The Colbert Report ( , —
t is
silent in both "Colbert" and "Report") is an American
satirical late night
television program that airs
Monday through Thursday on
Comedy
Central in the United States, on
A,
The Comedy Network and
CTV in Canada, and on
The Comedy Channel in
Australia. It stars political humorist
Stephen Colbert, a former
correspondent for
The Daily Show.
The Colbert Report is a
spin-off of and counterpart to
The
Daily Show that, like
The Daily Show, critiques
politics and the media. It satirizes conservative
personality-driven political
pundit
programs, particularly
Fox News'
The O'Reilly Factor.
The show focuses on a
fictional anchorman character named
Stephen Colbert, played by his real-life namesake. The
character, described by Colbert as a "well-intentioned, poorly
informed, high-status
idiot", is a
caricature of televised political pundits.
The Colbert Report has been nominated for four
Emmys each in 2006, 2007 and 2008, two
Television Critics
Association Awards, and two
Satellite Awards. It has been presented as
non-satirical journalism in several instances, by the
Tom DeLay Legal Defense Trust, and following
Robert Wexler's interview on the
program.
The Report received considerable media coverage
following its debut on October 17, 2005, for Colbert's popularizing
of the term "
truthiness", which
dictionary publisher
Merriam-Webster named its 2006
Word of the Year.
The
Report has also coined other
neologisms, such as "freem".
The Report has had
cultural influence in
a number of ways.
In 2006, after Colbert encouraged viewers to
vote online to name a Hungarian
bridge after him, he won the first round of voting
with 17,231,724 votes. The Ambassador
of Hungary presented Mr. Colbert with a declaration certifying
him as the winner of the second and final round of voting, though
it was later announced that the bridge would instead be named the
Megyeri
Bridge
, as it couldn't be named after a living
person. In 2007, the Democratic Caucus chair,
Rahm Emanuel, instructed freshmen
Representatives not to appear on the show's "
Better Know a District"
segment.
Production
In 2005,
The Daily Show had
won
Emmy Awards, and Comedy Central
wanted to expand the franchise. Producers were also looking for a
way to hold on to Colbert,
Daily Show correspondent and
co-writer for six seasons, after the show's other breakout star,
Steve Carell, left the program to
pursue a successful career in film and network television.
Jon Stewart and
Ben
Karlin (
The Daily Show's executive producer)
supposedly came up with the idea for
The Colbert Report
after watching coverage of the
sexual
harassment lawsuit filed against
Bill O'Reilly. Jon Stewart's
production company,
Busboy
Productions, developed
The Report. Colbert, Stewart,
and Karlin pitched the idea of the show (reportedly with one
phrase: "our version of
The
O'Reilly Factor with Stephen Colbert") to
Comedy Central chief
Doug Herzog, who agreed to run the show for
eight weeks without creating a pilot.
The Colbert Report first appeared in the form of three
television commercials for
itself which aired several times on
The Daily Show,
although the themes that form the basis for
The Report can
be seen in the reports of Colbert's correspondent character on
The Daily Show. The show debuted October 17, 2005, with an
initial contract for an eight-week run. On November 2, 2005, based
on the strong
ratings for the show's
first two weeks, Comedy Central and Colbert announced they had
signed for an additional year, through the end of 2006. In 2007,
co-head writer
Allison Silverman
became an executive producer of the show.
Program format
Typically, Colbert starts each episode with teasers regarding the
show's topics and guest, each headline structured to be a
deliberate pun, followed by a verbal
metaphor that promotes the show—for example, "Go
out ten yards and
button-hook to the left. I'm
going to hit you with a perfect spiral of the truth. This is
The Colbert Report." The show's opening title sequence
begins with images of flag waving, eagles, Colbert striking poses
and words describing Colbert flying by, some of which that have
been used as The Wørd. Originally, the last word was
"
Grippy," but it has changed to, among others,
"
Megamerican," "
Lincolnish,"
"
Superstantial," "
Freem," "
Eneagled,"
"
Flagaphile," "
Warrior-Poet," "
Good,"
"
Gutly," "
President Bush, Have A Hot Dog With
Me," "
Self-Evident," "
Multi-Grain,"
"
Factose Intolerant," "
Colmes-Free Since 2009,"
"
Juice It!," "
Purple-Mounted," "
346x"
(for one episode, on May 4, 2009; this episode featured many hints
planted by
J. J. Abrams about when
and where Colbert would be in the Persian Gulf
)," "Farewellison" (for one episode, the last
episode with former producer Alison Silverman) and as of October
2009, "Fundit." The sequence ends with a
computer-generated shrieking eagle swooping toward the
foreground.
Following the opening sequence, Colbert proceeds a run-through of
the day's headlines, similar to that of
The Daily Show but
with a pseudo-
right-wing spin.
The program proper then begins with Colbert addressing a specific
topic. That topic will usually lead into a "The Wørd" segment,
which juxtaposes Colbert's commentary with satirical bullet points
on-screen, a parody on
The O'Reilly Factor's "Talking
Points Memo"; though on occasion he will conduct a short interview
with someone having to do with the topic. The format of the middle
segment varies, but it is normally a visual presentation or skit.
