Jimmy Kimmel stated that late-night television is “being poisoned” rather than “dying of natural causes” following the 2026 cancellation of Stephen Colbert’s program on CBS. The ABC host attributes the collapse of the decades-old late-night format to algorithmic media consumption, corporate streaming pivots, and the fragmentation of the American viewing audience. The sudden end of Colbert’s tenure at the Ed Sullivan Theater marks a definitive fracture in a broadcasting tradition that began in the 1950s. Kimmel views the shift not as an evolution, but as an assassination.
For decades, the midnight hour belonged to the networks. It was the cultural watercooler. It was where the American public processed the news of the day. Now, the desk is empty. The band has packed up. The audience has moved on to a personalized feed.
The End of the Ed Sullivan Era
Stephen Colbert took over the Ed Sullivan Theater in September 2015. He inherited the space from David Letterman. He brought a sharp, political edge to a format that had traditionally favored broad, apolitical entertainment. For a time, it worked. During the Trump administration, Colbert’s monologues dominated the ratings. He provided a nightly catharsis for millions of viewers. But the landscape was already shifting under his feet.
By 2026, the economics of linear television had deteriorated. Paramount Global, the parent company of CBS, faced mounting debt and dwindling broadcast revenues. The cost of producing a daily, hour-long variety show in the heart of New York City became difficult to justify. The cancellation was not a reflection of Colbert’s talent. It was a reflection of a broken business model.
When the news broke, the reaction across the industry was swift. But it was Jimmy Kimmel who articulated the grim reality most clearly. Speaking to Variety, Kimmel refused to accept the narrative that late-night was simply aging out of relevance. He rejected the idea of a natural death.
“We’re being poisoned. It’s not dying of natural causes. The ecosystem is being intentionally drained.”
Kimmel’s words struck a nerve. He did not point fingers at the audience. He pointed fingers at the infrastructure. He pointed to the algorithms, the corporate mandates, and the digital platforms that extract value from late-night television without contributing to its survival.
Anatomy of a Poisoning
To understand Kimmel’s metaphor, one must understand how late-night television makes money. Historically, it was a simple transaction. Networks broadcast a show at 11:30 PM. Millions of people tuned in. Advertisers paid a premium to reach those viewers. The cost per mille (CPM) was high because the audience was captive and engaged.
That transaction no longer exists. The poison Kimmel refers to is a multi-layered toxin. It began with the DVR. It accelerated with YouTube. It became fatal with TikTok. The audience did not stop watching late-night content. They stopped watching it at night. They stopped watching it on television. They stopped watching the commercials that funded the production.
The Economics of the Midnight Slot
A modern late-night show is an expensive operation. It requires a host, a live band, a team of union writers, producers, celebrity bookers, and a massive studio in either Los Angeles or New York City. Annual production budgets routinely exceed $80 million. In the era of Johnny Carson, that investment yielded massive returns. In 2026, the math no longer works.
Advertisers have migrated to digital platforms where they can target consumers with surgical precision. A 30-second spot on a broadcast network cannot compete with the granular data offered by Alphabet and Meta. As ad revenues shrank, networks attempted to cut costs. They reduced the number of original episodes. They trimmed writing staffs. They relied heavier on sponsored integrations. But these were temporary bandages on a fatal wound.
A Century of Monologues
The late-night format is a uniquely American invention. It was pioneered by Steve Allen in 1954. It was perfected by Johnny Carson in 1962. For thirty years, Carson ruled the 11:30 PM slot. He was a cultural monolith. When he retired in 1992, nearly 40 million people tuned in to watch his final broadcast. The battle to succeed him, between Jay Leno and David Letterman, was front-page news. It was a clash of titans.
Today, a late-night host is lucky to pull 1.5 million live viewers. The monolith has been shattered into a million algorithmic pieces.
The decline was gradual, then sudden. When Jimmy Fallon took over The Tonight Show in 2014, he brought a hyper-kinetic, viral-friendly energy to the desk. He played games with celebrities. He sang lip-sync battles. He created moments designed specifically to be shared on the internet the next morning. For a brief period, it seemed like late-night had successfully adapted to the digital age. The shows were generating billions of views online.
The Algorithm vs. The Anecdote
But those billions of views contained a hidden poison. By optimizing their content for the morning-after viral clip, late-night shows inadvertently trained their audience to ignore the live broadcast. Why stay up until midnight to watch a 60-minute show filled with commercials when you can watch the best three minutes on your phone while waiting for your morning coffee?
This is the YouTube Paradox. Late-night television built the viral web. Carpool Karaoke, Mean Tweets, and Lip Sync Battle were the engines of early social media engagement. But the networks never figured out how to monetize those digital views at the same rate as a linear broadcast. They traded dollars for digital pennies. They fed the algorithm, and the algorithm grew massive. Then, the algorithm ate them.
The Rise of the Vertical Feed
The final blow came in the form of the vertical video feed. TikTok, YouTube Shorts, and Instagram Reels fundamentally altered the way the public consumes entertainment. The traditional late-night interview, a slow, meandering seven-minute conversation between a host and a celebrity, cannot compete with a hyper-edited, dopamine-inducing 15-second clip.
Celebrities realized they no longer needed the late-night couch to promote a movie. They could reach a larger, younger demographic by collaborating with a digital creator or posting directly to their own followers. The symbiotic relationship between Hollywood studios and late-night television broke down. The couch became obsolete.
The Corporate Pivot
Kimmel’s frustration is also directed at the corporate suites. The major media conglomerates, Disney, Comcast, Paramount, have spent the last decade pivoting their resources toward streaming platforms. Disney+, Peacock, and Paramount+ became the primary focus. Linear television was treated as a legacy asset. It was managed for cash flow, not for growth.
When a network views a time slot as a declining asset, it stops investing in innovation. It stops taking risks. The late-night format became rigid. The monologues became predictable. The interviews became overly managed PR exercises. The poison was not just external. It was administered from within.
George Cheeks, Bob Iger, and other network executives face an impossible task. They must manage the decline of linear television while attempting to build profitable streaming businesses. In that equation, a $80 million late-night show is a prime target for the chopping block. Colbert was simply the first major domino to fall in this new era of austerity.
The Last Men at the Desk
Jimmy Kimmel is now one of the last men standing at the traditional late-night desk. He has anchored Jimmy Kimmel Live! on ABC since 2003. He has outlasted Leno, Letterman, Conan O’Brien, and now Colbert. But his comments reflect a deep existential dread about the future of his profession.
He recognizes that the format he loves is being dismantled. The communal experience of late-night television is gone. The nation no longer goes to sleep watching the same program. We go to sleep staring at our own personalized, algorithmic feeds. We are isolated in our own digital silos.
The loss of late-night is not just a loss of entertainment. It is a loss of a shared cultural baseline. Even when the nation was divided, the late-night monologue provided a common text. It was a nightly temperature check on the American psyche. When that temperature check is replaced by an algorithm designed only to maximize engagement, the culture loses its anchor.
Kimmel’s warning is not just about television. It is about the broader media ecosystem. When institutions are drained of their resources to feed digital platforms, the resulting landscape is barren. The poison works slowly. It degrades the quality. It fragments the audience. It bankrupts the producers. And then, one day, the lights go out at the Ed Sullivan Theater.
The cameras were powered down. The marquee went dark. The audience looked down at their phones.





