John Price
Gang Gang
- Sep 19, 2008
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I could dig Jon Stewart in that role.
He has a good thing going on Comedy Central where his show regularly destroys Fallon and Letterman
Why would he leave
I could dig Jon Stewart in that role.
I thought you were a Fallon guy.
Jerry Seinfeld would be the ideal replacement to cover a late-night TV show, IMO.
He has the look of a late night talk show host.
He seems well liked in the world of celebrity.
His jokes suck well enough for late night TV. At least in my eyes anyway I don't find Seinfeld really funny.
He has a good thing going on Comedy Central where his show regularly destroys Fallon and Letterman
Why would he leave
Sharpest wit in late night tv
The stuff he was doing/saying in the late 80's early 90's remains unsurpassed. For whatever reason though he's been a shadow of his former self for the better part of 20 years now.
Norm would be great but is way too beaten down, out of shape, and lazy to do anything with mass appeal right now)
Too true, but I can dream.That would be amazing. Letterman loves the guy too so he'd probably give him a ringing endorsement. Norm is too lazy to do it though.
I would guess contracts would preclude his availability, but what about Dan Patrick?
Is Tina Fey too tied to Lorne Michaels?
Chris Rock?
Ricky Gervais? (I'm kinda intrigued by this.)
Ferguson and Conan, of course.
Ellen kills on her show and is right where she belongs, IMO.
That would be amazing. Letterman loves the guy too so he'd probably give him a ringing endorsement. Norm is too lazy to do it though.
Stephen Colbert is a great choice
Comedy Central comedian Stephen Colbert is the top choice to replace longtime late night host David Letterman in 2015, Mashable reported Friday.
The "Colbert Report" host "has indicated that he's willing to take over the Late Show when the time comes," according to people familiar with discussions. He would be leaving behind his "conservative" persona should he take the helm at CBS.
The network has also discussed the matter with with Colbert's Comedy Central colleague, Jon Stewart, according to the report.
He would be leaving behind his "conservative" persona should he take the helm at CBS.