Often, these skits are parts of
recurring segments,
which may include "
Better Know a
District," in which Colbert interviews a
U.S. Representative from a
certain district of the United States; "Tip of the Hat/Wag of the
Finger," in which Colbert voices his approval or disapproval of
prominent people and news items; "Cheating Death with Dr. Stephen
T. Colbert, D.F.A.," a health segment; "The Sport Report" with the
"t" in both Sport and Report silent, a sports segment; and "The
ThreatDown," in which Colbert lists the five greatest threats to
America, and others.
Sometimes, there is a "
Colbert Report Special Repor-t"
(final "t" pronounced with special emphasis), in which Colbert
devotes a section of an episode, and sometimes the entire episode
to a special subject. The third segment is almost always an
interview with a celebrity guest, often an author or government
official. The interview is, unlike
The Daily Show,
conducted at a different table on the set. Viewers applaud as
Colbert hammily jogs from his desk to the interview area, where his
guest awaits. At times, Colbert will give
high
fives to the front row of his audience as they stand and clap.
This is different from the traditional talk show format, in which
the guest enters to applause and joins the already seated host. The
third segment of the show is sporadically a musical guest.
Prominent musical guests have included Rush, TV On The Radio, Green
Day, Paul Simon, Crosby Stills & Nash, and Yo-Yo Ma.
Afterwards, Colbert ends the show by giving some parting words to
the audience.
Set
The studio
in which The Colbert Report is taped, located in New York City's
Hell's Kitchen
neighborhood, was used for The Daily Show
until July 2005. NEP Studio 54 on
54th Street is owned by
NEP Broadcasting which is New York City's
largest production facility and also owns
The Daily Show
set at NEP Studio 52 two blocks south on
52nd Street.
The set for
The Colbert Report is called "The Eagle's
Nest" and reflects and facilitates Colbert's self-aggrandizing
style. The set has two main areas: the desk, from which Colbert
hosts most of the show, and the guest interview area to camera
right, where his guest for the evening is interviewed. Colbert's
desk is in the shape of serifed C, standing for Colbert. On one
wall, above an artificial fireplace, is a portrait of Colbert; it
originally showed Colbert standing in front of the same mantel with
another portrait of himself.
On the show's first anniversary, the portrait
was replaced by one of Colbert standing in front of the mantel with
the first portrait above it; the original was auctioned off at a
charity event and currently hangs in the Sticky Fingers restaurant in
Colbert's native Charleston, S.C.
Colbert stated that the portrait will be
changed every year to add another level of depth. On October 17,
2007, the portrait was removed and replaced with a new one that
followed an identical pattern, but changed Colbert's placement in
the foreground.
On January
16, 2008, the "3-deep" Colbert portrait was placed on display
"right between the bathrooms near the 'America's Presidents'
exhibit" at the National
Portrait Gallery
in Washington,
DC
. After first being rejected by the National
Museum of American History, Colbert petitioned the Smithsonian to
display his portrait, who agreed to "go along with the joke",
though they stressed that it was only temporary. Colbert said "I
don't mean to brag, but as it contains three portraits, my portrait
has more portraits than any other portrait in the National Portrait
Gallery!" The portrait was then put on display at the Smithsonian
until April 13. On October 16, 2008, the 3-deep portrait was
officially donated to the permanent collection of the Smithsonian's
American Treasures exhibit. At the end of that show, a new 5-deep
portrait was unveiled, with the newest Colbert holding his
newly-won Emmy with another Emmy and a Peabody by the mantle.
Outside the studio
The graphics used throughout the show and the studio itself are
saturated with
American flags,
bald eagles,
Captain America's shield, and other
patriotic imagery. The set contains many references to Colbert, and
on the show's first episode he pointed out several examples: his
name, initials and the name of the show appear on the desk's plasma
screen, on the rafters above the desk, and the desk itself is
shaped like a giant "C". In an interview with
The A.V. Club, Colbert explained that much of the
design for the set was inspired by
Leonardo da Vinci's
The Last Supper. "All the
architecture of that room points at
Jesus'
head, the entire room is a
halo", Colbert said. "On the
set, I'd like the lines of the set to converge on my head. And so
if you look at the design, it all does, it all points at my
head...there's a sort of
sun-god burst
quality about the set around me." On the floor to the front stage
right of his desk there is an eagle's nest, and a tape outline of
where he injured his wrist, akin to those seen at murder scenes on
television police procedurals.
For the
week of April 14 through April 17, 2008, the program was taped at
the Annenberg Center for the Performing
Arts
at the University of Pennsylvania
campus, in advance of the Democratic Party primary in
that state on April 22. This was the first time the program
has been taped outside its regular New York City studios.
In an interview with Lisa Rose for nj.com published on October 26,
2009, Colbert mentioned that a new set is currently being built and
will premiere sometime in January.
Writers' strike
Production of new episodes was suspended on November 5, 2007 due to
the
Writers
Guild of America strike, although a live untaped performance
called
The Colbert Report - On Strike! took place on
December 3, 2007, with proceeds going towards show staffers. The
show returned on January 7, 2008, without the writing staff. Upon
the show's return, Colbert modified the pronunciation of the show's
name, using hard 't's ( ); a similar move was made by
The Daily
Show which returned to air as
A
Daily Show. On February 13, in honor of the end of the
strike, the original names of both shows were restored.
