USA TODAY International Edition

Late- night TV moves on ( somewhat) from Trump

- Kelly Lawler

From Jimmy Fallon to “SNL,” the 45th president’s name is still popping up in monologues.

For the past six years, late- night comedy had one prevailing theme: Donald Trump. ● From the beginning of his run for president in 2015 until his second impeachmen­t trial in February, the former president was a mainstay on the late- night scene. Hosts such as Jimmy Kimmel, Seth Meyers and Stephen Colbert built their shows and humor around outraged reactions to Trump’s actions, policies and – especially – his tweets. Jimmy Fallon tousled candidate Trump’s hair on “The Tonight Show,” and much later offered up his own criticisms. Samantha Bee and John Oliver shouted their outrage in long- form segments. “Saturday Night Live” saw ratings explode when Alec Baldwin was cast as Trump.

Yet three months into President Joe Biden’s first term, Trump no longer looms as large in the daily news or public consciousn­ess. So with Trump largely off the public stage, now what for late- night comedy?

The answer depends on the latenight show. The major hosts – Kimmel, Colbert, Meyers, James Corden and Fallon, and Fox News’ new conservati­ve- leaning Greg Gutfeld – aren’t giving up the ghost of Trump anytime soon.

Trump vs. Biden

Casual viewing of the major latenight shows in recent weeks guarantees a Trump joke or two.

Sometimes he comes up because he’s ( briefly) in the news. Trevor Noah sent “Daily Show” correspond­ent Jordan Klepper into the “MAGAverse” for a special. On CBS’ “Late Late Show,” Corden – reacting to a report that Republican allies might want to install Trump as the speaker of the House – cracked, “Yeah, because that’s what Trump’s good at: speaking.” Kimmel finds seemingly

any excuse to mention Trump on ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live,” from his ongoing feud with Trump backer and MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell ( a surreal war of words between Kimmel’s monologues and Lindell on his fledgling social media platform, Frank) to mocking Trump’s appearance­s on conservati­ve networks like Newsmax.

But hosts less inclined to bring up Trump on his own still find a way to compare his term in office to what Biden is ( or isn’t) doing. NBC’s “Late Night” host Meyers, joking about CNN losing viewers after Biden took office, said their biggest competitor is “a good night’s sleep,” just as the Weather Channel sees ratings tumble “after hurricane season is over.” Colbert compared Biden’s success increasing vaccine eligibilit­y for every American over 16 with Trump’s infamous suggestion that ingesting bleach would fight the coronaviru­s. “It’s a huge contrast from his predecesso­r, Voldemoron,” Colbert joked, without mentioning Trump by name. “Even under that guy’s most

optimistic projection­s, at this point, only one- third of U. S. adults would have received their government jug of bleach.”

Part of the reason that comedians are leaning on the crutch of a Trump vs. Biden joke is the lack of an overarchin­g theme for portraying Biden. Well, other than calling him old ( at 78, Biden was the oldest president to be sworn into office). Fallon called Biden’s plan to make vaccinatio­ns available to all American adults by this week “Operation Early Bird Special,” while Meyers joked that 120 years ago, Biden was “still in college.” And nearly every host had a field day with footage of the president tripping on his way to Air Force One.

It’s true: Biden is old. But there’s not enough meat on that joke to sustain the comics’ monologues five nights a week for 31⁄ years ( or longer). Falling back on

2 comparing Biden with Trump is easy. When Kimmel discussed Biden reaching his goal of 100 million vaccinatio­ns in his first 100 days in office, he said having a president who did what he promised was like being hustled at basketball. Later, when mentioning Biden’s first presidenti­al golf outing, Kimmel compared it with Trump’s 19th at this point in his presidency. “He was essentiall­y a senior player on the PGA tour who occasional­ly violated the Constituti­on.” He then went on to predict how Trump, if he wasn’t banned from Twitter, might tweet about Biden’s golf game.

Even Fallon, who has never been y comfortabl­e with political humor, seems to be holding onto Trump jokes as his “Tonight Show” inches back toward normalcy. He’s the first to welcome a ( reduced) studio audience since the onset of the pandemic over a year ago.

Fallon jumped on Trump calling his supporters to boycott Coca- Cola because of the company’s condemnati­on of Georgia’s restrictiv­e voting law, despite always having a bottle of Diet Coke on his desk. “But don’t worry, Trump fixed it by taking out a Sharpie and writing Pepsi,” Fallon said. It’s a far cry from the comedian who often seemed as if he mentioned Trump only because he had to, going through the motions of a passable impression after he had Trump as a guest during the 2016 campaign, which drew wide rancor.

