The "Colbert Report" Behind The Scenes

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JAKE COYLE | June 9, 2008 12:01 AM EST | AP


In this April 9, 2008 file photo, Stephen Colbert is photographed at his office in New York. (AP Photo/ Jim Cooper, file)

NEW YORK — The walls of "The Colbert Report" studio are plastered with letters and artwork of the show's fearless leader submitted by loyal fans. In one painted portrait, Stephen Colbert, astride a horse, is substituted for George Washington.

Outside Colbert's office sits a brand new GPS system, which he had pleaded for on the show just days earlier. A publicist shrugs, "Ask and you shall receive."

Inside, Colbert's desk is surrounded by leftover props and gifts from guests _ a veritable record of the absurdity he's created from this place Jon Stewart calls "bizarro world."

This is where Colbert and his staff hatch plans for where they might next fling their bloviating, perpetually suit-clad creation. Like a malfunctioning heat-seeking missile, he might go anywhere.

Colbert may inject his character into politics and media, just as he might wind up in the Smithsonian or Canadian junior league hockey. He's created a kind of satire in action, teetering between his self-made universe and an often equally absurd real world. It's a constant balancing act that last year nearly had him on the road to the White House.

"The Report" recently aired its 400th episode. On June 16, he will stroll into the Waldorf-Astoria and accept the prestigious Peabody Award for his show. Colbert says he also expects to play the role of "kingmaker" in this year's election.

The race has already been swayed by "Saturday Night Live" (whose debate parody altered how the press covered Barack Obama), but the comedy of Colbert has a different effect. In his hall of mirrors, reflections may be distorted, but never unflattering. A study has even shown that his self-declared "Colbert bump," an upswing in popularity for a politician after appearing on the show, is largely factual.

The presidential candidates have already had to reconcile themselves to dealing with Colbert, and the presumptive nominees _ Barack Obama and John McCain _ would be wise to play along.

That's because Colbert doesn't demand a particular agenda of anyone, only the tacit, wink-wink acknowledgment that most any agenda _ and all the image-conscious apparatus behind it _ is a bit absurd, don't you think?

His particular talent is in blurring reality while at the same time illuminating it. In a world where kids on MySpace trumpet a cult of personality just as politicians do on the stump, his act has larger reverberations.

We all have a truthiness.

___

Hastily finishing a sandwich at his desk, Colbert is busy. Lining the wall to his right are index cards of segments that may or may not make the week's shows.

"Mostly I know what I'm doing today and tomorrow and have an idea about the day after that," he says. "And tomorrow might change and I'm not sure about tonight."

"The Colbert Report" debuted on Oct. 17, 2005 with what might still be its biggest success _ the coining of the term "truthiness." The term, which means a truth one feels in the gut rather than learns in books, was a home run in the first at bat that Colbert calls the "thesis statement" to everything that's followed.

"The Report" was then seen (and largely still is) as a parody of Bill O'Reilly's "The O'Reilly Factor" on Fox. While that was indeed the inspiration _ a satire of conservative political punditry _ anyone who's watched the show consistently knows that its tentacles of farce reach far beyond any simple spoof.

"People say, `Aren't you going to be sad when Bush goes?'" says Colbert. "No. The show is not about that. The show is not about O'Reilly. The show is not about the shout fest. The show is about what is behind those things, which is: What I say is reality. And that never ends. Every politician is going to want to enforce that, or every person in Hollywood _ every person."

The 43-year-old Colbert grew up in Charleston, S.C., the youngest of 11 children in a Catholic family. In 1974, his father and two of his brothers were killed in an airline crash. His mother, Lorna, recently said of her son on South Carolina public television network ETV, "I can never nail him down as to exactly what he is" _ which makes you wonder what hope the rest of us have.

In his nearly decade-long tenure, Colbert became a standout correspondent on "The Daily Show," and "The Report" was spun-off by Stewart's company, Busboy Productions.