During the strike, Colbert stopped performing the customary "table
of contents" that usually precedes the opening titles, as well as
other regular written segments such as The Wørd. As a member of the
Writers Guild of
America, Colbert was barred from writing any material for the
show himself which his writers would ordinarily write. As a result,
Colbert conducted more guest interviews, although several people
turned down invitations to cross the picket line to appear on the
show, including
Katrina van den
Heuvel and
Naomi Klein. At one
stage, pitched as an effort to fill time on the show, Colbert
lashed out at fellow late night host
Conan
O'Brien, who had also recently returned to air without his
writers, for claiming to have elevated the popularity—or
"made"—presidential candidate
Mike
Huckabee, which Colbert's character had frequently claimed
credit for in the past. In response,
Jon
Stewart, Colbert's former
Daily Show colleague,
claimed that he had introduced O'Brien to the public on
MTV's
The Jon
Stewart Show, and thus, by his logic,
Stewart was
responsible for Huckabee's success. This sparked a briefly
recurring
mock feud between
Colbert, O'Brien, and Stewart—during which they appeared on each
other's shows—which culminated in a three-way brawl on
Late Night with Conan
O'Brien on February 4, 2008.
Stephen Colbert (character)
The Stephen Colbert character is a fictional character portrayed by
comedian and actor Stephen Colbert. The character is a caricature
of news pundits such as
Stone
Phillips,
Bill
O'Reilly,
Sean Hannity, and
Geraldo Rivera, whose shows focus on
"bluster and personality". Colbert's character, a
"well-intentioned, poorly informed, high-status idiot", is
right-wing,
egomaniacal,
fact-averse ("factose intolerant"), God-fearing, and super-
patriotic. He claims to be an
independent who is often mistaken for a
Republican, but
uniformly despises
liberals and generally agrees
with the actions and decisions of
George
W. Bush and the Republican Party.
This is evidenced by one of the questions that he asks of many of
his guests: "George W. Bush: great President, or the
greatest President?"
The character's self-aggrandizing style includes frequent promotion
of an extensive range of fictional merchandising and products,
including perfumes,
sci-fi novels,
medications, his own "
man seed", and other
products, all of which are either produced or endorsed by Colbert.
He has also convinced his viewers, whom he addresses as "the
Colbert Nation", to vote for him in various public naming polls:
the mascot of the
Saginaw Spirit, an
Ontario Hockey League team has
been named after him.
Colbert's
character also holds a recurring grudge against everything French
, including
their language. Ironically, he
pronounces both his last name "Colbert" - a surname of French
origins - and "Report" in "The Colbert Report" with a silent T in
the traditional French accent. This faux-French way of pronouncing
"Report" has started a trend amongst other
American journalists, such as
Bobby Dunbar, of
The Colorado Rap Report. In an
interview on NPR's "Fresh Air" Colbert acknowledged the
pronunciation of report referring to the word "rapport": A close
and harmonious relationship in which the people or groups concerned
understand each other's feelings or ideas and communicate
well.
Colbert's character has been described as a "caustic right-wing
bully". On the interview segment of the show, Colbert frequently
attempts to nail his guest by using various
rhetorical devices, and often
logical fallacies, to prove them wrong.
Despite his bluster, Colbert's character suffers from
arctophobia, the
fear
of
bears, which he refers to as "giant,
marauding, godless killing machines". This bear phobia was inspired
by Colbert's real-life fear of bears as a child. Colbert refers to
Bill O'Reilly as "Papa Bear", a title with a double meaning,
considering Colbert's fear of bears. Colbert displays fear and
suspicion of nearly any animal and is quick to declare they are
"training" to attack humanity. He is also highly distrustful of
technology, particularly robots.
Over the months of May and June in 2007,
Colbert begged Apple
to give him
a free iPhone, and finally received one in
July. Once he received it, however, he claimed the phone
knew so much about him that he had become virtually dependent on
it, and that the iPhone itself was a threat. Colbert also despises
the liberal media,
The New York
Times in particular, but applauds conservative media such
as
Fox News on a regular basis.
Operation Iraqi Stephen: Going Commando
From June
7-9, 2009, Colbert filmed a series of five episodes for the troops
in Baghdad,
Iraq
. He had a suit tailored for him in the
Army Combat Uniform pattern and
went through an abbreviated version of the
Army's
basic
training regimen.
On the first of the five episodes, Colbert
had his head shaved on stage by General Ray
Odierno who was jokingly "ordered" to do so by President
Barack Obama, who appeared on the
episode via satellite from the White House
.
Recurring themes
The Colbert Report presents various recurring themes that
help define the show.
Truthiness
In "The Wørd" segment of the first episode of the
Report,
Colbert featured the term
truthiness, defined as "the
quality by which one purports to know something emotionally or
instinctively, without regard to evidence or intellectual
examination". Colbert said that, "I don't trust books, they're all
fact, no heart. And that's exactly what's pulling our country apart
today. Let's face it folks, we are a divided nation…between those
who think with their head and those who know with their heart." In
December 2005,
The New York Times selected
truthiness as one of nine words that captured the
zeitgeist of the year, and in January 2006, the
American Dialect Society
announced that
truthiness was selected as its 2005 Word of
the Year.
Colbert has made frequent reference to the spread of the word
truthiness since he introduced it, while carping on media
accounts of
truthiness that neglect to identify him as its
source.
