As the heir to Stephen Colbert’s Comedy Central time slot, comedian Larry Wilmore knows he has some big shoes to fill. Plenty of so-called “fake news” shows have tried and failed to repeat the winning formula that Colbert, and his lead-in Jon Stewart perfected. Ahead of the premiere of Wilmore’s new series, “The Nightly Show,” the comedian sat down with reporters Friday on his set to talk about the new show.
The name
The 53-year-old Wilmore, who emerged as a breakout star on “The Daily Show,” knows that even nailing down a signature show name is crucial to ingratiating yourself with a late night audience that has plenty of options to choose from. And Wilmore’s program has already gone through a couple iterations — it was originally titled “The Minority Report with Larry Wilmore,” a nod to the comedian’s previous role as the “senior black correspondent” for “The Daily Show.”
“If we used it, we had to use the whole title. All the time it had to be ‘The Minority Report with Larry Wilmore,’ all the time, in all forms,” Wilmore said. The show risked a legal battle with owners of the title “Minority Report,” Steven Spielberg’s 2002 movie starring Tom Cruise.
“We said forget it, let’s just not get in this fight. I mean we were hearing from their lawyers all the time,” Wilmore said, adding, “I was going to call it ‘Meet the Rest,’ that was another name.”
Ultimately the team settled on “The Nightly Show with Larry Wilmore.”
The voice
Arriving at the right blend of information and comedy is key for any late-night satirical news show. But Wilmore also wants to elevate overlooked or new voices, many of whom will be minorities. And he wants to find his own voice, too.
The head writer is Robin Thede, who previously worked as head writer for “The Queen Latifah Show” and a writer for BET’s “Real Husbands of Hollywood” before coming to Comedy Central. Wilmore’s team also plans to feature personalities such as Mike Yard, Ricky Velez and Shenaz Treasury.
How does he find new voices?
“You just look, you just look,” Wilmore told the reporters surrounding him on his new set. “It’s as simple as that, you just look. Most people don’t look, you gotta look. You gotta say who’s out there? Let’s go find them.”
As for his own voice?









