THE STRANGE KABUKI THEATER OF THE LATE-NIGHT TALK SHOW
Why are late night show hosts like Kimmel, Fallon, and Colbert so bad? Even saying that they are not funny understates the magnitude of the problem. It has gotten to the point that what they do in front of an audience every night can’t even be defined as humor. It’s something else.
It’s a chimera of sorts, a mirror image of what humor is in the real world but lacking in essence. It’s as if an alien from outer space put on a human disguise and then tried to mimic humor without the ability to feel human emotion.
I am not talking about robotic delivery. I am talking about a show host force-feeding his audience a diet of what they expect to hear and an audience that feels obliged to go along with the gag — kabuki theater of sorts, done for show, not substance.
It all feels staged. A comedian must catch the audience off guard and as such cannot deliver jokes passed through the HR department for approval. What’s going on? Whatever it is, it’s why Greg Gutfeld in eating their late-night lunch.


Donald Trump made headlines this week by announcing the creation of
Then the anger of the Lord will be kindled against you, and he will shut up the heavens, so that there will be no rain, and the land will yield no fruit, and you will perish quickly off the good land that the Lord is giving you.