Truthiness has since been discussed, sometimes
repeatedly, in
The New York
Times, the
Washington
Post,
USA Today, the
San Francisco
Chronicle,
The Chicago
Tribune,
Newsweek,
MSNBC,
National Public Radio, the
Associated Press,
Editor & Publisher,
Salon,
The Huffington Post,
ABC NewsRadio's
Word Watch with Kel
Richards and
Chicago Reader,
and on
ABC's
Nightline,
CBS's
60
Minutes, and
The
Oprah Winfrey Show. In January 2006,
truthiness
was featured as a Word of the Week by the website of the
Macmillan English Dictionary. In
December of the same year,
Merriam-Webster announced that "truthiness"
had been voted by visitors to its website to be the #1 Word of the
Year for 2006. On August 27, 2006, the
Global Language Monitor named
truthiness and
wikiality—both coined by Colbert
on
The Colbert Report—as the top television buzzwords of
2006. It was used in
The New York Times crossword
puzzle in June 2008, which Colbert himself mentioned during an
exchange with Jon Stewart on an episode of
The Daily
Show.
Relation to The O'Reilly Factor
The Stephen Colbert character and
The Colbert Report are
generally parodies of
Bill
O'Reilly and
The O'Reilly
Factor respectively. New episodes of
The Colbert
Report are scheduled in the same time slot as rebroadcasts of
The O'Reilly Factor, while
Colbert rebroadcasts
are scheduled during new
O'Reilly shows. When O'Reilly
appeared on
The Daily Show before the second episode of
The Colbert Report aired, he commented, "Before we get
started, somebody told me walking in here, you got some French guy
on after you making fun of me?", and made several references in the
following interview to 'the French Guy'. In a subsequent
Newsweek interview, O'Reilly said
that he "feels it's a compliment" to have Colbert parody him
because Colbert "isn't mean-spirited" and does not "use [his]
platform to injure people". Later, Colbert replied on-air, "I like
you too. In fact, if it wasn't for you, this show wouldn't
exist."
The Colbert Report features a commentary segment called
"The Wørd", similar to O'Reilly's "Talking Points Memo". Like the
Memo, The Wørd features the commentator asserting a political point
of view with a text screen graphic next to him. However, while
O'Reilly's text serves to emphasize his points, Colbert's text
generally serves as an ironic counterpoint to his character's
position. Other segments that can be juxtaposed with
The O'Reilly Factor are The Colbert
Report's
Inbox (compared to O'Reilly's "Factor Mail");
Stephen Colbert's Balls for Kidz which, unlike The
Factor's "Children at Risk", tends to portray messages and lessons
typically considered unsuitable for children; and
That's The
Craziest F#?king Thing I've Ever Heard, which is comparable to
O'Reilly's "The Most Ridiculous Item of the Day". Additionally,
Colbert parodies O'Reilly's references to his program as the "no
spin zone" by inviting viewers of his show to "take a spin in the
no fact zone". O'Reilly and Colbert each appeared as a guest on the
other's show on January 18, 2007. As a souvenir, Colbert "stole" a
microwave from the O'Reilly green room—in fact, he informed
O'Reilly of his intention to take the microwave beforehand—later
displaying it on his own show. He later sent over a replacement
microwave, emblazoned with
The Colbert Report logo.)
Green Screen challenges
On the August 10, 2006 episode, Stephen Colbert was shown wielding
a
lightsaber in front of a
green screen, a parody of the
Star Wars Kid internet phenomenon.
This was
done as part of the "Better Know A District" segment, when Colbert
visited California's 6th congressional
district
, the home of Star Wars
creator George Lucas. The
greenscreen footage was subsequently edited by fans and their
results were posted on the
Internet,
primarily the website
YouTube. Colbert
featured some of these clips on the August 21 episode and issued
the "Green Screen Challenge" to the public—a contest to create the
best video from footage shown in the August 10 episode. Lucas
himself made an appearance on the October 11 episode to showcase
his own entry.
When
indie rock band
The Decemberists shot a
music video for their single "
O Valencia!" in front of a green screen and
asked fans to complete the video, Colbert accused them of copying
his idea, and started his second green screen challenge, which
called for fans to edit Stephen Colbert into The Decemberists
unfinished music video. In response, The Decemberists challenged
Colbert to a
guitar solo challenge. For a few
weeks, the upcoming contest, which Colbert titled "Rock and Awe:
Countdown to Guitarmageddon" ("The I-Rock War: Cut and Strum" and
"
The Axeman Cometh:
Mourning Becomes Electric" were
announced as alternate titles; Colbert added that he would find and
fire the English major on his staff who created the latter title),
became a focus of the show. On December 20, 2006,
Chris Funk, lead guitarist for The Decemberists,
came on the show for the guitar solo challenge. Once Funk finished
playing, Colbert arrived on stage with a five-necked guitar
belonging to
Rick Nielsen of
Cheap Trick. Colbert played two notes, pretended
to cut his hand, and insisted that he could no longer play, so
Peter Frampton played a solo in
Colbert's place.
