Colbert on the set of The Late Show, 2015
"Joy is the most infallible sign of the existence of God."— Stephen Colbert (the actual person)
"Reality has a well-known liberal bias."— Stephen Colbert (the character)
Stephen Colbert did not believe in books. They're all fact and no heart. (You may think
he wrote one
, but it's just a transcription of what he hollered into a tape recorder. Over a three day weekend, no less.) A staunch supporter of
George W. Bush and devoted admirer of
Bill O'Reilly, Colbert lambasted the
liberal elite four nights a week on
The Colbert Report from 2005 to 2014. He is now immortal.
Okay, Stephen Tyrone Colbert (born May 13, 1964) is
actually an improvisational comedian and political satirist. Best known for lampooning
bull-headed conservatives as host of the
The Colbert Report after being a popular correspondent for
The Daily Show from 1997 to 2005 (the show's longest-serving correspondent until Samantha Bee broke his record in 2012), the massive success of that series led to his
taking over the reins of
The Late Show in September 2015 following the retirement of
David Letterman.
Between Colbert's
Daily Show run and years on the
Report, he and
Jon Stewart spent fifteen straight years as the greatest late-night comedy duo in the nation (and many would say the world). Between airing sister shows back-to-back for nine straight years, Stephen's six-year run as the acknowledged best correspondent on
The Daily Show, co-hosting the Rally to Restore Sanity and/or Fear in 2010, their epic SuperPAC shenanigans in 2011/2012, and co-anchoring eight consecutive "Indecision" election specials,
you really can't separate these two.
note You really can't. The Report was, during its final episode, revealed to have been just one long Daily Show segment.While there are many similarities between Stephen Colbert the man and "
Stephen Colbert" the character, there is a stark difference in that the character was, in Colbert's own words, "a well-intentioned, poorly informed,
high-status idiot."
Oh, and Colbert is also known for that time he was invited to be
the featured entertainer at the 2006 White House Correspondents' Association Dinner
and, instead of providing typical light-hearted fare, comedically savaged President George W. Bush and the press to their faces, all in his show persona. ("I stand by this man. I stand by this man because he stands for things. Not only for things, he stands
on things. Things like aircraft carriers and rubble and recently flooded city squares. And that sends a strong message, that no matter what happens to America, she will always rebound — with the most powerfully staged photo ops in the world.")
His performance was an internet sensation, and the audio recording became the #1 album on iTunes, remaining a top download for months. New York Times columnist Frank Rich called Colbert's performance a defining moment leading up to the 2006 midterm elections, when the Democrats became the majority party in Congress. Colbert himself has said he did not necessarily mean to make a huge political statement, but only intended to be funny (although obviously for a different audience than the dinner coordinators would have liked), and did not realize how strongly his performance resonated until speaking with awed coworkers the next day. Despite all this, Colbert's performance initially got very little media attention, with many major news outlets like
The New York Times not even mentioning him in their day-after report on the Dinner. The mainstream media was widely criticized for this, seeing as the media itself was a major target for Colbert's mockery and thus the muted coverage was seen as self-serving.
On Sept. 24, 2010, having been invited to appear by committee chairwoman Rep. Zoe Lofgren,
Colbert testified before Congress, IN CHARACTER, at the House Judiciary Subcommittee Hearing on Immigration and Farm Labor.
He did
drop character at one point, when asked by Rep. Judy Chu
why he felt this issue was important.
Colbert eventually grew tired of maintaining his fictional persona and was considering ending the
Report when a call came in about a new job opportunity. In 2014, CBS announced that Colbert would succeed
David Letterman as host of
The Late Show in 2015. Colbert confirmed that
The Late Show (unlike his Congressional testimony) would not be performed in-character, but he does continue to make political commentary from behind his new desk.
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert premiered on September 8, 2015.
note Where Colbert goeth, Stewart is sure to follow; Jon Stewart is an executive producer on The Late Show. And ne'er the twain shall part.Colbert came up in comedy through improv at
The Second City in Chicago (he even guest-starred on two episodes of the US version of the improv show
Whose Line Is It Anyway?) while slowly but surely leaving behind his ambitions to be a serious actor. (Thank God.) There he met lifelong friends Paul Dinello and
Amy Sedaris, with whom he co-created and co-starred in
Strangers with Candy. He also did considerable voice acting in
Harvey Birdman, Attorney at Law, and was the voice of Ace in
Saturday Night Live's The Ambiguously Gay Duo (fellow future Daily Show star
Steve Carell was the voice of Gary). Even less known is his work on the short-lived
The Dana Carvey Show and the even more obscure sketch show
Exit 57. There's also performance as President Hathaway in
Monsters vs. Aliens; he worked with
DreamWorks again for
Mr. Peabody & Sherman. His
Middle-earth expertise also earned him a
cameo in
The Hobbit: The Desolation of Smaug, followed by an exclusive on his interview with Smaug himself.
