The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Stephen Colbert, Trevor Noah bid adieu to Trump: ‘America just got a brand-new dad’

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STEPHEN Colbert shed plenty of tears on Wednesday, he confessed to viewers of ‘The Late Show,’ as he always does when he feels happy. But he had little to relish while watching outgoing president Donald Trump depart the White House that morning.

“It was extremely emotional, and not entirely in the way that I expected,” Colbert said during a special live monologue. “I have zero gloat in me. There is no end zone dance here. What I feel is enormous relief.”

That long-awaited release, though, did not mean the punchlines were over just yet.

After four-plus years of relentless­ly bashing Trump, Colbert and his fellow latenight hosts used their shows Wednesday to roast the outgoing president’s exit with one last round of jokes, homing in on his flurry of last-minute pardons and unapologet­ic departing words, as they also celebrated President Joe Biden’s ascent to the White House.

“Well, you did it,” Colbert told viewers, putting his tongue to his cheek. “You survived the last four years and your reward? A shiny, new, old president.”

On ‘Jimmy Kimmel Live!,’ the ABC comic opened with footage of people around the world excitedly counting down the new year, passing it off as tape of them watching Trump climb into Air Force One, ready to depart Washington.

“I have to imagine this is what it feels like when the oncologist calls and tells you the tumour is benign,” Kimmel quipped. “Today, this country showed the world that there is no MyPillow large enough to smother our democracy.”

Trevor Noah, too, mentioned that something felt different in the air on Wednesday, even if he was still inside the same home TV studio he has occupied since the start of the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“The sun was shining, the birds were singing, and McDonald’s share price in Florida just went way up,” he said, laying into Trump’s well-known love of fastfood, ‘because America just got a brand new dad.’

But before Biden could be sworn in, Noah noted, Trump had to spend one last day in the White House attending to business. Besides ‘whining and stealing silverware,’ the departing president ‘made sure to hand out some very nice parting gifts to all his friends’ – more than 140 pardons to longtime allies like Stephen Bannon and celebritie­s like Lil Wayne.

Despite some speculatio­n that Trump might extend a pre-emptive pardon to himself following the Jan 6 riots at the US Capitol, White House advisers eventually convinced him such a move would amount to an unnecessar­y admission of guilt.

Noah, however, saw it differentl­y. “Even President Trump looked at Donald Trump’s record and decided, ‘Man, I can’t let this guy off that easy,’” he said. Like the ‘The Daily Show’ host, a number of other TV comics also roasted Trump for the final words of his departure speech Wednesday morning at Joint Base Andrews: “So, have a good life,” Trump said. “We will see you soon.”

“Have a good life? That’s not a presidenti­al farewell,” Seth Meyers told his viewers. “That’s what your high school crush writes in your yearbook as a final twist of the knife.”

As many television critics have argued, Trump did not prove to be the boon for liberal comics that some expected. TV writers have admitted that the former president irreparabl­y altered the genre of late-night comedy, with antics so absurd or troublesom­e that they surpassed the point of mockery.

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