A panel of three judges, then New York
governor-elect
Eliot Spitzer, Rock critic Anthony DeCurtis, and chairman of the
Clive Davis
Department of Recorded Music at New York University
, Jim Anderson, voted to determine the best
solo. DeCurtis voted for the Colbert/Frampton team, Anderson
voted for Funk, and Spitzer withdrew himself from judging as
Colbert tried to
bribe him during the
commercial break. The deciding vote was given to
Henry Kissinger, who had briefly appeared
earlier in the show. Kissinger said that the American people had
won, at which point Colbert declared himself the winner. As a
prize, Colbert received
The Crane
Wife, The Decemberists' new album, saying "The Crane Wife
by the Decemberists? I love the Decemberists, they rock. In your
face, Funk!"
On June 12, 2008, Stephen announced his third green screen
challenge, "Stephen Colbert's Make McCain Exciting Challenge!", in
which he invited viewers to replace the
green
screen behind
John McCain during one
of his speeches with something more exciting. The show would
display entries on a semi-regular basis for the next two
months.
On September 5, 2008, Colbert issued a follow up McCain green
screen challenge. He challenged his viewers to alter the footage of
McCain's acceptance speech, while Colbert himself took a one week
hiatus.
Wrist violence and fictional addiction
On July 26, 2007, Colbert broke his left wrist while performing his
warm-up for the show.
Following the accident Colbert launched a
new section of the show entitled "Wrist Watch", featuring news
stories about wrists during which the character attacks what he
sees as Hollywood
's glamorization of "wrist violence". On
August 8, Colbert debuted the "Wriststrong"
wrist band, based on
Lance Armstrong's "
Livestrong" wrist band, in a hope to
increase wrist awareness. The wristbands were made available for
purchase online and Colbert ordered those wearing the bracelets to
give them to anyone they meet who is more famous than themselves.
Colbert has subsequently attempted to pass on bracelets to
well-known media figures including
Katie
Couric (Stephen gave a Wriststrong bracelet to Katie and she
said that she would wear it on air, but didn't),
Brian Williams and
Matt
Lauer. All proceeds raised by the sales of the wrist bands are
given to the
Yellow Ribbon Fund.
On January 23, 2008, Colbert interviewed the head of the Yellow
Ribbon Fund, Marie Wood, and presented her a check for the money
raised by WristStrong bracelet sales to date, totaling US$171,525,
the profits of over 30,000 bracelet sales.
Colbert
had a number of well-known figures autograph his cast, including
Michael Bloomberg, Mayor of New York City
; CBS Evening
News anchor Katie Couric; Bill
O'Reilly, host of Fox's
The O'Reilly Factor; Nancy
Pelosi, Speaker of the
U.S. House of
Representatives;
Tim Russert, host
of
NBC's
Meet The
Press;
Tony Snow, former
White House Press Secretary; and
NBC Nightly News anchor
Brian Williams. On August 23 the cast
was removed on air, and it was announced that Colbert would auction
off his cast for the Yellow Ribbon Fund on
eBay. The auction began after that evening's show.
Within minutes of the auction's start, bidding quickly rose to over
US$71,000. However, many bids
were canceled because bidders failed to get pre-approved by the
seller (which was required in the auction). It was sold for
US$17,200.
While Colbert's wrist was in the cast, the character began taking
(and subsequently became addicted to) painkillers to deal with his
injury, frequently taking absurd doses and displaying exaggerated
withdrawal symptoms of irritability and
hallucinations when they were denied.
The cast was removed on television, after which
The Report
went on a brief hiatus, and following its return on September 10,
Colbert claimed that, with help from a court order and rehab over
the break, he had kicked his addiction.
Recurring characters
While the show is largely dominated by Colbert, there are a number
of recurring characters who appear periodically. Colbert will
frequently address the show's director, Jimmy—a reference to
real-life
Colbert Report director Jim Hoskinson—and will
sometimes converse with him. On the rare occasions Jimmy has
appeared on screen, he has been portrayed by staff writer
Peter Gwinn. Building manager Tad, portrayed by
Paul Dinello, has appeared on the show
multiple times to host special segments. Other recurring members of
Colbert's fictional staff have included Meg the intern (played by
Meg DeFrancesco), Bobby the stage
manager (played by
Eric Drysdale) and
Killer (uncredited). Colbert himself has portrayed his character's
Cuban
alter ego, Esteban Colberto; and his
Chinese alter ego, Ching Chong Ding Dong.
Early in the show's run, Stephen occasionally encountered Russ
Lieber, a liberal media personality character portrayed by
David Cross.
Tim
Meadows has also appeared on the show as P.K. Winsome, a black
Republican and hucksterish entrepreneur.
An
inanimate character was created in response to Supreme
Court
ruling to lift the Washington, D.C. gun ban.
Sweetness is a black
pistol that Colbert
claims he can hear talking to him. He will often converse with
Sweetness by holding the gun up to his ear and then relaying what
it has supposedly said.
Colbert has also voiced
Wilford
Brimley in false phone conversations. Gorlock, Colbert's alien
financial adviser, is another recurring character mentioned on the
show. Recently
Jeff Goldblum has
randomly interrupted Colbert to make a speech and advertise
Law & Order:
Criminal Intent.
Reception
The Colbert Report currently scores favorable reviews,
with 65/100 on
Metacritic, while viewers
ranking it higher at an 8.6/10.
The Colbert Report drew an unusual amount of media
attention prior to its premiere. It was featured in articles in
The New Yorker,
NPR's
All Things
Considered and
Fresh
Air,
CNN, and
The Washington Post.
The New York Times alone ran three
articles on the
Report before its debut, and has made
repeated references to
The Colbert Report since then.