Officially
One of Us and
unashamedly so. When
Viggo Mortensen was a guest on
The Daily Show, Jon Stewart played a recording of Colbert reciting
the many names of Aragorn. (In addition, Mortensen had had a set of chocolates shaped like
Lord of the Rings characters sent to Colbert's office, and Stewart's receiving this news was essentially speculating on how powerful a
Nerdgasm Colbert would have). When CNN misused an image of the Balrog on 6/6/06, he proceeded to rattle off a list of references to
The Silmarillion without even using notes. Colbert also keeps a set of
polyhedral dice in his desk at
The Colbert Report and is the current keeper of
Captain America's mighty shield (delivered after Steve Rogers'
short-lived death) and
Andúril (gifted to him by Aragorn himself). Get behind this man on the battlefield. He also won the popular vote in the 2008 election (in the Marvel universe). After
being knighted by the Queen of Jordan with Andúril his full name has been expanded to
Sir Dr. Stephen T. Colbert
D.F.A. He has given "a shout out to all [his]
bronies." (Before he admitted he had no idea what it meant, looked it up, and promptly took it back.) Finally, he declared that he was the new First Lady of France after French President Hollande's sex scandal resulted in the seats being rearranged at a White House function so that Colbert was in the former First Lady's chair.
Oh, and he's also a practicing Roman Catholic who teaches Sunday school on the weekends. He can call up Bible verses in
Latin at the drop of a hat, recite the Nicene Creed, the Ten Commandments, and a truly staggering amount of Catholic trivia from memory
note seen on the Report and again on the Late Show, and calmed down the notoriously interview-shy
Jack White by engaging him in a Catholic trivia contest. On
The Late Show, Pope Francis' 2015 visit to the USA occasioned a positive barrage of Catholic jokes, as well as more serious discussions with an all-Catholic panel on issues of faith vs. social progressivism and the meaning of being an American Catholic in the present day.
He is also known for coining the words 'truthiness' and 'wikiality', as well as the
Colbert Bump.
He has been one of the biggest critics of President Donald Trump and is not afraid to cuss out the President on national television.
- A TV show
- Another TV show
- Steagle Colbeagle the Eagle (a hockey mascot)
- Stephen Jr. (a bald eagle)
- Stelephant Colbert (an elephant seal)
- Stephanie Colburtle the Turtle (a turtle)
- Aptostichus stephencolberti (a species of trapdoor spider)
- Agaporomorphus colberti (a species of diving beetle, named for him as a birthday present)
- Diamphipnoa colberti
(a species of stonefly, never mentioned on the show) - Colbert (a stuffed moose, formerly named Ebersol, ridden by both him and Bob Costas during the Vancouver "'010" Olympics; unfortunately had to be re-renamed after going to NBC's archives since it and Comedy Central are rivals)
- Not a bridge in Hungary
- although he did win the online contest to decide the name, the Hungarian ambassador to the U.S. appeared on his show, and told him that, in Hungary, bridges can only be named after dead people, as well as fluency in Hungarian. Colbert nonetheless demonstrated that he knew that "híd" was Hungarian for "bridge." - A treadmill (not a toilet) on the International Space Station, the "Combined Operational Load Bearing External Resistance Treadmill" (C.O.L.B.E.R.T.). We believe that that puts NASA in the lead when it comes to insane acronyms, surpassing Aperture Science.
- The first of Richard Branson's airplanes upon expanding the Virgin brand to Virgin Atlantic as well. Once made an emergency landing due to birdstrike. Geese are On Notice.
- A Ben & Jerry's ice cream: "Stephen Colbert's Americone Dream".note For the record, it's vanilla ice cream with a caramel swirl, filled with chocolate chips and bits of chocolate covered waffle cone. And it is delicious. And it's certainly better than Jimmy Fallon's "Late Night Snack".