The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

As Colbert exits, we must say farewell to his proxy

- Frazier Moore

NEW YORK — Dear Stephen, Before you go, I just had to add my voice to all the others in Colbert Nation. On Thursday at 11:30 p.m., you will end “The Colbert Report” after nine seasons of heroic truthiness. We will miss you like crazy.

I know, the flesh-andblood performer with whom you share your name, the man who night after night gave you life and comic bluster, is moving on to even greater stardom: hosting “Late Show” on CBS.

And we fans can rejoice that, starting sometime next year, we will feast on twice as much of that Stephen — a full hour nightly.

But he has made it plain you won’t be making the trip with him. You will no longer serve as his proxy. For that, Colbert Nation is bereft. We soon will be leaderless. I realize you started out not as a guru but a spoof. Back in 1997, you were created as a “senior correspond­ent” for Comedy Central’s “The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.”

Sparked by a messianic dose of certitude and hauteur, you both honored and lampooned Bill O’Reilly, the pundit who inspired you, and his Fox News Channel “Factor." You began with a bang your first night of the “Report” in October 2005. You noted how Americans are distressin­gly divided — but not between Republican­s and Democrats, or conservati­ves and liberals. Whereupon you introduced the word “truthiness.” At least you claimed to have coined that word, and it quickly caught on, even being named word of the year three months later by the American Dialect Society. Then, when an Associated Press story about the designatio­n failed to credit you, you began a tongue-in-cheek crusade, railing that the AP’s omission was a “journalist­ic travesty” akin to the muchcritic­ized reporting on weapons of mass destructio­n that led up to the Iraq War.

Keeping things truthy is a big part of your mission, as expressed on that long-ago opening night: “Anyone can read the news TO you. I promise to FEEL the news, AT you.”

And for nine years, you have made good on your vow. But there was more than feeling underneath it. Your doltish pronouncem­ents, once decoded for their satirical intent, served as some of TV’s shrewdest analysis of politics, global affairs and the media.

Fortunatel­y, “The Daily Show” — proudly billed as a “fake news show” that nonetheles­s delivers news at least as responsibl­y as many “real” newscasts — will carry on when you’re gone.

So will your fellow “Daily Show” alumnus John Oliver with his weekly HBO halfhour, “Last Week Tonight,” which focuses on often-overlooked Big Think issues adorned with laughs.

Stephen, you have been the product of a marathon of performanc­e art unmatched in TV history.

Whether working from a script or winging it, whether bloviating, interviewi­ng or even playing the activist, the man who gave you life was masterful in how he inhabited you, always staying in character — your “Stephen Colbert” character — with only a twinkle in his eye to let the audience know HE knew that most of what he uttered was purposeful absurdity.

Now he is shelving you, his magnificen­t invention, to relaunch himself as host of “Late Show.”

He will drop the invisible mask you provided. He no longer will be you. Which I why I wanted to tell you goodbye.

And say thanks.

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