Taylor Tomlinson to host ‘After Midnight’ on CBS, filling ‘Late Late Show’ slot
CBS confirmed that a new take on the late-night panel game show “@midnight” will take over James Corden‘s “Late Late Show” time slot starting next year, and it will be hosted by Taylor Tomlinson.
At the taping of “The Late Show” on Wednesday, the comedian joined Stephen Colbert, where he made the announcement that Tomlinson would host “After Midnight.” Tomlinson is known for her Netflix stand-up comedy specials, “Look at You” and “Quarter Life Crisis.” The new series is set to premiere in early 2024, but an exact date has not been announced. It will air on CBS at 12:37 a.m. Pacific and stream on Paramount+.
It follows an earlier announcement by CBS that the show had assembled its team of executive producers. Jack Martin, who served as a showrunner on the original “@midnight,” and Eric Pierce (“Raid the Cage”) will co-run and executive produce the series. Comedian Jo Firestone will be the show’s head writer and will co-executive produce the series with Alexx Wells. “After Midnight” will be produced by Colbert’s Spartina Industries and Funny or Die.
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1. Comedian Jo Firestone will be the head writer. (Mindy Tucker) 2. Showrunner Jack Martin. (Ves D’Elia/CBS ) 3. Showrunner Eric Pierce. (Eric Pierce)
‘The Late Late Show With James Corden’ came to a close on Thursday night after nine seasons. Here’s how the finale went down.
Reports that CBS would fill the late-night spot with some version of Comedy Central’s “@midnight” surfaced in February, just months before Corden sang his final song in a star-studded April finale.
The original “@midnight” series was hosted by comedian Chris Hardwick and aired about 600 episodes from 2013-17. The series posed internet-themed questions to three guest comedians, who competed for points by riffing on the most interesting or absurd social media moments of the day.
When late-night host James Corden leaves his post this spring, CBS reportedly will replace “The Late Late Show” with a reboot of the game show “@midnight.”
During its run, “@midnight” won two Primetime Emmy Awards. The series ended in 2017, a mutual decision between its host, Comedy Central and production company Funny or Die.
“My hope is that, every night, ‘After Midnight’ will be just as ridiculous as the internet is every day,” Colbert said in Wednesday’s release.
Funny Or Die owner Henry R. Muñoz III added: “Now that we are all old enough to stay up until after midnight, I’m excited for this show to harness the power of comedy and laughter to bring us all together.”
Times staff writer Nardine Saad contributed to this report.
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