Stephen Colbert had barely been gone from television long enough for viewers to miss him before he found a way back onto the screen, and somehow the return felt perfectly suited to the strange, emotional, chaotic ending of his late-night era. Less than 24 hours after signing off from The Late Show, Colbert resurfaced not on another major network, not in a polished studio, and not with the careful atmosphere of a celebrity comeback, but on Only in Monroe, a public-access show from Monroe, Michigan, where the low-budget setting became part of the joke and part of the message.

“It’s been an excruciating 23 hours without being on TV,” Colbert joked, turning what could have been a quiet post-finale pause into one of the most unexpected television moments of the week. The line immediately framed the appearance as both ridiculous and revealing, because Colbert has always understood how to use absurdity to say something sharper. He was not pretending the end of The Late Show did not matter. He was taking the emotional weight of that goodbye and throwing it into the smallest, weirdest, most chaotic television playground he could find.
The move was not random. Colbert had appeared on Only in Monroe back in 2015 before taking over The Late Show, which made the surprise return feel like a strange full-circle joke inside his own television history. In 2015, the public-access episode functioned like a comic warm-up before the biggest job of his career. In 2026, it became something very different: a bizarre aftershock, a post-network victory lap, and maybe the first sign that Colbert was not ready to disappear simply because CBS had closed the curtain.

The episode quickly turned into a star-packed piece of controlled chaos. Jeff Daniels appeared and joined Colbert for a local-TV-style bit involving oddball Michigan charm, Jack White served as a kind of DIY musical presence, Eminem showed up in the madness, and Steve Buscemi appeared in a spoof ad that made the whole thing feel like late-night comedy had escaped from a major network and wandered into a community studio with no intention of behaving itself. (People)

What fans cannot stop talking about, however, is how quickly Colbert began turning the knives toward CBS. The jokes were funny, but they did not feel empty. After CBS canceled The Late Show, citing financial reasons, the decision remained controversial because it followed Colbert’s outspoken criticism of Paramount’s settlement involving Donald Trump, even though CBS insisted the cancellation was not political. That context made every jab land differently. A joke about corporate television did not sound only like a joke. It sounded like Colbert using the one weapon he has always used best: comedy with teeth.
The public-access format made the jokes even sharper. On CBS, Colbert had monologues, guests, writers, history, and the prestige of one of late night’s most famous stages. On Only in Monroe, he had the opposite: a tiny platform, local-TV awkwardness, rough edges, and the freedom to make the whole thing feel beautifully unhinged. That contrast became the point. If a network ending could take away the big desk, it could not take away the voice behind it.

By the end, the episode had moved from comeback stunt to something stranger and more symbolic. There were local jokes, fake ads, celebrity cameos, CBS references, and even reported set destruction that pushed the whole broadcast into surreal farewell-after-the-farewell territory. It felt less like Colbert trying to recreate The Late Show and more like him proving that late-night energy can survive outside the machine that once housed it.
For fans, the big question is whether this was just Colbert being funny or his first real message after leaving The Late Show. The answer may be both. Comedy has always been how Colbert processes power, disappointment, absurdity, and grief. His surprise return allowed him to laugh at his own sudden absence, poke at the network drama surrounding his exit, and remind viewers that he remains dangerous precisely because he knows how to turn a punchline into a statement.
In the end, Colbert’s 23-hour television absence became part of the bit. He left one of the most famous late-night stages in America, then came back on public access with famous friends, low-budget chaos, and enough sharpness to make the internet pay attention.
It was not just a comeback.
It was Stephen Colbert proving that even after the final curtain, he still knew how to swing.