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The Late Late Show with James Corden

The Late Late Show with James Corden (also known simply as Late Late) is an American late-night talk show that aired on CBS from 2015 to 2023. It is the fourth and final iteration of The Late Late Show, and aired in the U.S. from Monday to Friday nights at 12:37 a.m. ET/PT. The show was taped in front of a studio audience Monday through Thursday afternoons at Television City in Los Angeles, in Studio 56, directly above the Bob Barker Studio (Studio 33). It was produced by Fulwell 73 and CBS Studios.

The Late Late Show with James Corden

The Late Late Show (franchise brand)
The Late Late Show with James Corden From His Garage (COVID-19 pandemic)

Mike Gibbons (head writer)

Tim Mancinelli (main show)

Reggie Watts, The Late Late Show Band

Reggie Watts
Hagar Ben-Ari
Guillermo E. Brown
Steve Scalfati
Tim Young

"The Late Late Show"

United States

English

9

Rob Crabbe
Ben Winston
James Longman
Josie Cliff

James Corden
Sheila Rogers

Television City,
Los Angeles, California

40 minutes

CBS

March 23, 2015 (2015-03-23) –
April 27, 2023 (2023-04-27)

James Corden was announced as the show's new host on September 8, 2014, succeeding Craig Ferguson.[1] Originally scheduled to premiere on March 9, 2015, CBS later pushed back the premiere to March 23, 2015, so the NCAA basketball tournament could be used to promote Corden's debut.[2]


Corden brought The Late Late Show to England for three special episodes taped at the Methodist Central Hall, Westminster from June 6 to 8, 2017. It was the third time in the show's history that it aired from another country, with Ferguson taking his incarnation to Paris, France, in 2011[3] and Scotland in 2012.[4] The show returned to London for a week of shows at Methodist Hall on June 18–21, 2018,[5] and June 17–20, 2019.[6]


In April 2022, it was announced that Corden would be leaving The Late Late Show in mid-2023.[7] Its series finale aired on April 27, 2023; reruns of the show still aired from May 1 to September 15, 2023.

Production[edit]

Corden said he was "thrilled and honored" and found it "hugely exciting ... to host such a prestigious show".[8] CBS Entertainment chairman Nina Tassler said in a statement that Corden is a warm, charming and original performer whose "diverse range of creative instincts and performance talent" make him a "rare entertainment force". Tassler cited Corden's work in such media as theatre, film and television, and called him "loved and respected" in all of them.[9] The show continues to be produced at Television City in Los Angeles.[10] Corden made a surprise guest appearance on predecessor Ferguson's programme on December 16, 2014, two days prior to Ferguson's last broadcast as host, during which the two briefly discussed Corden taking over the show.[11] He also appeared on an episode hosted by Judd Apatow to job shadow, stating he wanted to "learn from his mistakes".[12]


Unlike his predecessors, Corden's Late Late Show has a house band, originally nicknamed "Karen", but later, in response to the slang usage of Karen, changed to "Melissa",[13][14] led by Reggie Watts who also acts as the show's announcer. Watts also performs as lead vocals, keyboards, beatboxing, and programmer.[15] The other personnel in the band are Tim Young on lead guitars, Steve Scalfati on keyboards, Hagar Ben-Ari on bass, and Guillermo E. Brown on drums. Watts and the Late Late Show Band composed the theme song.[16] The show's title sequence, which was supposed to be directed by J. J. Abrams, was filmed by the visual firm of Trollbäck + Company, and depicts James Corden and Reggie Watts traveling around Los Angeles in a lowrider and on LED bikes, including some graphics and light painting with a Pixelstick. Trollbäck + Company put this statement below the video: "James Corden and Reggie Watts put the LA LA back into Late Late in a series fun vignettes filmed around Los Angeles for the identity of the new CBS Late Late Show. James originally wanted JJ Abrams to film him, and Reggie scored to a Mark Ronson track. We were of course honored to take JJ's place as he was a bit busy filming a blockbuster! We managed to shoot everything in one night with LED bikes, a Lowrider, and a Pixelstick setting an eclectic visual tone for this experimental new show."[17] The show's executive producers are Rob Crabbe and Ben Winston.[12]


While an opening monologue is a staple of the late-night talk show genre, Corden suggested initially that as he is not a stand-up comedian, he would also be using alternatives to the traditional joke-heavy monologue.[18] However, the show has retained the monologue though it is shorter and not as important an element as the monologue on other late-night shows.[19]


The show also uses an interview format similar to that of the British talk show The Graham Norton Show, in which all of the night's guests appear on stage simultaneously.[20] Guests do not walk on stage from the wings but emerge from the back of the studio and walk through the audience rows. As is more typical in British talk shows, the host sits to the left of the guests, a reversal of the traditional American layout. Corden also does not sit behind a desk, unlike other late-night hosts, but in a swivel chair.[19]


