Fact Check

Tune out claim about Stephen Colbert's impromptu 3 a.m. broadcast

Posts implied the late-night host had received a threat from U.S. President Donald Trump.

by Jack Izzo, Published Feb. 23, 2026


Late show host Stephen Colbert, a white man with dark hair and glasses, wearing a suit and tie

Image courtesy of Getty Images


Claim:
In February 2026, comedian and late-night TV host Stephen Colbert unexpectedly hosted at livestream at 3 a.m. to inform viewers about a threatening text message he had received from a powerful politician.
Rating:
False

About this rating


In February 2026, posts online claimed that late-night host Stephen Colbert unexpectedly started a livestream at 3 a.m. because he had received a threatening message from a powerful politician. The posts implied, but did not outright state, that the politician in question was U.S. President Donald Trump.

For instance, a Facebook page named Issa shared the claim at least three times between Feb. 16 and Feb. 20:

A long Facebook post alleging Stephen Colbert unexpectedly went live at 3 a.m. to discuss a threatening text message from Donald Trump.

(Facebook page Issa)

Other pages also shared the claim, which was often accompanied by a link to an unreliable blog in the comments. (That link redirected a website where the post's date suggested the rumor about Colbert had been spreading since at least Jan. 25, 2026). 

Snopes readers wrote in asking for more information about Colbert's supposed statement.

We found there was no information supporting the claim that Colbert had unexpectedly started a livestream after receiving a threatening message from Trump. Searches of Bing, DuckDuckGo, Google and Yahoo found no news media outlets reporting about the rumor. If the rumor were true, a lack of reporting would be incredibly unlikely — Colbert's show (among other late-night shows) has made headlines multiple times over the past year due to what many observers interpret as a conflict with the Trump administration.

Rather, whoever authored the story fabricated the entire tale with a goal to earn advertising revenue on websites linked from the aforementioned Facebook posts and from the social media platform itself, a type of content often associated with AI-generated tools and sometimes called AI slop.

An examination of the Issa Facebook page's stories, for instance, found multiple indications of artificial intelligence-generated images. For instance, one photo included with the claim featured Colbert supposedly talking into several microphones, as if at a news conference. Those microphones, however, were labeled with complete gibberish. Another sign the page was a source of AI slop was its inhuman posting volume — new posts with similar story structures went up most hours of the day with minimal breaks.

Snopes contacted a manager of the Issa Facebook page to ask about the fictional stories displayed on the feed, and will update this story if we receive more information.

Colbert has often been a target of AI slop. Snopes previously checked false claims that he started a dog sanctuary or that he teamed up with Jimmy Kimmel and Simon Cowell to launch a new TV channel.


By Jack Izzo

Jack Izzo is a Chicago-based journalist and two-time "Jeopardy!" alumnus.


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