"Stephen has such encyclopedic knowledge and I figured using himself as the foundation of a character like that, there was no question he could do this every day," says Stewart. "He was just ready. He wears that character so perfectly."

So far, Obama has appeared on "The Report" via satellite and Clinton has made a quick cameo, but McCain hasn't yet stopped by. His preferred Comedy Central visit is "The Daily Show," where he's guested 10 times.

A politician's appearance to "The Report" certainly comes with risks. In a sit-down interview, Colbert memorably _ and in a keen journalistic fashion _ asked Georgia Congressman Lynn Westmoreland, who had lobbied for the Ten Commandments to be displayed in government buildings, to name them. Westmoreland managed only two and got one wrong, while Colbert sat patiently counting.

Still, few lose when they enter Colbert World. Former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee's unlikely rise late in the Republican primaries could be partly attributed appearances on "The Report." Though viewership for the program is relatively small (it draws around 1.2 million nightly on average), Huckabee showed himself to have a better sense of humor than his competitors.

The presidential run in South Carolina was the comedian's ultimate attempt to inject himself into the news, and many pundits and politicians resented the mockery _ especially since Colbert was polling ahead of half the Democratic field. Eventually, party officials voted to keep him off the ballot, claiming he was a distraction.

"When a fictional person declares something news, is it responsible for you to agree? Isn't that interesting?" wonders Colbert. "But so many real people declare fictional news and the press agrees. For instance, the surge is a success, don't you think?"

Does it scare Colbert that a fake person can be taken so seriously?

"It does not scare me at all because I don't take myself seriously," he says. "My character wants to do these things. We're making jokes. We never stop making jokes."

On camera, his devotion to staying in character is total, but off-camera he's himself: intelligent, relaxed and quick to laugh. Before taping episodes, he asks the studio audience if anyone has any questions "to humanize me before I say horrible things." He begins every interview by telling his guest that his character is "an idiot" and to "disabuse me of my ignorance."

Many of the show's greatest hits have been entirely apolitical, like the "meta-free-phor-all" with Sean Penn, or singing "Go Down Moses" with civil rights activist and politician Andrew Young, author Malcolm Gladwell and the Harlem Gospel Choir.

After such shows, Colbert likes to sarcastically announce to his staff: "Remember, it's just like O'Reilly!"

Since falling while running around his "C"-shaped desk and breaking his wrist, he's advocated "wrist awareness" by selling "WristStrong" bracelets. All proceeds go to the Yellow Ribbon Fund to assist injured service members and their families.

When asked how long he plans to keep wearing the band and stick with the joke, Colbert turned more serious than at any other point in our conversation. He replied firmly, "Not until the war is over."

That's about as close as Colbert comes to any kind of political statement.

"It is a sketch comedy show," he says. "So far, it's a 2 1/2-year sketch. I think of the entire show as a single scene. I'm just working on an 84-hour comedy project, and that's how we think of it."

In such a comedy project, Colbert compares himself to a "wind-up toy." Unable to plan ahead, he must always react to the news, to the initiations of his devoted audience and to his reflection in the media.

"I am not a passive verb," he says. "This is first person, present tense, at all times. I am a verb. As Buckminster Fuller said, `I seem to be a verb.' The show is present tense, present active. We're not passive, we don't observe. We set the news agenda. We create the news. We throw the pebble of the show into reality and we report on our own ripples."

It's a clearly frantic, near-insane job ("I'm tired all the time," he admits) and one can't help but wonder how much longer Colbert _ who lives with his wife and three kids in Montclair, N.J. _ can keep it up.

When asked this, he puts his head down and is silent for a full 20 seconds. He finally breaks the quiet, "The short answer is, I don't know. The facile answer but maybe the true answer is, as long as it's fun."

___

On the Net:

http://www.comedycentral.com/shows/the_colbert_report

 
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- Nyk I'm a Fan of Nyk permalink

Stephen makes me wants to have his baby. And I'm done having babies. He's awesome and I hope it remains fun forever.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:39 PM on 06/11/2008

Colbert, You are Brilliant!