On March 14, 2020, the show suspended production because of the COVID-19 pandemic. From March 30, 2020, the show resumed production with Corden hosting from inside his garage and communicating with his band and guests via Zoom video link.[21] Corden returned to a reworked studio without a guest couch or live audience on August 10, 2020.[22] However, from September 14, 2020, Corden resumed hosting via Zoom link from inside his house while self-isolating as a precaution after coming into contact with someone who tested positive for COVID-19, while the band and crew continued filming from inside the studio.[23] Corden returned to the studio from September 21, 2020, after finishing his self-quarantine. Per recommendations by the Los Angeles County Department of Public Health, the program temporarily returned to an at-home format on January 4, 2021.[24]


On April 28, 2022, it was announced that Corden had extended his contract to mid-2023, after which he would leave the show.[7] It was expected to be several months earlier than the previously reported August expiration.[25] In February 2023, it was announced that the series would conclude on April 27, 2023.[26][27] That month, it was reported that CBS was planning to discontinue the Late Late Show franchise after 28 years in favor of cheaper formats, and had settled on a revival of @midnighta comedy panel show that had previously aired on sibling network Comedy Central—as a future replacement for the program.[28]

, a segment in which James and musical guests sing along to their songs whilst driving on a planned route usually in Los Angeles. Corden explained that the segment was inspired by a Gavin & Stacey-themed sketch he had participated in for the British charity television special Red Nose Day 2011, in which he sang along with George Michael in a car, stating that "Ben Winston and I always thought there was something very joyful about someone very, very famous singing their songs in an ordinary situation. We just had this idea: Los Angeles, traffic, the carpool lane — maybe this is something we could pull off." The segments have featured artists such as BTS, Lady Gaga, Foo Fighters, Britney Spears, Jennifer Lopez, Take That, Pink, Chris Martin, Selena Gomez, Jennifer Hudson, Iggy Azalea, Justin Bieber, Stevie Wonder, Shawn Mendes, Gwen Stefani, George Clooney, Julia Roberts, Nick Jonas, Adele, Barbra Streisand, Demi Lovato, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Audra McDonald, Jesse Tyler Ferguson, Jane Krakowski, Elton John, Rod Stewart, A$AP Rocky, Céline Dion, Mariah Carey, Sia, Billie Eilish, One Direction, Harry Styles, Niall Horan, Liam Payne, Louis Tomlinson, Katy Perry, Bruno Mars, Ed Sheeran, Michael Bublé, Ariana Grande, Sam Smith, Fifth Harmony, Chance The Rapper, Migos, Paul McCartney, Madonna, Adam Levine, Christina Aguilera, Usher, Miley Cyrus, Nicki Minaj and the Red Hot Chili Peppers.

Carpool Karaoke

International broadcast[edit]

In the UK and Ireland, the show airs at 11:50pm on Sky Comedy on a one-day delay. Since 2016, the show has been available on Sky's 'On Demand' service as well as Now TV with each episode available the day after its US broadcast. Sky Q customers also get to watch some content from the show in the 'Online Video' section.[84] Late Late Show: Best of The Week is also shown Friday nights at 10:00pm on Sky One.[85]


In Canada, The Late Late Show with James Corden is aired by CTV in simulcast with CBS. The program formerly aired on sister network CTV Two, but moved to the main CTV network on February 8, 2016, switching with Late Night with Seth Meyers.[86][87]


In Australia, the series was purchased by CBS's then-Australian partner network Network Ten.[88][89] It premiered on Network Ten's sister network Eleven (now 10 Peach) on May 24, 2015, on a seven-day-a-week airing schedule to catch up with the current run through the northern hemisphere summer (by September and the start of the new American television season it had caught up and now airs on a day-delay with repeats at weekends); CBS has owned 10 Peach (and Network Ten itself) since it purchased Ten Network Holdings in the last half of 2017.[90] From September 2020, the show has moved to the newly launched 10 Shake channel. The show returned to 10 Peach in 2021.


In Asia, the show premiered on August 3, 2015, on RTL CBS Entertainment. It broadcasts on weekday nights following The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. Following the sale of the RTL CBS Networks to Canadian-based company Blue Ant Media and subsequent rebranding it to Blue Ant Entertainment in January 2018, the show continued to air until the deal with the show's distributor CBS expired in September 2020.[91]


In Hong Kong, the show had been broadcast at 10:30 p.m. HKT every Friday on ViuTVsix, free-to-air television channel, since April 5, 2019. The show now airs at 9:30 p.m. HKT every Wednesday and Friday on the same channel.


The American Forces Network satellite radio and television service broadcasts the show commercial free to United States military personnel stationed overseas on Prime Atlantic for viewers in Europe and on Prime Pacific for viewers in Asia.

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