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LSSC: Season Seven Episode Talk


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I cannot stand the spiel he does before “Meanwhile,” pointing at his monologue location, talking about curating the material, talking about the bits he left out, etc.  Tonight, Tuesday, I think the ramblings leading up to “Meanwhile” was longer than the material that followed.  I’ve started muting, but that also is interminable.  

Edited by freddi
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I found the Peter Jackson interview painful to watch. Stephen was so excited and such a fanboy, and I think Jackson is amazing as a movie maker, but I don't want to listen to him ever again. He's just not articulate or focussed enough for me. Too bad, but I hope to see the Beatles series eventually. I don't have Disney+ and don't know if I ever will. 

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2 hours ago, Annber03 said:

I like those opening bits before "Meanwhile" just 'cause I get a kick out of seeing how absurd and out there they get :p. I just keep wondering how he manages to rattle all of that off without tripping over the words much of the time. 

Do they do a Stefon SNL type thing here where he doesn't see it beforehand, and the writers try to make it as convoluted as possible?

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Is it just me or has Mr. Colbert become more openly crass in recent months? It used to be that he'd hint, do an eyeroll or maybe make a double entendre instead of going for the more blatantly tasteless options re monologues (and interviews) . I still like him overall but it's getting more and more difficult to see this happen. Wasn't one Letterman   quite enough?

 If I had the chance to talk to him I'd say to him:

Mr. Colbert, you're smarter than to have to resort to this and you're better than this! 

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8 hours ago, Blergh said:

Is it just me or has Mr. Colbert become more openly crass in recent months? It used to be that he'd hint, do an eyeroll or maybe make a double entendre instead of going for the more blatantly tasteless options re monologues (and interviews) . I still like him overall but it's getting more and more difficult to see this happen. Wasn't one Letterman   quite enough?

 If I had the chance to talk to him I'd say to him:

Mr. Colbert, you're smarter than to have to resort to this and you're better than this! 

I've observed this too, but I guess he has always been no-holds-barred in his monologues, it's just that you and I and others like it when Colbert directs his verbal barbs at those who we see as threats to life on earth rather than taking on tweenage boyish sex and potty humor.

Watching the interview right now with Javier Bardem re his role as Desi Arnaz. 
Bardem is such a wonderful interviewee that I can almost overlook his wardrobe faux pas, heh.

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This conversation with Dr. Agus is the most optimistic, hopeful conversation I've heard about this pandemic in I don't know how long. It's so exciting to hear about all these new treatments and efforts that will help add to our efforts to combat this virus, and which will help people who really need it, like the immunosuppressed. Bless all the medical scientists and experts who've been working so hard to make these treatments possible and who've done so much to help keep people healthy and safe. Science is truly remarkable. 

Also, hey, Stephen and I are Moderna twins :p!

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Oh, I wish Stephen would stop mentioning that the fake Friday audience is "there" on "Friday".  If he did not mention "Friday audiences" five or six times in the opening sentences, I would not be as focused on the idea that they are not there on Friday.  Really, I don't mind that they tape in advance, just don't need to keep getting hit on the head with it.  

Last night (12-11, Friday) they were not even trying very hard to patch together the segments taped with previous guests over several days.  Jon Baptiste's clothing initially was the same as Thursday (hard to forget the elaborate formal ensemble) for the monologue, then later he was in the outfit I assume he wore on the evening that Sting originally had appeared.  

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I know the Colbert Questionnaire is a 'thing' now, but they should consider switching up some of the questions. It was obvious Sting knew what was coming and had thought out his answers in advance. I liked it better when it was off the cuff.

And that "what number am I thinking of" question, has anyone ever managed to make anything funny out of that? Not that I can remember. It's a pointless waste of a question, and the first one that should go. 

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2 hours ago, DXD526 said:

And that "what number am I thinking of" question, has anyone ever managed to make anything funny out of that?

The closest I can think of is Jeff Goldblum saying a big, very specific number and then immediately saying something like, “It’s amazing, I was right!” And clowning about it for so long that Stephen didn’t even get to say, “No.” That’s about the only thing you can do with that, and it’s now been done.

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6 hours ago, DXD526 said:

I know the Colbert Questionnaire is a 'thing' now, but they should consider switching up some of the questions. It was obvious Sting knew what was coming and had thought out his answers in advance. I liked it better when it was off the cuff.

And that "what number am I thinking of" question, has anyone ever managed to make anything funny out of that? Not that I can remember. It's a pointless waste of a question, and the first one that should go. 

