For all the talk of Tom Bradyâs TV debut in 2024, few pro athletes have made the transition off the field and into the pop-culture landscape more effectively than Jason Kelce, whose unique professional and personal alchemy includes: notable on-field success, including All-Pro honors, a Super Bowl title in Philadelphia and a role as a lead performer of the Eaglesâ âTush Pushâ; off-field media stardom as a co-host, with brother Travis, of the wildly popular âNew Heightsâ podcast; and commercial ubiquity (Buffalo Wild Wings and Campbellâs Chunky Soup, among others).
That led to a multiyear deal with ESPN, including participating on âMonday Night Countdownâ and, as of 1 a.m. ET on Saturday morning, a new role as late-night talk show host â arguably one of the the most challenging jobs in TV.
Taped in front of a live audience at Philadelphiaâs Union Transfer, âThey Call It Late Night With Jason Kelceâ was the first of a four-week âpop-upâ experiment in sports TV leading up to the Super Bowl, and the results were a not-unexpected mix of raucous, ragged and relatable.
Here are key takeaways from the showâs debut:
Kelceâs bearded, beer-swilling âeverymanâ vibe is at the heart of his charm
And the show leaned right into that. Kelce wore a lettermanâs jacket and T-shirt, with jeans and work boots.
He set a tone quickly, asking his audience: âHow did we get here?â Actually, his very first words were âHoly sâ.â The late-night license to curse was used liberally but not particularly gratuitously (the s-word went unbleeped, the f-word was bleeped).
From the showâs name, logo and intro to its retro-fun set to a few of its bits, there was a running homage to the best of NFL Films. âThey Call It Pro Footballâ was one of NFL Filmsâ earliest projects, and the appreciation Kelce has for NFL history popped, from a warm studio cameo and toast with Hall of Fame Eagles receiver Harold Carmichael to Kelceâs awe for framed photos of the NFLâs most famous âmangled handsâ hanging in the studio.
First pics of Jason Kelceâs new show âThey Call It Late Nightâ
đž: @ESPNPR pic.twitter.com/PPKD0lZ2qN
â Kelce Brothers (@kelcebrothers) January 4, 2025
Kelceâs opening monologue gets graded on a curve
Thatâs because the late-night host monologue in front of an audience is among the most challenging work in all of TV â let alone by someone with limited hosting experience. The audience was friendly and forgiving of the occasional faltering riff, if not laughing their heads off. The bits involving actors â like a segment where Kelce met himself as a 14-year-old and as an older person â were more cringe than comedy.
The second segment shined
The show was at its best in the second segment, when Kelce brought out a roundtable of guests: the rapper and actor Dave âLil Dickyâ Burd, the NFL TV analyst Brian Baldinger and â in an impressive flex by Kelce and ESPN â Charles Barkley.
Their roundtable conversation felt like listening to a podcast in all the right ways â casual and conversational. From his experience co-hosting âNew Heights,â Kelce seemed so much more comfortable as a moderator than solo star.
They covered some good ânewsyâ topics â the Eagles sitting Saquon Barkley before he could try to set the NFL single-season rushing record (Charles Barkley: âIâm glad heâs not playing.â), playersâ mindset heading into Week 18 and Detroit Lions coach Dan Campbell. Giving four professional talkers a classic sports-talk framework was a great idea.
The show could use a tighter run time
As the show got deeper into its hour-long run-time, the conceits and viewer experience got demonstrably more strained: A segment where the four panelists were tasked with doing their best impressions of legendary NFL Films voice (and Philly native) John Facenda was derailed by the panelists being totally unprepared to read their cue cards and the content of the cards being clunky and corny. (Burd: âI donât know what I just read.â)
A final segment featuring four super-fans in a beer-chugging contest felt tacked on and featured the fastest chugger being disqualified for not ending by flipping his mug onto his head as instructed. (Watching it was even more raggedy than describing it.)
The show could â and would â benefit from a tighter run-time (30 minutes makes sense), which would allow it to really zero in on Kelce as an expert moderator of an interesting panel of guests.
The show needs more Kylie
One area where the show should not skimp going forward: Air-time for Kelceâs wife, Kylie, who sits at a table in the wings (âKylieâs Kornerâ) and acts as lead voiceover, lamentably used only sparingly in the debut.
Kylie â who recently displaced Joe Rogan as the most popular podcast host on Spotify â is way too talented (and way too big of a star in her own right) to have such a minimal, marginal role. The show would benefit from way more Kylie, and it could easily replace the final two blocks with the couple bantering about topics together â or adding Kylie to the roundtable.
Kylie Kelce is an announcer for “They Call it Late Night with Jason Kelce” â€ïž @latenightwithjk | @JasonKelce pic.twitter.com/QnibuiP3eL
â espnW (@espnW) January 4, 2025
I have a lot of empathy and appreciation for a production team trying something new, and debut episodes are the moment all your fun ideas in the writersâ room meet reality.
In this case, they donât need the canned bits and actors â they have Kelce, in all his authenticity and talent for holding a conversation; they have Kylie; they have ESPNâs convening power to get big names like Barkley; they have a friendly Philly crowd and a welcoming studio set-up â and they should double down on letting Kelce do what he is best at.
Required reading
(Photo: Andy Lewis / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)