In a rare reversal, CBS has backed off its aggressive copyright enforcement against YouTube uploads of Stephen Colbert’s surprise guest-hosting gig on Michigan public-access show Only in Monroe — at least for now.
The network’s legal team was issuing takedown notices to fans sharing clips, but pulled back after a wave of online criticism accused the media giant of censorship.
From Late Show Finale to Local Access
On May 22, 2026, just one day after taping his final episode of The Late Show after an 11-season run, Colbert made an unexpected return to his roots. He popped up as a guest host on Only in Monroe, the Monroe Community Media public-access program he famously hosted once in 2015 before succeeding David Letterman at CBS.
The episode — which featured Jeff Daniels, Steve Buscemi, Jack White, and local hosts Michelle Baumann and Kaye Lani Rae Rafko Wilson — aired Friday and quickly went viral.
CBS Studios financed and produced the special, posting it to Colbert’s newly launched YouTube channel in collaboration with Monroe Community Media and The Late Show’s official channel.
Routine Enforcement Meets Viral Moment
Almost immediately, fans who uploaded their own clips or “bootleg” versions to YouTube began receiving copyright strikes from CBS. The network said the takedowns were “standard industry practice” to protect content it owns and financed.
“As is our regular practice, we send copyright notices to unauthorized websites that post copyrighted content from CBS and our network/studio talent such as Stephen Colbert,” a CBS spokesperson told Variety and USA Today.
But the timing struck a nerve. Colbert had just ended his Late Show run amid rumors of network tensions, and the Only in Monroe bit included subtle jabs at CBS over late-night’s shifting landscape. Fans accused the network of trying to suppress a grassroots-style project and limit the reach of a show that felt like Colbert breaking free.
CBS Blinks First
Facing backlash, CBS reversed course. “However, for this episode, we have decided to waive further enforcement of this standard industry practice until additional review,” the spokesperson added. Reports indicate CBS has already rescinded copyright claims previously filed against users.
A Bigger Fight About Who Owns Comedy
The episode highlights a growing tension in media: legacy networks trying to control IP in an era where viral clips and creator-driven platforms drive culture. Colbert’s YouTube launch — days after his CBS exit — taps into a trend where 68% of Gen Z now prefer YouTube over linear TV for comedy, per a 2026 Nielsen report.
This isn’t CBS’s first YouTube copyright battle involving Colbert. In 2007, Viacom, then Comedy Central’s parent, was sued after a satirical “Stop the Falsiness” video using Colbert Report clips was taken down, raising fair-use questions that still echo today.
For now, Only in Monroe clips remain up. CBS says the pause on enforcement is temporary “pending further review,” but the incident underscores how fan communities can force even major studios to rethink standard practice when nostalgia, humor, and free access collide.
Colbert, meanwhile, seems to be leaning into digital freedom. With The Late Show over, he’s reportedly co-writing a Lord of the Rings project with his son — and building a YouTube presence where, for the moment, CBS isn’t issuing strikes.