Skip to main content

So long, Letterman! We salute the man who changed late night TV

David Letterman on his final late show - 5/20/2015 - Full Interview
It’s hard to believe for long-time fans, but late-night television trailblazer David Letterman’s 33-year career as host of the Late Show on CBS finally came to a celebratory end yesterday. It was a show befitting of the ebullient Letterman, whose self-mockery and irreverence went on to inspire an entire generation of comics.

The 68-year-old Letterman’s final episode amounted to an appropriately lengthy televised goodbye. (The show ran 20 minutes over its usual run-time, in fact, but CBS executives agreed to air it in its entirety.)

It began with a video montage of the presidents who’ve been the subject of Letterman’s lampooning as they sat — Gerald Ford’s famous reference to Nixon’s resignation, “Our long national nightmare is over,” was repeated by former commander-in-chiefs George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George H.W. Bush, and finally President Obama. “Letterman is retiring,” Obama told Letterman as he emerged from off screen. “You’re just kidding, right?”

In signature style and to thunderous applause, Letterman emerged from the designated entrance at the rear of the Late Show stage, a fixture of the Ed Sullivan theater since 1993. He not so much walked as ran onto the set as announcer Alan Kalter bellowed his name and bandleader Paul Shaffer played the familiar Late Show diddy, an impeccable beginning to what Letterman called “the most important show of [his] life.”

In his monologue, Letterman deftly avoided a Maudlin delivery that would’ve come all to easily. His best lines were, as always, self-deprecating — “I’ll be honest with you,” he said. “It’s beginning to look like I’m not going to get the Tonight Show.”

He joked about post-retirement plans. “You know what I’m going to devote the rest of my life to,” Letterman said. “Social media.”

It’s a testament to Letterman’s talent that his last of thousands of monologues managed to captivate. He delivered his first, after all, in 1982, during an after-midnight timeslot following the indomitable Tonight Show with Johnny Carson. It was a tough act to follow, but Letterman’s flippancy and self-awareness, in some ways at odds with Carson’s bemused subtlety, quickly struck a chord among youth in an era of VCR and MTV.

“David’s influence was phenomenal. whenever there was something important going on in America, you turned on David Letterman.” CBS CEO Leslie Moonves told USA Today. “He was the conscience of America, […] he was our local curmudgeon.”

Letterman’s sardonic twists on genre conventions, like Stupid Pet Tricks and Top 10 Lists, led to more than a few surprising late-night moments. He tried to bring a fruit basket to General Electric’s corporate offices when the company acquired NBC in 1986 (he was kicked out of the building.) He mistook orders at a drive-in window at a Taco Bell. And he played the estranged lover of Elaine Stritch.

But Letterman is probably better known for his celebrity guest segments, of which there were approximately 5,850 on  Late Night and 14,082 on Late Show. He dodged slaps from Andy Kaufman, kicks from Crispin Glover, and blows of a more verbal kind from Cher. But his very best interviews were also his most acerbic — Letterman, never one to shy away from skewering celebrity, grilled Paris Hilton about her time behind bars and Justin Bieber about his wrist tattoos.

Controversy never bothered Letterman. On the contrary, he seemed to invite it, especially in the realm of politics — he cracked an uncouth joke about Sarah Palin’s daughter during the 2008 presidential race and staged a Stooge of the Night sketch in 2013 that lambasted opponents of gun control. But the versatile Letterman wasn’t above solemnity when appropriate. His personal triumphs, when the incredibly guarded host chose to share them, were incredibly heartfelt — he invited the surgeons that performed his quintuple bypass surgery, and in 2003, he held up a picture of Harry, his newborn son.

But Letterman’s career isn’t without its share of blemishes. He was passed over as Carson’s successor in favor of Jay Leno, and never achieved notable success outside of late night TV. Still, if you ask Letterman, things worked out pretty well considering — he’s described his leaving the Late Show as “a good solid punch to the head.”

Yesterday’s episode concluded with a referential compilation of farewells from superstars Jim Carrey, Chris Rock, Steven Martin, Alec Baldwin, Jerry Seinfeld, Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Peyton Manning, Tina Fey, and Barbara Walters, and others —  “Top 10 Things I’ve Always Wanted to Say to David Letterman” — and words of thanks. Letterman credited CBS executives, Shaffer, his staff, and his family with his success.