Definitely. The first couple times over the pandemic the question thing was cute, but now it's just scripted. (That said, Sting is freaking cool. He has aged amazingly well; it warms my Gen X heart.)

A further gripe: more than I think anything else on this show, I DESPISE the animated intros to the subsections of bits. Not the animation itself, but the dumbass, accents-muddled-beyond-recognition, worse-than-a-dad-joke lines they have the fucking horse or cargo ship or cow or whatever it is utter. (Or should I say "udder"? HAHAHAAHAHA the height of comedy!!) Leave in the animation if it's a necessary time-waster (as Colbert admitted) but please do away with the speaking parts. Horrible.

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6 hours ago, DXD526 said:

I know the Colbert Questionnaire is a 'thing' now, but they should consider switching up some of the questions. It was obvious Sting knew what was coming and had thought out his answers in advance. I liked it better when it was off the cuff.

I interpreted Sting's obvious preparation for the questions as a sort of drawing away the curtain to reveal the little man behind the Great and Mighty Oz (Wizard of Oz film reference). 
Meaning: They've probably all had the questions in advance, and any seeming "off the cuff" responses were just acting
——except, perhaps, for some who might have chosen to not prepare.
And now I wonder if they are given the questions with a note telling them to feel free to prepare or not.

6 hours ago, DXD526 said:

And that "what number am I thinking of" question, has anyone ever managed to make anything funny out of that?

3 hours ago, ahisma said:

The closest I can think of is Jeff Goldblum saying a big, very specific number and then immediately saying something like, “It’s amazing, I was right!” And clowning about it for so long that Stephen didn’t even get to say, “No.” That’s about the only thing you can do with that, and it’s now been done.

Jeff Goldblum has a hyperactive imagination, so I would bet he did a fair amount of ad-libbing in addition to any prep
——but there are a few others like him who might come up with something truly creative for that seemingly mundane question of "what number am I thinking of?" 
Jim Carrey comes to mind. Leslie Jones could be interesting too.

I guess that's the point of the  "what number am I thinking of?" question: It's a challenge to answer it in an interesting way.
But I'm mostly just playing the devil's advocate, and would be fine if they ditched that question.

I was glad Stephen didn't mention the peanut butter on apple slices with Sting. That was getting a little tired for me.

8 minutes ago, Dewey Decimate said:

Sting is freaking cool. He has aged amazingly well; it warms my Gen X heart.

Heh, he warms my Boomer heart too: google.com/search?q=how+old+is+sting 

Edited by shapeshifter
because the quotes within quotes are hard to read
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1 hour ago, shapeshifter said:

I guess that's the point of the  "what number am I thinking of?" question: It's a challenge to answer it in an interesting way.

They could maybe say "even", or "prime number", just to see whether Stephen pauses to think or not, then we would know that he either has any specific number in mind or just automatically says No.

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I don't really think there is any interesting answer available to any of the questions. Apples vs oranges? Favorite sandwich? Who cares? 

If they need fillers, bring on more stand up comedians to tell jokes for a few minutes, or hire some writers who actually have something interesting to say and let them do bits like the other late night shows do. 

Having Stephen sit at the desk and ask completely boring and meaningless questions over and over again is a waste of everybody's time. Is his ego so fragile that he can't let anyone else be on camera, without him, ever?

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As a baptized Lutheran who attended a Catholic wedding, I concur with Catholicman Stephen's opinion about how too God damned long Catholic weddings are!😪

Enjoyed the animated segment. The only thing that would have made it even better is if John McClane had flown in and yelled "HO-HO-HO, MUTHAFUCKAH!!!"

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I don't drink, but even I knew about the salt with tequila shots. I can't figure out if Anderson Cooper is genuinely naive about booze, or if it's an act. But he seems to hate all the drinking segments he does for TV, so I wish he'd just not do them. Maybe I just don't get why it's fun to see him gag after each one.

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On 12/1/2021 at 3:01 AM, freddi said:

I cannot stand the spiel he does before “Meanwhile,” pointing at his monologue location, talking about curating the material, talking about the bits he left out, etc.  Tonight, Tuesday, I think the ramblings leading up to “Meanwhile” was longer than the material that followed.  I’ve started muting, but that also is interminable.  

I hate that word salad thing and try to avoid it by any means! I guess he thinks it makes him sound intelligent and erudite, but I think it's just irritating.

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The Meanwhile intros (for mostly not that interesting of bits after) is part of why I keep thinking I should stop watching. I started in late March of 2020, and the show, from his house, with limited tech and polish, was what I needed--more honest, more sharp, and at the same time more human than so much regular news. I feel those qualities are slipping away and it's just fluff and sarcasm.

