‘Karma is a b*h’: TV Host Roasts the End of Stephen Colbert’s Career as CBS Pulls the Plug

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The Curtain Falls: Colbert’s Comedy Empire Crumbles

It’s official: the self-styled king of late-night snark, Stephen Colbert, is out. CBS has dropped the axe, announcing that “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” will end in May 2026. For millions of Americans, this is just another TV shakeup. But for Colbert’s critics—especially those who’ve suffered through his nightly left-wing sermons—it feels more like poetic justice.

No one is celebrating more gleefully than Sky News host Rita Panahi, who didn’t hold back as she delivered a scathing eulogy for Colbert’s career. “The unfunniest flog on television,” she declared, “has finally been sacked.” The subtext? Karma has come calling, and Colbert’s smug brand of activism-masquerading-as-comedy finally wore out its welcome.

Comedy or Crusade? The Activist Behind the Desk

Colbert’s show has always been a lightning rod. To his fans, he’s a sharp-tongued truth-teller. To his detractors, he’s a “Trump-deranged activist” who traded jokes for jeers, and punchlines for political vendettas. For years, CBS unleashed his nightly monologues on a dwindling audience, each episode a cocktail of progressive outrage and self-congratulation.

Panahi summed up the frustration: “How can you have so many writers and producers and consistently produce nothing but trash?” The numbers tell a similar story. With ratings sliding and losses topping $40 million a year, the network’s patience finally snapped.

A Show Built on Venom, Not Laughter

Let’s be honest: Colbert’s comedy was never for everyone. If you voted the wrong way, he lumped you in with the worst of humanity—racists, bigots, even Nazis. Half the country became the butt of the joke, night after night. And if you didn’t laugh? You just didn’t get it.

But even Colbert’s rare flashes of brilliance weren’t really his own. The show’s most memorable moment in years came courtesy of Jon Stewart, who torched the official narrative on COVID’s origins with a devastating bit of logic:

“There’s a novel respiratory coronavirus overtaking Wuhan, China. What do we do? Oh, you know who we could ask? The Wuhan novel respiratory coronavirus lab.”

Colbert squirmed, tried to pivot, but Stewart’s punchline landed. It was a rare moment of unscripted honesty—one that Colbert seemed desperate to shut down.

A Taste of His Own Medicine

It’s hard not to notice the irony. Colbert, who famously gloated when Fox News fired Tucker Carlson—“I feel like I just had the best pee of my entire life”—is now facing the same fate. The difference? There’s no studio audience cheering this time.

As Colbert announced the end of his show, his words were tinged with resignation:

“It’s not just the end of our show, but it’s the end of the Late Show on CBS. I’m not being replaced. This is all just going away.”

For Panahi and others, it’s a fitting end for a host who spent years mocking, belittling, and dividing. “Good riddance,” she said. “And as they say in the classics, karma is a…”

Expert Take: When Comedy Becomes a Lecture

Media analyst Mark Reynolds puts it bluntly:

“Colbert’s problem wasn’t just his politics. It’s that he stopped being funny. Late-night is supposed to be an escape, not a scolding. When you treat half your audience like the enemy, don’t be surprised when they tune out.”

TV historian Lisa Monroe agrees:

“Colbert’s legacy is a cautionary tale. He went from satirist to scold, and in the end, even his network couldn’t justify the cost.”

The End of an Era—and Maybe Something More

So what’s left? A once-great franchise reduced to a punchline. A host who mistook activism for entertainment. And a network, CBS, finally forced to admit that comedy without laughs isn’t worth the price.

As the lights dim on Colbert’s stage, one thing is clear: in television, as in life, karma really does have the last laugh. And for Stephen Colbert, that laugh came at his own expense.