Too Late with Adam Carolla

2005

Seasons & Episodes

  • 1

5.2| 0h30m| en
Synopsis

Too Late with Adam Carolla was a late night talk show hosted by Adam Carolla and produced by Jackhole Industries, a team made up of old collaborators: Carolla, Jimmy Kimmel, and Daniel Kellison. The show, which mixed celebrity interviews, chatty everyday observations, scripted sketches, and phone conversations with viewers, premiered on August 8, 2005 in the 11:30 p.m. time slot on Comedy Central. The show struggled to find an audience, averaging fewer than 700,000 viewers, a poor performance that Carolla jokingly acknowledged on air. On September 20, the show was moved to 12:00 and the live audience was dropped. The show got its highest ratings when Steve-O of Jackass and Wildboyz fame came onto the show intoxicated and tackled Adam while yelling obscenities. The last episode aired in November 2005.

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Reviews

GamerTab That was an excellent one.
Kailansorac Clever, believable, and super fun to watch. It totally has replay value.
DipitySkillful an ambitious but ultimately ineffective debut endeavor.
Kirandeep Yoder The joyful confection is coated in a sparkly gloss, bright enough to gleam from the darkest, most cynical corners.
swatsds I enjoyed this show very much, however I can understand why many people didn't. When you're flipping the channels at midnight, your choices consist of a lot of scripted, overproduced, gimmicky talk segments. Alternatively,the effect that Adam Carolla brought forth was and is something that is very unusual; real talk with a real host. Similar to his radio shows, Adam would speak what was on his mind, steered ever so slightly by that days topics, but most of the time he would choose his own personal beefs or thoughts to discuss.That's what I enjoyed most about the show. You felt like you were actually talking to a human being. An incredibly humorous story teller who was amazingly quick witted, Adam never loses your attention. He never goes for the traditional sight gags or cheap laughs either. Perhaps that is what lost him casual viewership.I admit that the show has served me best when I watch many in a row, just from my PC (where it can easily be found online at acsarchive.com) So I can see why the commercial interruptions and competing shows would make "Too Late" seem too subtle and unable to maintain traction in comparison.Going beyond his conversational skills, Adam complemented his style with several segments that balanced his improvisational observations with something more tangible and interactive; like making fun of clips from a movie, going through a slide show, remote pieces on the streets, and other, unique, one-off segments. Perhaps what made the show even more inviting was the chemistry Adam had with his guests, whom he would not only have humorous discussions with, but often include in these segments. That is seldom, if ever, attempted elsewhere.For the second half of the series, the crowd was removed, and ironically made the show even more intimate, by bringing more focus to the man, Adam, who really is 99% of the show anyway as well as expanding the length of time with the guests. Usually the guest was interesting and eclectic to Adam's personality, from Sarah Silverman to Buzz Aldrin and Alec Baldwin. And when two comedians or interesting people talk, with less commercial agendas, the result is a more genuinely entertaining talk show.Rounding out the show were two regular bits Adam would use coming into and out of commercials; "slippery slope guy" and "1780's guy", as well as the infrequent Sensai Adam. All were great concepts that, even though you knew the punchline, never lost their poignancy or hilarity. The real staple of the show, however, was the viewers who were always on the phone waiting for Adam to dance with whatever they threw his way, showcasing his every man appeal and universal humor.I guess what could be the double edge sword that made "Too Late" an extremely enjoyable, addictive show for some and one that seemed too slow for the average viewer was its more relaxed style. In my eyes, however, this adds greatly to the lasting appeal and freshness, proving to be a classic talk show that will most likely never be matched.
misc2-1 I think this show is actually quite funny. Corolla has a cutting, witty sense of humor. I bet most of the people who are criticizing the humor need other people to tell them what's funny. Watch John Stewart's Daily Show and listen to the laughs. He just makes a stupid face and everyone goes crazy. They must drug their studio audience. Corolla on the other hand turns down the volume of his audience--it's much more realistic.Also Corollo specializes in intellectual/sarcastic humor (as opposed to humor based on strong emotional reactions). It may not provoke belly laughs, but that doesn't mean it's not funnier than material that does.Corolla tends to have lower-profile guests: second-tier comedians like Patton Oswald instead of top tier celebrities like Tom Hanks or John McCain. Most people probably don't like this, but it does lower the tension level and make the show more laid back, relaxed, and less like your stereotypical talk show.
Chromium_5 This is a refreshing show. I realize a lot of people hate it, but that's probably because they're used to perfectly executed, super-smooth shows like "The Daily Show" (and remember, when that got started, they didn't know what the hell they were doing, either). "Too Late" is just a guy rambling on aimlessly with his guest. The complete randomness and awkwardness bring it down to a personal level. It feels like the type of show YOU would do with your friends. Adam seems like a pretty down to earth guy, and I admire the way he really doesn't seem to care how slipshod the show is; he's just talking with his guest and enjoying himself. He keeps trying new things, and I imagine that if they keep this on the air long enough, it will evolve into a pretty good show. I am liking this so far, and I'm interested to see where they go with it.
General_G I always used to hate both Adam Carolla and his buddy Jimmy Kimmel, but since Adam's new show here I'm starting to think he is funny! Too Late is a great show! Its the pet peeve show where Adam and callers talk about there pet peeves and speak there mind. Current events are also discussed. There's at least one guest every episode. My favorite guests so far where Kevin Nealon and Matthew Lesko. There's a live audience too. Adam really won himself over with this great show. I'm hoping its a success over that bad Weekends at the DL show which isn't that great seeing that DL Hughley isn't funny. Anyway, keep watching Too Late with Adam Carolla! If its on to late for you, tape it.