“Thank you for being my family,” he said to his wife, Regina, and son, who were seated in the audience. “I love you both and really, nothing else matters, does it?”

To close the show, the Foo Fighters played “Everlong,” the song to which he returned after his heart surgery. Music was a defining part of Letterman’s early career — Shaffer’s legendary group, comprised of guitarist Sid McGinnis, bassist Will Lee, and drummer Anton Fig, seemed, as Variety recently put it, “adept at handling nearly every kind of sound the show might require.” Over the past few weeks, Letterman’s hosted a few of his favorite musical luminaries, John Mayer and Bob Dylan among them.

When asked about post-retirement plans, “I will be completely in the hands of my family,” Letterman told the New York Times. “I will be going, later in the month, to the Indianapolis 500. And then beyond that, for the first time since Harry’s been alive, our summer schedule will not be dictated by me. It will be entirely dictated by what my son wants to do. And I think that’s pretty good.”

Kyle Wiggers
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Kyle Wiggers is a writer, Web designer, and podcaster with an acute interest in all things tech. When not reviewing gadgets…
Netflix is streaming the craziest action movie of 2024. Here’s why I loved it
A man floating in air kicks another man in the face in City Hunter.

This month seems to be the time to release action movies that color outside the lines. We've already had Dev Patel's Monkey Man, a messy, throw-everything-at-the-wall action movie that blends intricate fight sequences and on-the-nose social commentary in an entertaining package that will surely gain cult status in the near future. Just this weekend, Boy Kills World dished out loads of cartoon violence and over-the-top gore in a bid for John Wick-level fandom. Both movies bend or break the rules of reality to deliver quickly cut fight scenes that push the boundaries of the genre, all in an attempt to one-up the high standards set by the best movies in the Mission: Impossible and Fast and Furious franchises.

Yet the best of the April bunch is the one that has the lowest profile. City Hunter doesn't star anyone you'd recognize like It actor Bill Skarsgård in Boy Kills World and hasn't been backed by an extensive marketing campaign like Universal's Monkey Man. But the movie is a blast; it's like putting Pop Rocks in a can of Mountain Dew and chasing it down with a couple of Pixy Sticks. It's ludicrous, immature, and totally unrealistic. It's also my favorite action movie of 2024. Here's why you need to stream City Hunter pronto.
It's an adaptation of a massively popular franchise

Read more
7 great free action movies you should stream right now
Guns are pointed at John Wick

There's nothing wrong with a gripping and compelling Oscar-winning drama that's full of complex characters ... but sometimes you just wanna watch stuff get blown up. You wanna see high-speed car chases. You wanna practically feel the shrapnel fly past your face. Artful films like Oppenheimer and The Iron Claw certainly have their place, but that place isn't here. Instead, we're diving into some of the best action movies you can stream right now for free.

Thanks to ad-supported streaming services like Amazon Freevee, Tubi, Pluto TV, and more, there's a huge selection of great free action movies streaming right now. Whether you want to watch a guns-blazing revenge movie, giant animals attacking unsuspecting victims, or even a kinetic video game adaptation, we've got you covered. So, what are the best action movies streaming right now completely for free? Read on to find out.

Read more
10 best Netflix shows with more than 5 seasons, ranked
A woman puts a crown on a man in The Crown.

Netflix is home to many great shows. It's also the most prolific and well-known streaming service of them all, with a large catalog of original and acquired content. However, the King of Streamers is also famous for being quite trigger-happy. Indeed, Netflix is no stranger to canceling its shows, even if it spent millions producing them; if they don't yield immediate results, the streamer will pull the plug without blinking an eye.

Still, many original shows have beaten the cancellation curse and had a successful life, at least by streaming standards. These shows are Netflix's best efforts that actually got to enjoy a full life cycle, receiving more than five seasons. None might come close to the 100-episode mark, but these beloved series prove to hopeful showrunners everywhere that there is indeed life on Netflix after season 5.
10. Virgin River (2019-present) - 6 seasons

Read more