Stephen Colbert Turned Down a 5-Year Deal Before Late Show Cancellation

In late-night television, timing defines everything. A joke dies in two seconds, a legacy turns on a renewal offer that arrives one headline too soon, and the most decisive moves are made off-camera. In one such decision, Stephen Colbert turned down a five-year CBS deal before The Late Show was canceled.

Stephen Colbert declined a five-year contract with CBS

Stephen Colbert had rejected CBS’s offer of a five-year contract, designed to keep him behind the desk through 2031.

The beloved host recently added a twist to the story of CBS ending The Late Show With Stephen Colbert. He revealed that the network tried to sign him to a long-term deal less than two years before canceling the franchise.

During an interview with The New York TimesStephen Colbert shared that CBS had pushed for a renewal lasting “as long as five years” during 2023 negotiations. He instead signed a three-year extension, which will now end with The Late Show’s final episode on May 2, 2026.

The revelation complicates CBS’s claim that The Late Show ended for purely financial reasons. While broadcast late-night economics have worsened, Colbert’s reasoning appears to cast doubt on that narrative.

Notably, in 2022, ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel, also represented by James “Baby Doll” Dixon, extended his Disney contract through May 2026. Colbert’s decision to decline CBS’s five-year offer and align his term with Kimmel’s likely positioned both him and Dixon for greater leverage when the next round begins.

However, CBS announced last year that it would end The Late Show entirely after Colbert’s current season, closing out the franchise that David Letterman launched in 1993.

As of yet, Colbert isn’t planning beyond The Late Show while he’s still on air four nights a week. “The show takes like 95 percent of my brain,” he said. The 61-year-old further noted that he likely won’t consider new opportunities seriously until he gets “a little time to breathe.”

He is, however, co-writing a new The Lord of the Rings project for Warner Bros.

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