Vince Vaughn’s critique lands because it comes from someone who’s lived inside Hollywood’s comedy machine yet refuses to plant a flag on either side. On Theo Von’s podcast, he painted a picture of late-night that feels less like a party and more like a lecture hall, where jokes are replaced by judgment and viewers are treated like students who need correcting. That, he argues, is when the laughs died.
Instead, he sees people turning to long-form conversations and podcasts, where the edges aren’t sanded down and the agenda isn’t so obvious. Vaughn admits his own politics are mixed and messy, and that’s exactly his point: most people don’t want to be told what to think, or shamed for thinking differently.
They want to feel welcome, not sorted into “good” and “bad.” For him, authenticity isn’t a buzzword — it’s the last real currency in entertainment.