I Say Goodbye
Okay. I really wanted to like the final Colbert show. I had expectations. And to be truthful, I answered the phone a couple of times... took my eyes and ears off the TV. Also I was buoyant and a little emotionally intoxicated from the second Knicks win over the Cavaliers. Factually, I never loved the show in the first place. I sympathize, he tries... but it's a little like being on a date with that charming handsome intelligent man who cracks jokes over dinner and pours your wine correctly... but you can't wait to get home to that hot crazy guitar player who makes you laugh.
I grew up craning my ears to hear the Jack Paar and then Johnny Carson show from my parents' room. It was like forbidden fruit. Some nights I'd lie on the floor and listen outside their door. I loved the way the audience laughed. When I had my own place and a tiny b/w TV I got to watch from a bed on the floor with my guitar player live-in boyfriend. It was special.
When Letterman took over it was perfect. Everything about the show-- his guests, his cynicism, his lists, his skits and bits... was perfect. I loved the band. Hiram Bullock was to become one of my favorite musicians and friends. He was smart and cool and brilliant.
In the last years there is too much competition for late night. You see the same guests on all networks... no loyalty or feuds or even political differences. Everyone hates Trump with similar ferocity. Who to pick? Musical guests no longer compel me; they occupy a very short segment. Hosts take up half the show with their monologues. The audience doesn't count as much.
Colbert is nice. He's become something of a hero-- a TV martyr. His cancellation is an eerie foreshadowing of the compromised future of media platforms. What is happening here, etc.? I read today about his grief episode... where he shared with Anderson Cooper that his father and two brothers were killed in a plane crash when he was a boy. Touched me. But he had a mother and many other siblings. Some of them were in the audience tonight and they all seemed wholesome and happy and normal.
Memorial Day is almost upon us. My father died shortly before his ninety-seventh Memorial Day. I remembered how I wished he would die in a plane crash. Not a car accident-- one of his brothers went that way and it was a scandal because he'd disowned his own family. But a plane crash seemed instant and sort of poetic, especially for a former paratrooper who was at home in the sky. It's a terrible guilt but I wanted my mother to have a husband who deserved her kindness and I wanted a 'real' father-- the kind of father maybe Steven Colbert is.
But the show-- ? Well, for those of who were hoping for the Pope, we got Paul McCartney. His facework is marvelously done and he's charming and maybe a NYC legend at the moment... he lives ten blocks away from me. He once stopped into a club where I was playing on the upper east side... well, he started to, until he was swarmed. And the Ed Sullivan theatre connection-- the history. I always actually thought Ed was creepy-- ditto Lawrence Welk, and the children's show hosts-- Soupy Sales, Captain Kangaroo, Ringmaster Claude, even Mr. Rogers (apologies). But the guests were superb. No contest. Immediately recognizable. Iconic. Variety.
Maybe there was a message in the McCartney appearance. He's eighty-something and promoting his new album. I wonder if he would have done the show had he no product. But he reinvents himself. He goes on. No matter that each reincarnation is that much less stellar than the one before. It's been fifty-six years since the Beatles broke up. Admittedly, Paul played great bass tonight on Hello/Goodbye. Really good. But for many of us who always preferred Stones to Beatles, our favorite was George. He was a rebel. Sir Paul is metamorphic and has rounded corners. You could tell Colbert was thrilled and that was nice. It made me forget about Jon Batiste whose success baffles me. Everyone wants to be a rockstar--talent or not. Like instant rice-- just stick a bowl and some water in an instagram oven and you have it.
But Colbert will go on. Cancellation is the new black. It's like death; suddenly people who never cared become your supporters. I actually watched the show tonight-- or some of it. Isn't that the point of television anyway-- the viewers, the money? I wonder what McCartney was paid and who paid it. Literally a ha'penny in the billion pound bucket of his wealth and continued royalties. Like Bruce they can't stop. I wonder if the Pope had been on Late Night whether he'd have given the godly finger to the management at CBS... a Fatherly scolding. I'd like to shake the whole damn country. But we're complacent-- we worship mediocrity and elect morons. And we wave goodbye. It's wrong.
Memorial weekend I'll say a prayer for my unhappy misunderstood father. I'll remember all those great guests on the Ed Sullivan show-- Elvis, Little Richard, the 'original' Paul. The more things multiply the further we are from the originals. Scroll through the thousands of faces onscreen at any given moment... it's underwhelming. Goodnight, Steven... we'll surely be seeing you.
Labels: Beatles, David Letterman, Ed Sullivan, Elvis, George Harrison, Hiram Bullock, Jack Paar, Johnny Carson, Jon Batiste, Late Night, Lawrence Welk, Little Richard, Paul McCartney, Soupy Sales, Steven Colbert, Stones