Featured  ·  Opinion  ·  TV

Canceling Late Night TV Could Give New Yorkers a Tax Cut – An Editorial by Culture Casino

May 6, 2025  ·
  C.C. Campione
Jimmy Kimmel doing a monologue

Jimmy Kimmel performing a Monologue on his ABC show - X, @kylenabecker

As the downward spiral that is late night TV seems to accelerate toward it’s inevitable doom (unless you’re Gutfeld of course), a strange upside for the city of New York emerges. Potentially anyway. A small beneficial tax cut could be realized for a very odd reason.
 
For some of the oddest reasoning imaginable, the average New Yorker pays $2 a year in taxes toward keeping Saturday Night Live on the air. That’s right! A network television subsidy redirects some of the blame for the decline of the once funny counter culture juggernaut, beginning in 2017.
 
Stephen Colbert Vaccine Dance

Stephen Colbert dances around with human vaccine needles – YouTube, The Late Show With Stephen Colbert

READ: Thunderbolts Falls Below Initial Opening Weekend Box Office Projections, Becomes Marvel’s Lowest Summer Kickoff Ever

In fact, the New York Film Tax Credits may be keeping shows around that otherwise may have been canceled for lack of profit. All at a pretty hefty cost to taxpayers, the majority of whom wouldn’t even know.
 
The primary beneficiaries since the 2017 implementation have been: Saturday Night Live for $111 million dollars, The Tonight Show at $81 million dollars, and many others including The Blacklist, Blue Bloods, Billions, Bull, and Madam Secretary.
 
Jimmy Kimmel Crying

A screenshot of Jimmy Kimmel crying on TV after the election of Donald Trump – YouTube, Jimmy Kimmel Live

READ: California Governor Gavin Newsom Proposes $7.5 Billion Tax Incentive for Studios to ‘Make America Film Again’ After Trump Unveils Tariff Plan on Foreign-Made Movies

Tax credit programs come with a lot of controversy in most states when put under a cost benefit lens. In 2020 alone New York handed out about $700 million dollars of taxpayer money. That’s a pretty penny indeed. As surprising as that number may be, neighboring state New Jersey spilled out $800 million per year. Yet there is a nagging question, are the film credit programs a net gain. That all would depend on the book keeping method employed.
 
A few studies done on the subject are, at best, misleading. Worse than that, they showed opposite results. New York’s own organization concluded $1.70 in added tax revenues for every dollar spent, while another study determined the state recouped only $0.30 for every dollar spent. Talk about inconclusive results.
 
Tom Hanks Keenan SNL

Tom Hanks and Keenan Thompson in the controversial Black Jeopardy segment on SNL – YouTube, Saturday Night Live

 

Suffice it to say that if, SNL retires after this year, it’s 50th season, Jimmy Fallon gets kicked to the curb, and the entire late night show monstrosity finally lays down in it’s grave, there would be a net positive New Yorkers could enjoy. Less wasted money. 

Would you be for or against the dinosaurs of “Late Night” loosing access to citizens taxes? Are “Late Night” shows still relevant? Do you think “Tax Credits” for film and television a scam or good investment? Let us know in the comments.

UP NEXT: Dolly Parton Leads 40th Anniversary Celebration at Dollywood in Person With a Parade, Big Dreams, and a Monumental New Ride on the Way

Author: C.C. Campione
Traveler, gardener, communicator on all things pop culture and entertainment. Also known on YouTube as Culture Casino, where he appears on his own channels as well as That Park Place, WDW Pro, and Mr. H Reviews, among others.