LISTEN: James Corden Reunites âLate Late Showâ Team for Foxâs âAfter Hoursâ World Cup Show
Three years after he signed off CBSâ âThe Late Late Show,â James Corden is having the time of his life hosting the World Cup after show for Fox, âAfter Hours With James Corden.â On the latest episode of âDaily Varietyâ podcast, the multihyphenate discusses the joy of indulging in his lifelong love of football and why the call from Fox Sports was the one hosting gig that heâs been offered in recent years that he couldnât turn down.
âAfter Hoursâ debuted on the first day of the tournament, June 11, and is airing nightly at 11 p.m. through the final game on July 19. Cordenâs set is right next to the studio for Fox Sportsâ World Cup anchor team including Rebecca Lowe, Thierry Henry and Zlatan IbrahimoviÄ.
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The âAfter Hoursâ set is decorated like a clubhouse, with all manner of soccer memorabilia â photos of star players past and present, balls, cleats, flags, pennants and of course, the many scarfs that fans don to show their loyalty to favorite clubs. Another eye-catching element is the life size wax figure of soccer great PelĂ© that is on loan from Madame Tussauds in London.
For Corden, the opportunity to get the âLate Late Showâ team back together for a finite assignment revolving around a subject that he knows well was impossible to turn down, once he gave it some thought. Heâs working with âLate Late Showâ executive producer Ben Winston and former head writer Ian Karmel, who mixes it up at a big table with Corden and British soccer great Rio Ferdinand.
âI didnât realize how much Iâd missed producing an hour of live television every day,â Winston told Variety.
Corden notes that he and Winston produced a similar after show for the U.K.âs ITV during the 2010 World Cup. The offer from Rob Wade, Fox Entertainment CEO, came to him more than a year ago. Heâs been offered all manner of hosting gigs since bowing out of âLate Late Showâ that were of no interest to him. But the chance to weigh in nightly on a World Cup tournament in the U.S. â that was special.
âI wasnât completely convinced and on the hook, if Iâm honest. I certainly wasnât in a rush to host anything. I really felt like hosting shows was something Iâd probably said goodbye to when I stopped âThe Late Late Show,â â Corden told Variety. âAnd then the more I thought about it and the more I thought, âMan, the great thing about this is itâs so definite in its time. Itâs not like youâre going to sit and go, oh, weâre going to get picked up for a second season. Howâs it doing? Itâs about something very specific that I love. And the more I thought about it, I thought, youâre an idiot to even consider turning this down.â
The timing was dictated by the tournament, of course, but it turned out that the stars aligned for Corden to recruit the âLate Late Showâ alumni that would allow him to work at a high level.
âThe thing thatâs made it really, really joyful is how many old faces are back just doing this for five weeks,â he said. âItâs been glorious.â
With the benefit of distance, Corden reflected on his decision to wrap up âLate Late Showâ in April 2023 after eight years behind the desk. Heâs proud of the show and its legacy. He has, of course, watched from afar in the U.K. all the controversy and drama envelope his former CBS schedule mate, Stephen Colbert, whose show ended amid enormous pressure exerted against CBS by the Trump administration. And now ABCâs Jimmy Kimmel is in the crosshairs of Trump and the FCC.
Corden said he could feel a big shift in landscape coming even in 2023. âLate Late Showâ wrapped up barely one week before production shut down with the start of the writers strike on May 2, 2023.
âI remember when I when âThe Late Late Showâ was wrapping up, we had about a week to go and very kindly, weâd been invited to talk at the Paleyfest about the show. And I was stood backstage with David Staff, who runs CBS Studios, a wonderful man who I just love and adore, and I consider him a friend still and always will. And we stood backstage and there was this clip reel running on the screen. And, and he said, âItâs so sad, isnât it?â And I said, âI donât think it is sad, actually.â I said, âIf Iâd signed that contract that you offered me,â which took a lot of willpower to walk away from, youâd have come to me and said, âWe need to cut $10 million from this budget,â â Corden recalled.
âAnd as soon as you need to cut $10 million from a budget, the only way you do that is by making your team smaller. And as soon as you make your team smaller, you change the entire environment of the team that are making that show. And I said, âI donât think itâs sad at all.â And he went âTwo years? It would have been in six weeks.â Thatâs where it was at,â he said. âI feel just incredibly proud of what we did and of what we accomplished when we did it.â
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