Thank you, thank you, thank you.

And thanks John Stewart, for giving him a start!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:03 PM on 06/10/2008

My post vanished !!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:32 PM on 06/10/2008

Colbert is a comic genius. His intelligence is beyond charming. I don't ever miss a show. And his performance at the correspondents dinner was priceless. They should have known better than to hire him, but I'm glad they did.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:33 AM on 06/10/2008

My husband and I are huge fans of Colbert. It is amazing how much real news you get on his show and with hardly any bias. During this campaign season you can hardly tell which candidate he favours because he satirized each one equally. You have my respect Colbert!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:06 PM on 06/09/2008

Stephen Colbert has done for the right wing shout-fest what Spinal Tap did for heavy metal. A parody so close it exposes the excesses of it's subject and subsequently tearing it down. Keep it up heyoka master...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:45 PM on 06/09/2008

Colbert lost a fan in me after his White House Correspondents Dinner performance.

He lost a fan and gained an admirer.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:53 PM on 06/09/2008
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That is brilliantly put.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 09:23 AM on 06/10/2008

Jon and Stephen have kept a bunch of us sane after Bush won twice. If it wasn't for them I would have gone nuts, especially after Kerry lost. How jon can still kiss ass to mccain bothers me though. i know jon is more serious about politics than stephen so helping mccain bugs me.

He knows mccain is on his show to steal some of his young folks.

Stephen just gets better year after year.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:43 PM on 06/09/2008

Jon has stated that the "straight talk express had taken a turn into bullshit town". Oh so true!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:29 AM on 06/10/2008
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The man's humility is awesome to behold. From auctioning his portrait for Save the Children to auctioning off his wristcast for charity to WRISTSTRONG for our wounded men and women at Walter Reed. That is the measure of the man

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:06 PM on 06/09/2008

A moment to remember Paul Sills, the man who created Second City, the place where most of the political satirist of consequence first found their voices. Other alum -- Steve Carrell, Tina Fey (and several of her colleagues on 30 ROCK), Harold Ramis, Bill Murray, Bonnie Hunt, Jeff Garlin ,,, and so on and on and on. I'm told Colbert taught at Second City and was loved by his students.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 PM on 06/09/2008
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saw Lewis Black Live a few weeks ago.
He actually did come "out of character" a few times
and revealed himself to be a very gentle soul.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:50 AM on 06/09/2008
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Presidential Debates - 2008
Hosted by Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert (in character)

Better than anything I can imaging by Corporate Media.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:22 AM on 06/09/2008

For SwiftGoat,

A Stewart/Colbert hosted debate would be the most heavenly event in US political history!!! But now that we're down to the real candidates, it won't happen, will it?

Then what about a vice-president candidates' debate?? We've never ever had respect for the VP, so is that do-able?

whaddaya think?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 PM on 06/09/2008

just the thought has me lmao

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:49 PM on 06/09/2008

Best idea for a "debate" I've heard yet.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:21 PM on 06/09/2008

Gives McCain an unfair advantage. He and Stewart have way too much fun together.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:47 PM on 06/09/2008

Yeah, but as unreasonably forgiving as Jon Stewart is to McCain, he still behaves as a more responsible and fair journalist than most and asks harder questions than all the Wolf Blitzers and Chris Matthewses out there.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 04:48 PM on 06/09/2008

Genius! Thanks - every time I think of your idea I chuckle!!! There's not much to laugh at these days...

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:16 PM on 06/09/2008

i hope he stays on the air for atleast another 10 years

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:06 AM on 06/09/2008

Stephen - what would life be like without you? Banish the thought. I don't know how we survived so long without you! Oh to be your mother!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 11:00 AM on 06/09/2008
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Luv that Stephen!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 10:59 AM on 06/09/2008
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