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On 12/18/2021 at 9:12 PM, possibilities said:

I don't drink, but even I knew about the salt with tequila shots. I can't figure out if Anderson Cooper is genuinely naive about booze, or if it's an act. But he seems to hate all the drinking segments he does for TV, so I wish he'd just not do them. Maybe I just don't get why it's fun to see him gag after each one.

I agree! I don't drink and I've made it clear that if folks don't like my company sober, they/I can head for the door- and I have a much lower income than Mr. Cooper so I don't see why he keeps doing that. It's not as though Mr. Cooper is depending on Mr. Colbert to get into a college fraternity! 

26 minutes ago, Ailianna said:

The Meanwhile intros (for mostly not that interesting of bits after) is part of why I keep thinking I should stop watching. I started in late March of 2020, and the show, from his house, with limited tech and polish, was what I needed--more honest, more sharp, and at the same time more human than so much regular news. I feel those qualities are slipping away and it's just fluff and sarcasm.

Not to mention, since Mr. Colbert has returned to the studio audience, it seems for the most part, he's quit trying to even attempt   keeping the dialogue and, specifically, the monologue from becoming base and tasteless but instead seems to be deliberately diving into crassness! As I said in another post, someone needs to tell him he's smart enough to find ways to entertain and inform without resorting to this- and he's better than this. Hence for    these reasons, I especially hate seeing this happen and am not sure how much longer I am willing to endure this galloping coarseness. 

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I'm shocked that Stephen is doing his show with an audience at this point. Seth was, too - until he tested positive and the rest of his shows this week have been scrapped. The View has gone remote again. I was shuddering watching live audiences in NYC. We may be seeing the converted storage closet again sooner rather than later.

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4 hours ago, catlover79 said:

I'm shocked that Stephen is doing his show with an audience at this point. Seth was, too - until he tested positive and the rest of his shows this week have been scrapped. The View has gone remote again. I was shuddering watching live audiences in NYC. We may be seeing the converted storage closet again sooner rather than later.

Stephen did bring that up with Jon B tonight, and said that if they were put in the same position as they were at the start of the pandemic, that he'd FUCKIN'NOT go back into that closet. He was most emphatic about it!

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3 hours ago, Victor the Crab said:

Stephen did bring that up with Jon B tonight, and said that if they were put in the same position as they were at the start of the pandemic, that he'd FUCKIN'NOT go back into that closet. He was most emphatic about it!

Did he say anything about possibly canceling audiences and filming with just the chuckles of the crew in the theater like they did after the closet but before the return of the audience?

Edited by shapeshifter
5 hours ago, shapeshifter said:

Did he say anything about possibly canceling audiences and filming with just the chuckles of the crew in the theater like they did after the closet but before the return of the audience?

At the time, when Jimmys and Seth returned to empty studios, he said he was in The Closet instead of on stage because it's not a theater/show without an audience or respect for the theater or something like that. If I'm remembering correctly he only returned to the stage when he had an audience.

Edited by SG429
adding a memory
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He said he would do the show in the studio even without an audience because he won't go back into the closet. So to speak.

I can't find the clip on YouTube although they have every other segment.

From Hollywood Reporter: https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv/tv-news/stephen-colbert-the-late-show-covid-19-ed-sullivan-theater-1235070110/

 

Edited by ABay
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I was really angry about Walensky minimizing how serious the Omicron outbreak is. Healthcare workers are begging people to take it MORE seriously, because hospitals are collapsing. It's worse than in 2020 in some states. 

I missed Stephen saying he would not go back to the closet, but I heard him say he would not wear a mask. So I guess he'd rather cancel the show for 10 days than come back with a mask or do it from quarantine. 

Continuing to have an audience packed like sardines strikes me as tempting fate, but I guess he likes to live on the edge.

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He said the mask thing during the Walensky interview. He asked her how long he would have to stay out if he tested positive. She said 5 days, and then he could come back and wear a mask for 5 more days. He said he wouldn't do that, so she said he'd have to stay home for 10 days.

I was a day behind when I posted earlier, so I only just saw him talking about not going back to "the closet" when I watched last night's show this afternoon.

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I can't blame him for saying he'd do the show alone, with no make-up, in sweats and a GoPro before going back into that closet. I always figured it was a small office, but now I'm thinking it really was a converted storage closet. My office (when I went into the office) was a converted storage closet, and I cannot blame him at all for not wanting to go back.

I also didn't read too much about him saying he would stay home the full 10 days instead of wearing a mask. It's one thing for on-air journalists to mask-up, it's another for a performer.

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