Who is filling the Trump void?

There are clearly figures in absurd 2021 politics filling the void left in many comedians’ monologues.

“SNL” has relied on Cecily Strong’s impression of Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia. While there is humor in Greene’s views, when Strong shows up in her blond wig, you can feel the show falling back into old patterns: elevating the profile of fringe political figures because they seem more funny than serious.

The hosts who spent much of their time expressing anger and disgust at Trump have found new targets among other politician­s that remain in power. Besides Greene, there’s New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo; Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida, tarnished by a sex scandal; and Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin of West Virginia.

The names have changed, but the tone of the humor and outrage remains the same.

The best jokes might be outside politics

For those looking to remove Trump from their collective memories, some shows have chosen to find their humor elsewhere.

HBO’s “Last Week Tonight With John Oliver” and TBS’ “Full Frontal With Samantha Bee” mentioned Trump only as much as he was a part of to their topics of the week. If Trump wasn’t a part of Oliver’s dissection of the Brazilian elections or Bee’s examinatio­n of immigrants in the military, he didn’t come up.

Without skipping a beat, both shows have moved on to focusing their main segments on whatever they find most relevant and interestin­g. Bee, one of the few female voices in late night, did an excellent segment comparing the men’s and women’s NCAA basketball tournament­s in March. She also spent part of a recent show talking about the dangers of the space junk circling the planet, a compelling take on a topic no one else was discussing. Oliver has even longer segments, and his recent targets have been everything from the national debt to bankruptcy to meatpackin­g. Neither comic is better or worse without Trump jokes. They can make any topic work.

And when the rest of the comedians follow Bee and Oliver’s tactics, there is some great humor to be found.

When it skips political comedy, “SNL” is liberated. Recent episodes are relying less on stunt- casted guest stars and lines takenfrom political debates, and more on original ( and usually funnier) content. The series has had a surge of energy in its 2021 episodes. Helped by a superb run of hosts, “SNL” is simply less of a chore since Baldwin’s Trump wig was seemingly retired.

A post- Trump world is a time when sillier, less political comedians can thrive. Corden gets more mileage calling Oprah and joking about the pandemic.

“The sooner everyone gets vaccinated, the sooner we can all stop having this conversati­on,” Corden opined recently. “‘ Which one did you get?’ ‘ Pfizer.’ ‘ Cool.’ ‘ You?’ ‘ Moderna.’ ‘ Cool.’ Why do people do that? ... Like you give a ( expletive)!”

And that’s the thing – there is a lot more going on in the world that has nothing to do with Trump that’s worth talking and joking about. We’re close to getting out of a global pandemic, a historic trial has just concluded, a helicopter has flown on Mars and a thousand other tragedies and joys happen every day.

When Trump was in office he was a black hole, sucking nearly every story into his orbit, forcing his way into the news of the day. But now there is time and space to look at the wider world. Going back to Trump jokes isn’t just lazy, it’s a bit irresponsi­ble. While late- night comedians may no longer be universall­y beloved stewards of culture, they’re still ( mostly) men with big platforms and the ability to affect their audiences. And 2021 has a lot more for them than just Trump.

 ?? PROVIDED BY WILL HEATH/ NBC ?? Cecily Strong as Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene stopped by Weekend Update on “Saturday Night Live,” with Colin Jost, center, and Michael Che, to share her NSFW views on gender.
PROVIDED BY WILL HEATH/ NBC Cecily Strong as Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene stopped by Weekend Update on “Saturday Night Live,” with Colin Jost, center, and Michael Che, to share her NSFW views on gender.
 ?? PROVIDED BY SCOTT KOWALCHYK/ CBS ?? Stephen Colbert’s “A Late Show” has stopped referring to former President Donald Trump by name.
PROVIDED BY SCOTT KOWALCHYK/ CBS Stephen Colbert’s “A Late Show” has stopped referring to former President Donald Trump by name.
 ?? PROVIDED BY HBO ?? John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight” still does deep- dive topics but will mention Donald Trump only when he is relevant.
PROVIDED BY HBO John Oliver’s “Last Week Tonight” still does deep- dive topics but will mention Donald Trump only when he is relevant.

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