Late Night Last Week: Taylor Tomlinson Celebrates J.Lo’s Instagram to Kick Off New Season
Screenshots via YouTube & Courtesy of HBO
Late Night Last Week is a column highlighting some of the more notable segments from the previous week of late night television. Today’s installment features a round-up of news heading out of the summer break, Taylor Tomlinson kicking off the second season of After Midnight, John Oliver on school lunch, and Seth Meyers on the 2024 election.
Summer may be over, but late night television came roaring back last week (well, except for the crew over at The Daily Show, who took a well-deserved break after carrying the late night hours for much of the last three months). Jimmy Kimmel returned to his program for the first time since June. And over on CBS, The Late Show with Stephen Colbert kicked off its tenth season in the Ed Sullivan Theater.
The biggest piece of late night news last week came from NBC. The network decided to reduce The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon from five episodes to four. The most venerated show name in late night has met the same fate as its peers. Going forward, the program will air a rerun on Friday evenings, giving viewers a chance to (re)encounter tired monologues and painfully cheesy bits from earlier in the week. That is sure to solve all the show’s problems.
But let us pivot towards late night television that at least aspires to freshness with each broadcast. After Midnight, helmed by Taylor Tomlinson, returned for a second season last week. The host came out rocking a new suit and tie, or, as she put it, the look “of a private school kid whose parents paid a lot of money to make ‘the incident’ go away.”
Tomlinson began her first monologue of the season with the summer’s most captivating celebrity drama: the breakup of Jennifer Lopez and Ben Affleck. Tomlinson praised J.Lo’s Instragam posts in the wake of the breakup, including one that simply read, “Oh, it was a summer.” “Oh, I know a single girl caption when I see one,” Tomlinson said. “I have friends who found out their parents were getting divorced cuz their mom posted a picture of herself in a wet t-shirt with the caption, ‘What Will Be, Will Be.’”
Not Even Schools Can Afford Costco Hot Dogs
Last Week Tonight is back. Or, as it is known around my apartment, the most American thing you can watch on a Sunday. Oliver returned from vacation giddy this week, beginning the program with the results of a recent Michigan contest inviting citizens to send in new designs for “I Voted” stickers. Our bespectacled host could not contain his joy for one finalist, which featured a wolf patriotically ripping their shirt off while howling against the backdrop of an American flag. “I know this is not the point,” Oliver said, “but I would commit voter fraud to get multiples of that sticker.”
The subject of the episode was the “daily miracle” (we say this sincerely) known as public school lunch. It is a massive undertaking by staff, who often are working on the tightest of budgets. And for many children, school lunch is often the most reliable (and the most nutritious) meal they will have in the day. Oliver tackles the challenges schools face in providing food on ever-shrinking budgets, and the subsequent risk our lack of investment in quality meals poses to children’s well-being.