Maureen Dowd, for instance, referred to
Colbert's "Dead To Me" board as a metaphor in her column, saying
that
Oprah Winfrey "should take a page
from Stephen Colbert and put the slippery
James Frey on her 'Dead to me' list".
The Colbert Report drew 1.13 million viewers for its
premiere episode, 47 percent greater than the average for that time
slot over the previous four weeks, and 98 percent of the viewership
of
The Daily Show, which has Comedy Central's
second-largest viewership. Averaged over its opening week,
The
Report had 1.2 million viewers per episode, more than double
the average for the same time the previous year, when the time slot
was occupied by
Too Late
with Adam Carolla. The premiere week of
The Colbert
Report also coincided with the second-highest-rated week of
The Daily Show, behind the week leading up to the
2004 U.S. presidential
election.
The Colbert Report rapidly became an internet phenomenon,
with a vast number of clips from the show being posted onto
YouTube by fans. Subsequently references to
YouTube were made in jokes on the show, which also launched the
first "
green screen
challenge". On October 27, 2006, however,
Comedy Central asserted its copyright over
The Colbert Report clips, and YouTube removed all clips
over 5 minutes in length. In February 2007, at
Viacom's request, they removed all remaining
Colbert Report clips. Clips of every episode of the show
can now be found at
Colbert Nation.com, as well as recent episodes on the
show's page on
hulu.com.
Presented as non-satirical journalism
Tom DeLay Legal Defense Trust
In May 2006, the
Tom DeLay Legal Defense
Trust posted a video of
The Colbert Report on its website
and sent out a mass email urging DeLay supporters to watch how
"Hollywood liberal"
Robert
Greenwald "crashed and burned . . . when promoting his new
attack on Tom DeLay." The video featured Colbert asking questions
such as, "Who hates America more, you or
Michael Moore?" The Trust's email describes
its content as "the truth behind Liberal Hollywood's"
film about DeLay,
and characterizes the
Colbert Report clip with the
headline, "Colbert Cracks the Story on Real Motivations Behind the
Movie." On June 8, 2006, Colbert responded by conducting an
"Exclusive Fake Interview" on his show with DeLay. Three different
interviews with DeLay on different networks were spliced for
humorous effect, and Colbert ended the "interview" by saying "I do
hope you enjoyed my manipulation of your words." DeLay has since
appeared as a guest on the program.
Robert Wexler
On
July 25, 2006, Colbert responded to television
networks—specifically Fox News, NBC's
The Today Show and
ABC's Good Morning
America—which took comments made by Florida
Congressman Robert
Wexler on The Colbert Report out of context (e.g.: "I
enjoy cocaine and the company of prostitutes because they are a fun
thing to do."). Wexler, who ran unopposed in the
then-upcoming election, made the comments in response to urging by
Colbert that he "say some things that would really lose the
election for [Wexler] if [Wexler] were contested.". Colbert
effectively criticized the major networks' morning news shows that
featured the interview in a misleading and a very negative light,
by showing clips from many of the "fluff" pieces they favored
instead of "real" news. Colbert subsequently told his viewers to
"vote Wexler, the man's got a sense of humor, unlike, evidently,
journalists."
Awards
Arts honors
In 2006,
The Colbert Report was nominated for four
Emmys, one more than its parent,
The Daily Show. However,
The Colbert
Report lost two of its Emmy opportunities to
The Daily
Show—Colbert received one as a then-member of
The Daily
Show's writing staff. Colbert also lost Outstanding Individual
Performance In A Variety Or Music Program to
Barry Manilow, who was nominated for a
one-time
PBS special, as Colbert jokingly noted
while presenting an Emmy later that night. Manilow later appeared
on the show to sign a peace treaty with Colbert, in which they
agreed to
joint custody of the award.
The two then sang a duet of Manilow's song "
I Write the Songs".
The show was nominated for:
- Outstanding Directing For A Variety, Music Or Comedy Program,
Episode #110
- Outstanding Individual Performance In A Variety Or Music
Program, Stephen Colbert
- Outstanding Variety,
Music Or Comedy Series
- Outstanding Writing For A Variety, Music Or Comedy Program
Additionally, the show was nominated for two
Television Critics
Association Awards: Outstanding Individual Achievement in
Comedy (Stephen Colbert), and Outstanding New Program of the Year.
The Colbert Report was also nominated for
Satellite Awards in two categories in 2005
and 2006: Actor in a Series, Comedy or Musical (Stephen Colbert),
and Television Series, Comedy or Musical. It was also given a
Special Recognition award at the
2007 GLAAD Media Awards.
In 2007,
The Colbert Report was nominated for four Emmys
for the second consecutive year, in the same categories as in 2006.
Not only did none of the nominations result in an award for the
second straight year, that year's winner for Outstanding Individual
Performance was another singer,
Tony
Bennett. Likewise, Bennett eventually sang with Colbert on the
program. In 2008,
The Colbert Report won the
Producers Guild of America Award
for "Best Live Entertainment/Competition Show".
In April 2008,
The Colbert Report received a
George F. Peabody
Award recognizing its excellence in news and entertainment.
This award was last seen being eaten by the
Cookie Monster during an interview on the
Report.
In 2008,
The Colbert Report was again nominated for four
Emmys for the third consecutive year, and for the same four
categories as listed above and won for Outstanding Writing For A
Variety, Music, Or Comedy.
