Los Angeles Times

Politician­s are still fair game

Colbert signals he’ll keep speaking truth to power. What about truthiness?

- By Scott Collins

Back in his Comedy Central days, Stephen Colbert acquired a reputation: Sometimes politician­s would go on his show and wind up getting hurt — or at least looking silly.

So what does it mean now that Colbert has taken over as host of CBS’ “The Late Show,” which premiered Tuesday night? Would he still skewer the pompous and the confused, as he did to fans’ delight on “The Colbert Report”? Or would his new CBS slot force him to go tame?

From the evidence on Tuesday’s show, it looks as though politician­s still have reason to fear.

GOP presidenti­al candidate Jeb Bush, struggling in the polls, turned up for an interview that did nothing to dispel rival Donald Trump’s

withering put-down that Bush is “low energy.”

Even before Tuesday evening’s show, Bush and Colbert were involved in a weird online meta-feud over the fate of a promotiona­l ticket to Tuesday’s show, which set the stage for their eventual meeting.

When Colbert asked whether Bush would do anything about a political world that has become “blood sport,” Bush answered with a vague appeal: “We have to restore a degree of civility.” He also (gently) criticized his brother, former President George W. Bush, for not reining in Republican spending during his final years in the White House.

The host ribbed Bush after the former Florida governor drew only lukewarm applause with an attack line on President Obama (who doesn’t have “bad intentions” but is just wrong about almost everything, according to Bush).

Worst of all was when Colbert started on Bush’s much-ridiculed campaign slogan, “Jeb!”

“It connotes excitement,” Bush explained, as Colbert and his audience burst into laughter.

Colbert was most in his element, though, when making fun of Trump, the brash real-estate tycoon and reality-TV star who has become the unlikely Republican front-runner.

“I will be covering all the presidenti­al candidates who are Donald Trump,” Colbert assured his studio audience.

After he played news video of Trump inviting a woman at a speech to touch the top of his head, Colbert cracked that Trump had proved that what was on top of his head was real but that “now it’s up to science to decide whether or not it’s hair.”

On the other hand, nothing on the first Colbert show for CBS was anywhere near as scathing as Colbert’s notorious 2006 White House Correspond­ents’ Assn. dinner address, in which he pilloried the Bush administra­tion — as the president sat nearby.

And the Colbert fear was most assuredly bipartisan. Rahm Emanuel, then chairman of the Democratic caucus in the House, reportedly warned his fellow party members in 2007 to steer clear of “The Colbert Report,” in which the host played a conservati­ve blowhard TV star in love with himself.

Will those days of “truthiness” — a buzzword that Colbert popularize­d — return?

Time will tell. But Colbert said he has already made a big change for his arrival on broadcast TV.

“I used to be play a conservati­ve narcissist­ic talk show host,” he informed Jeb Bush on Tuesday.

“Now,” Colbert said, “I’m just a narcissist.”

 ?? Jeffrey R. Staab CBS ?? “THE LATE SHOW” host Stephen Colbert with guest Jeb Bush on Tuesday.
Jeffrey R. Staab CBS “THE LATE SHOW” host Stephen Colbert with guest Jeb Bush on Tuesday.

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