Barack Obama posted a tribute to Stephen Colbert on Instagram this week. It read like something a real friend would write – not a publicist.
The former president kept it short and warm. Writing on his Instagram, Obama said Colbert had been “one of the top voices of late night” for more than a decade. He framed Colbert’s work as something bigger than comedy. In his words, Colbert had been “making us laugh and, even more importantly, reminding us who we are and what America stands for.” He brought Michelle Obama into the message too. Both of them had appeared as guests on The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. Obama added a small playful dig about the show’s games being “rigged,” then closed with something plain: he and Michelle are grateful to call Colbert a friend.
That detail about rigged games is a nice touch, friends. People only needle each other like that with real familiarity. It’s the kind of thing you say about someone you actually know well.
Obama also didn’t attach this to a specific news peg or milestone. He just posted it. Unprompted tributes tend to feel more genuine than the ones tied to a headline.
The Obamas have appeared on The Late Show multiple times. Barack has been on to discuss his books and reflect on his time in office. Michelle has visited too, with appearances around her memoir Becoming, one of the best-selling books of recent years. Those conversations had a way of going somewhere real.
Colbert has held the Late Show chair on CBS since 2015. He stepped in for David Letterman. From the start, the show felt different. Earlier in his career, Colbert had spent years on Comedy Central playing a satirical conservative pundit on The Colbert Report. It was a fully committed act. The show made him famous and ran for close to a decade. The Late Show let him drop the character entirely. The real Colbert – sincere and sharp – connected with audiences in a way the pundit persona never quite did.
Obama’s framing is worth sitting with, friends. He didn’t just say Colbert was funny. He framed Colbert’s work as something that helped people hold onto a sense of who Americans are – not a small claim for a late-night comedy show. Late-night comedy usually gets filed under light entertainment. Obama is putting Colbert’s work somewhere else entirely. He spent eight years in the Oval Office thinking hard about exactly those questions. That kind of praise, coming from him, carries real weight.
As of May 22, 2026, the Instagram post had drawn more than 166,000 likes.
The Late Show has aired on CBS five nights a week since Colbert took over in 2015, with a consistent focus on current events and political commentary across more than a decade of programming. Obama put all of that into a few sentences, and the warmth is plain. This is genuine respect from a genuine friend.
Late night has plenty of voices. Not all of them stay with people. Obama is saying Colbert is one of the rare ones that did. Spend a few seasons with the show and that probably just sounds right.