In 2009, the Best Individual Performance in a Variety or Music
Program category was eliminated.
Other honors
Colbert has received several other honors and distinctions.
Colbert
announced on his March 28, 2006 show that he had been contacted by
San
Francisco Zoo
officials seeking his permission to name an
unhatched bald eagle after him.
The eagle, affectionately dubbed Stephen Jr. on
The
Report, was bred to be reintroduced into the wild, as a part
of the zoo's California Bald Eagle Breeding Program. Colbert
celebrated the chick's birth on the April 17, 2006, program, and
has since given updates on the bird's development. He has
criticized the bird for migrating to Canada, and has attempted to
lure him back to the U.S. On December 24, 2008, Stephen Jr. (tag
A-46) was photographed at the Lower Klamath National Wildlife
Refuge on the California/Oregon border.
Colbert
received an honorary doctorate in fine arts from Knox
College
, Illinois
on June 3, 2006; his credit as producer has been
listed since that time as "Dr. Stephen T. Colbert,
D.F.A."
On
September 30, 2006, the Saginaw
Spirit, an OHL hockey team
in Saginaw
, Michigan
, named its co-mascot Steagle Colbeagle the Eagle in
honor of Colbert, despite the fact that it was
spotted holding a Canadian flag during the anthem.
Before the introduction of the mascot, the team record was 0-3-0-1,
but once the Steagle was introduced, the team improved their record
to 44-21-0-3 by the season's end, before losing in the first round
of the playoffs.
On January 27, 2007, Oshawa,
Ontario
declared March 20 of that year (John Gray's
birthday) Stephen Colbert Day after mayor John Gray bet Colbert
that the Oshawa Generals would beat
the Spirit, and Saginaw won 5-4.
In 2007, the
ice cream company
Ben and Jerry's announced a new flavor of
ice cream,
Stephen
Colbert's Americone Dream (available only in the United
States). The flavor is described as "a decadent melting pot of
vanilla ice cream with fudge-covered waffle cone pieces and a
caramel swirl." The company's founders appeared on the show on
March 5, 2007 to discuss the ice cream and to plug their
"grassroots education and advocacy project",
TrueMajority.
On March 12, 2007, the Editor-in-Chief of
Marvel Comics,
Joe
Quesada, awarded Stephen Colbert the
shield of the recently deceased
superhero
Captain America. The
letter to Colbert accompanying the shield stated that "
the Star-Spangled Avenger has bequeathed...
his indestructible shield to the only man he believed to have the
red, white, and blue balls to carry the mantle." Colbert promised
to use the shield "only to fight for justice…and to impress girls."
It was, in fact, one of only two full-sized prop shields which had
previously been kept in the Marvel offices. In the latter part of
March 2007, Drexel University named a
leatherback turtle in honor of Colbert in
their Great Turtle Race. "Stephanie Colburtle the
Leatherback Turtle" came in second place,
losing to a turtle named Billie.
On August 22, 2007,
Richard Branson,
who was being interviewed as a guest, announced that one of his
Virgin America aeroplanes would be named Air Colbert. Colbert
announced on April 2, 2008, during a ThreatDown segment, that the
plane had been grounded after one of its engines was damaged by a
bird strike.
On June
24, 2008, Dr. Jason Bond, an associate
professor with the Department of Biology at East Carolina University
, appeared on the show because he agreed to name a
trapdoor spider after Stephen Colbert. They negotiated over
what kind of spider would be named after Stephen, and Colbert told
the professor that they would "settle this in the next couple of
weeks". During the interview, the visual approximation of Bond
changed between different pictures depicting
Spider-Man, including
Tobey Maguire (the actor who played Spider-Man
in the films) and costumed people/animals. The spider was
officially announced on August 6 as the
Aptostichus
stephencolberti.
Time magazine's James
Poniewozik named it one of the Top 10 Returning Series of 2007,
ranking it at #7.
Colbert has appeared on the covers of several major magazines,
including
Wired,
Rolling Stone,
Esquire,
and
Newsweek, in which he was the Guest Editor.
On January 29, 2008, Marvel Comics president
Joe Quesada announced that Colbert's fictional
campaign for the presidency was still active in the Marvel
universe, references to which have appeared in Marvel comics since.
Colbert appears on the cover of
Amazing Spider-Man
#573.
On
October 17, 2008, it was announced that the portrait of Stephen
from his second year of The Colbert Report was accepted
into the national portrait collection at the National
Museum of American History
for its November reopening.
On
October 21, during the appearance of Patrick
Henry College
chancellor, Michael
Farris, Stephen was presented with the honorary title of
Arbiter of American Morality and Defender of the Vast Right-Wing
Conspiracy.
At the end of 2008,
The Colbert Report was named the
number one television series of that year by
Entertainment Weekly.
During the sweepstakes for naming the new wing on the
International Space Station,
Stephen Colbert announced on his show that there was a write-in
section where you could write your own suggestion for a name in. He
encouraged his fans to write in "Colbert". When the sweepstakes was
over, NASA announced that "Colbert" had beaten their top choice by
four times as many votes on March 11, 2009.
On April 15, 2009, NASA announced that instead of the new module
being named after him, a treadmill onboard the space station would
be called the Combined Operational Load Bearing External Resistance
Treadmill (COLBERT).
