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‘The Right Price Can Silence the Voice of Free Speech’: Jon Batiste Backs Former Colleague Stephen Colbert After ‘Late Show’ Axing

Jon Batiste has come out swinging in his defence of Stephen Colbert in a new interview with Rolling Stone AU/NZ

Stephen Colbert and Jon Batiste

Colbert and Batiste together at CBS Upfront, 2018

Matthew Eisman/Getty Images

US musician Jon Batiste has come out swinging in defence of his former colleague Stephen Colbert following news that The Late Show will end in 2026.

CBS announced the move last month, calling it “purely a financial decision.” Since then, however, a number of notable names have blasted the news, including Jon Stewart and David Letterman, while others have questioned if it was a political move by the network.

In a new interview with Rolling Stone AU/NZ ahead of the release of his new album, BIG MONEY, Batiste, who served as bandleader and musical director of The Late Show from 2015-2022, also slammed CBS’ decision.

“What happened to my friend Stephen is a symptom of big money,” the Academy and Grammy Award-winning composer said.

“We’re in a time where the right price can silence the voice of free speech, which we should be very, very conscious of. As artists, we have to constantly fight for free speech and fight for the ability to be able to share the authentic truth of our being.”

Next week will mark the 11th anniversary of Batiste’s first meeting with Colbert, as they embarked on the new iteration of The Late Show together following Letterman’s departure from the long-running talk show.

When he thinks about his time on The Late Show, as well as his friendship with Colbert, Batiste only has warm memories.

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“It meant so much to be in my 20s on national television and learning the ropes of being on a nightly show with a band and, really, being on camera and doing that for seven years. And to evolve as an artist in partnership with him,” he said.

“I’m very grateful to him and I think where he goes next, his voice won’t be silenced. The voice of free speech is challenge, but the soul of an individual cannot be cancelled. He’s gonna find another megaphone, another outlet, I’m sure of it. I’m rooting for him.”

Senator Elizabeth Warren wrote an opinion piece for Variety in which she questioned why The Late Show was cancelled: “Right now, Paramount is trying to merge with Skydance, another huge media company. This deal is worth $8 billion – and, by the way, it could raise prices for millions of viewers. But here’s the kicker: This merger can only go through if it’s approved by the Trump administration.

“Instead of fighting Trump on his “meritless” lawsuit, Paramount settled, handing $16 million to Trump’s presidential library. This looks like bribery in plain sight, and that’s exactly what Stephen Colbert said on his show: “[T]his kind of complicated financial settlement with a sitting government official has a technical name in legal circles: it’s ‘big, fat bribe.’” Three days later, Paramount-owned CBS canceled Colbert’s show. And Trump didn’t waste a moment before celebrating the news.”

BIG MONEY is set for release on Friday, 22nd August.