts to capitalize on the "court jester who is the only one allowed to speak truth to power" persona didn't feel so risky anymore.

Eventually the schtick ossified into the rote clapter-farming affair it is today.

Expand full comment
Christopher Gosz's avatar

Craig Ferguson left the “silly and fun” lane wide open and it’s been empty ever since.

Expand full comment
18 more comments...

No posts