Cultural impact
Syndication
Outside of the United States,
The Colbert Report is shown
on the broadcast network
CTV
and
The Comedy Network in Canada,
the same day it airs in the US. Additionally, all four episodes
from the week prior air from 12:00am to 2:00am in a early Monday
block on
A.
It airs
on The Comedy Channel in
Australia, Comedy Central
in New Zealand, and on Maxxx in the Philippines
. It was broadcast on FX in the United Kingdom
until they decided not to renew their contract in
May 2009. The show also has a strong following in
Ireland.
Beginning June 3, 2008,
The Colbert Report also aired on
the Showcomedy channel of
Showtime
Arabia, a channel which broadcasts in the
Middle East and
North
Africa. The show is transmitted on a one-day delay from
original transmission in the US.
Several international markets also air
The Colbert Report
Global Edition, which shows highlights from the previous
week's shows and includes a special introduction by Stephen Colbert
at the start of the program.
In addition most recent episodes (usually 3 weeks back) are
available in full length on colbertnation.com.
DVDs
A DVD of highlights from the first two seasons of
The Colbert
Report was released by Comedy Central on November 6, 2007.
Entitled
The Best of
The Colbert Report, the three-hour disc contains two "The
Wørd" segments (including "Truthiness" from the first episode and
"Wikiality"), one "Threat Down", various "Better Know a District"
segments (including Robert Wexler), and interviews with Bill
O'Reilly,
Willie Nelson, and
Jane Fonda (also included is Fonda's appearance
with
Gloria Steinem in a segment
called "Cooking with Feminists"), as well as the special segments
"Green Screen Challenge", "Stephen Jr. - Flight of a Patriot",
"Indecision 2006: Midterm Midtacular", and Colbert's
"Meta-Free-Phor-All" with Sean Penn.
Best Buy sold the DVD with a bonus disc
containing several animated
Tek
Jansen adventures.
The hour-long special
A Colbert
Christmas: The Greatest Gift of All! was released on DVD
November 25, 2008.
iTunes music
Comedy Central released The Complete Soundtrack of
A Colbert
Christmas: The Greatest Gift of All featuring songs by such
performers as
Feist,
John Legend,
Willie
Nelson,
Toby Keith,
Jon Stewart,
Elvis
Costello, and
Colbert himself.
I Am America (And So Can You!)
A "pure extension" of the show in book form, titled
I Am
America (And So Can You!), was released on October 9, 2007.
Written by Stephen Colbert and
The Colbert Report writers,
the book covers Colbert's opinions on a wide array of topics that
he has no time to address on the show. Red
margin notes appear throughout the book, providing
humorous reactions and counterpoints to Colbert's arguments in a
style comparable to the
Report's Wørd segment. The book
draws some influence from the literary endeavors of the character's
pundit models, such as
Bill
O'Reilly's
The O'Reilly
Factor (2000) and
Sean
Hannity's
Deliver Us From Evil (2004), which Colbert says he
"forced" himself to read as a reference.
See also
Notes
- [1]
- [2]
- [3]
- [4]
- http://www.metacritic.com/tv/shows/colbertreport
- http://www.hulu.com/the-colbert-report
- Emmy Roundup 2008
- A Colbert report: Bald eagle Stephen Jr. sighted in
Oregon | Seattle Times Newspaper
- Poniewozik, James; Top 10 New TV Series;
time.com
- Colbert,
Stephen (October 16, 2007). "Meet the Author" podcast. Retrieved on
2007-10-27.
References
- 'Daily Show' Correspondent Readies 'The Colbert
Report': National Public Radio's Robert Siegel interviews Stephen
Colbert, National Public
Radio, May 4, 2005
- 'Daily Show' Personality Gets His Own Platform,
The New York Times, May
4, 2005
- TV's Newest Anchor: A Smirk in Progress,
The Washington Post,
October 10, 2005
- The News Is Funny, as a Correspondent Gets His Own
Show, The New York
Times, October 12, 2005
- Zap2it Colbert interview October 15, 2005
- The
Colbert Factor: The Daily Show's senior bloviator gets a desk of
his own, Slate, October 18, 2005
- Comedy's Colbert Report Gets 1.13 Mil. Viewers, Mediaweek, October 18, 2005
- 'Daily Show' alum scores with a slap at talking
heads, The
Philadelphia Inquirer, October 19, 2005
- Colbert brings real wit to mock punditry ,
Detroit News, October 20,
2005
- The wit and sense of 'Colbert Report': Show is
smart, funny and a logical offshoot, Media Life, October 20,
2005
- 'The Colbert Report' succeeds as comedy, opened
with strong ratings and seems destined for a long run. What does that tell us about the news
business?, Newsweek, October
21, 2005
- Egomaniacal satirist broadcasts Stewart
spinoff, Daily Orange,
October 21, 2005
- 'Colbert', Cartoons Break Big for Comedy
Central , zap2it.com, October 24, 2005
- Bringing Out the Absurdity of the News,
The New York Times,
October 25, 2005 (misreports first Word of the Day as "Trustiness";
later publishes a correction, reports that it should have been
"Truthiness")
- Colbert Report comes north Nov. 7, Toronto
Star, October 31, 2005
- Group wants hall named for Colbert, The
Pitt News, January 7, 2007
External links