Current:Home > InvestJimmy Kimmel, Stephen Colbert and other late-night hosts launch 'Strike Force Five' podcast -FutureWise Finance
Jimmy Kimmel, Stephen Colbert and other late-night hosts launch 'Strike Force Five' podcast
View
Date:2025-04-17 14:52:26
Five unemployed late-night hosts have joined forces to help their shows' employees during Hollywood's dual strikes by writers and actors.
Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel, Seth Meyers and John Oliver are launching a podcast called "Strike Force Five," which premieres Wednesday. The Spotify podcast will be available "everywhere you get your podcasts," an announcement says, and run for at least 12 episodes, a representative confirmed to USA TODAY.
Shows such as “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon" and "The Late Show With Stephen Colbert" have been on pause since the Writers Guild of America went on strike in May, because they depend on writers to produce shows the same day they air.
The five men started meeting over Zoom to discuss the work stoppage and ended up having "a series of hilarious and compelling conversations," according to Tuesday's announcement. Now they're bringing these chats to the new podcast.
All proceeds the hosts receive from the project "will go to out-of-work staff from the hosts’ respective shows."
How Jimmy Fallon, Seth Meyers and others have been supporting their writers
The late-night hosts, whose shows would have been on hiatus during the summer months anyway, have been doing their part to support their staff. Some of them temporarily padded the employees' paychecks out of their own pockets, sending food trucks to strike rallies and joining writers on the picket line.
"I want to see a fair deal as soon as possible. It is absolutely appalling that they are not negotiating right now," Oliver told Deadline at a comedy writers picket line outside 30 Rockefeller Plaza in July. "The fact that they are not around a table right now is absolutely disgusting.”
In April, Seth Meyers weighed in on the impact of a work stoppage days before the WGA went on strike.
“If a writers' strike happens, that would shut down production on a great many shows. And I've been through this before in 2007-2008; there was a very long strike while I was working at 'SNL.' It was really miserable," he said during a corrections segment of his show.
He went on: "And It doesn’t just affect the writers. It affects all the incredible non-writing staff on these shows. And it would really be a miserable thing for people to have to go through, especially considering we’re on the heels of that awful pandemic that affected, obviously, not just show business, but all of us.”
Hollywood writers are on strike:All the ways it's impacting your favorite shows
veryGood! (8)
Related
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Southern lawmakers rethink long-standing opposition to Medicaid expansion
- Maryland Gov. Wes Moore unveils $90M for environmental initiatives
- How ageism against Biden and Trump puts older folks at risk
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Iowa’s Caitlin Clark wants more focus on team during final stretch now that NCAA record is broken
- Alexei Navalny, jailed opposition leader and Putin’s fiercest foe, has died, Russian officials say
- Iowa’s Caitlin Clark wants more focus on team during final stretch now that NCAA record is broken
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- These 56 Presidents’ Day Sales Are the Best We’ve Seen This Year From Anthropologie to Zappos
Ranking
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- The Census Bureau is thinking about how to ask about sex. People have their opinions
- Utah school board member censured after questioning high school athlete's gender
- Man convicted in 2022 shooting of Indianapolis police officer that wounded officer in the throat
- Arkansas State Police probe death of woman found after officer
- How to Watch the 2024 People's Choice Awards and Red Carpet
- Russell Simmons sued for defamation by former Def Jam executive Drew Dixon who accused him of rape
- After feud, Mike Epps and Shannon Sharpe meet in person: 'I showed him love'
Recommendation
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
Prince Harry Breaks Silence on King Charles III's Cancer Diagnosis
More gamers are LGBTQ, but video game industry lags in representation, GLAAD report finds
What does a total solar eclipse look like? Photos from past events show what to expect in 2024
Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
Bears great Steve McMichael is responding to medication in the hospital, family says
Maryland Gov. Wes Moore unveils $90M for environmental initiatives
There was an outcry about ‘practice babies’ on TikTok. It’s not as crazy as it sounds.