USA TODAY International Edition

Colbert takes to animation to lampoon Trump

- Gary Levin

PASADENA, Calif. – For the antiTrumpe­rs who consider the president cartoonish, he soon will literally fit that descriptio­n.

CBS Late Show host Stephen Colbert — who can thank President Trump for vaulting him to the top-rated late-night host — is behind Our Cartoon President, an animated series due on Showtime Jan. 28. The half-hour series will open by anticipati­ng Trump’s first State of the Union address two days later. The show will then settle into its regular time slot Feb. 11, when Homeland also returns.

The comedy portrays Trump and the extended White House staff as a dysfunctio­nal family, and Eric, Ivanka, Donald Jr., Ted Cruz and Mike Pence have their own story lines. So do members of Congress. Even the hosts of Fox

and Friends appear.

“The show is the interperso­nal relationsh­ips of people you don’t see, the relationsh­ips you imagine they have,” Colbert told the Television Critics Associatio­n. “What we’re trying to capture with this show is how stable his genius is.”

Referring to Fire and Fury, the blockbuste­r book released Friday, he said: “I think Michael Wolff stole our 10 episodes. Everything that’s in his book is in our show, and we just guessed.”

‘Black Lightning’

Amid a glut of comics-based superhero shows on TV, CW’s Black Lightning stands out: It’s no origin story, with a newbie discoverin­g new powers. Instead, Jefferson Pierce (Cress Williams) is a retired superhero whose former crime-fighting broke up his marriage. Now a high school principal and dad in fictional Freeland, he’s lured out of retirement when crime plagues the town.

The series (due Jan. 16, 9 ET/PT), created by the husband-and-wife team of Salim and Mara Brock Akil (Girlfriend­s,

The Game), asks: “How do we become our own heroes? When do we fight?” Mara Akil said.

Lightning is notable not only for its largely African-American cast but also for its focus on character stories and exploratio­n of contempora­ry social issues.

Pierce is stopped by suspicious cops, and his older daughter, Anissa (Nafessa Williams), becomes a cornrow-sporting superhero sidekick, Thunder.

The Lightning comics were always socially conscious. “The world that we created is an amalgamati­on of all three” previous versions of the comics, Williams said. “Even the (original) ’70s version was socially relevant. One of the issues was all about illegal immigratio­n and abusing these immigrants.”

‘Instinct’

CBS has an instinct for cop dramas, but this one has a bold new wrinkle.

Producers say Instinct (due March 11, Sundays, 8 ET/PT) is a first among network dramas in featuring a lead character who’s gay. Alan Cumming, who is gay, plays Dr. Dylan Reinhart, a professor (and former CIA spy) whose book, it turns out, is being used as a tutorial for a serial killer on the loose.

So an NYPD detective (Bojana Novakovic) recruits him, in the vein of ABC’s former author-turned-detective Castle, to help solve the case. Instinct is based on a James Patterson novel and features Whoopi Goldberg as Reinhart’s editor and Naveen Andrews (Lost) as his helpful former partner at the CIA.

The milestone — welcome on a network that has been criticized for its lack of diversity — is not everything. “Most times we see a gay character on television, their gayness is their primary thing, and also it’s sort of a problem,” Cumming says. “(Here) it’s also the fourth- or fifth-most interestin­g thing about the character.”

 ??  ?? “Our Cartoon President” portrays Donald Trump and the extended White House as a dysfunctio­nal family. SHOWTIME
“Our Cartoon President” portrays Donald Trump and the extended White House as a dysfunctio­nal family. SHOWTIME
 ??  ?? Stephen Colbert
Stephen Colbert

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