Here's Kelce! Retired Eagles great Jason Kelce's tries hand as late
night television show host
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[January 04, 2025]
By DAN GELSTON
PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Jason Kelce chatted with the Linc — yes, the
concrete and steel of the Philadelphia Eagles home stadium answered him
with a pep talk — before the retired All-Pro lineman toured the city in
his Eagles helmet car all while dressed in his Super Bowl parade
Mummer’s costume. He parked the souped-up golf cart and tossed the keys
ZZ Top-style ahead of the first day of his new job.
He then dropped a profanity into the start of his monologue.
Roll out The Chug Machine, fly, F-bombs, fly, and save a seat for Sir
Charles because the latest host crashing late-night television is a bit
more raw than the traditional suit-and-tie joke tellers.
Jason Kelce threw a late night bash — and he brought his wife, his
parents, a fan with a Phillie Phanatic tattoo inked on his navel, a
Philly band and an uncensored (at least on stage) take on sports for the
first of five episodes of “They Call It Late Night with Jason Kelce,” on
ESPN.
Here's Kelce!
“I used to love watching late night TV growing up,” Kelce said.
Kelce quickly proved there’s space for another JK in late night — Kelce
disappeared into a portal where he walked out into (a pantsless) Jimmy
Kimmel’s office to ask for hosting advice — and moderated a loose panel
of sports topics with guests Charles Barkley, rapper and actor Lil Dicky,
and NFL Network analyst Brian Baldinger.
And Kelce said he received real guidance from Kimmel on the art of
hosting.
“He sat me down and really explained some things that he thought would
accelerate this process for me,” Kelce said.
Kelce bantered with the guests during commercial breaks and took
questions from a few of about 300 fans in the audience. When a fan from
New Jersey invited Kelce to his wedding, the retired star quipped, “I
don’t go into New Jersey.”
Eagles fan and Penn State student Caleb Tinley learned only two days
earlier he was randomly selected for a pair of free tickets and was
first in line around noon to get a good seat for the taping. He’s a fan
of the “ New Heights ” podcast Kelce co-hosts with his brother, Kansas
City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, and figured the TV show was as close
to that experience as he could get.
“Ever since he had that speech at the Super Parade, he became a Philly
legend,” Tinley said.
The 37-year-old Kelce — who retired in March after a 13-year career
spent entirely with Philadelphia — has watched his profile balloon in
retirement. The Super Bowl winner already hosted the podcast but has
become a prolific pitchman hawking everything from chicken wings to
soup, to laundry detergent to cereal, to hoagies to his own beer
company.
Kelce was already omnipresent on television and social media, so what
was one more gig to add to his resume?
So “Late Night” was born.
Kelce is in the first year of a multiyear agreement with ESPN and
already appears on the network’s “Monday Night Countdown” show. The
retired center taking center stage on a late night staple such as a talk
show — no Letterman, though he did wear his Cleveland Heights
letterman's jacket — seemed a natural extension into his growing
entertainment profile.
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Former NFL player and ESPN analyst Jason Kelce performs his opening
monologue during the taping of "They Call It Late Night with Jason
Kelce", Friday, Jan. 3, 2025, in Philadelphia. (AP Photo/Chris
Szagola)
The show’s title is a homage to
“They Call it Pro Football,” which was NFL Films’ first full-length
film in 1967. NFL Films originated in Philadelphia and founders Ed
and Steve Sabol are in the Pro Football Hall of Fame. It also
featured the legendary voice of John Facenda, whose tone was
imitated on the show by Kelce and his panel as they narrated modern
NFL highlights.
“I knew I wanted NFL Films because I felt like we
wanted to make a show that celebrated the NFL landscape,” Kelce
said. “Not just from current players and current games, but of past
games and past players. Past announcers. NFL fans and the subculture
of the NFL. We wanted to create a show that really embraced all of
that.”
The Philadelphia-based band Snacktime provided the music. Kylie
Kelce, fresh off dethroning Joe Rogan as the No. 1 podcast on the
Spotify charts, served as the foul-mouthed sidekick from her perch
in “Kylie’s Korner.”
Kelce's expletives in the monologue were no momentary brain cramp as
he transitioned from locker room talk to cable television. Kelce and
Kylie peppered their conversations with profanity — this is late
night, after all — and tried to make the relationship seem as real
in the studio as it is at home where the couple raise three
daughters with a fourth girl expected this year.
“We really wanted the language to be real and authentic to me,”
Kelce said after the show. “We overdid it a little bit today to kind
of prep the audience on what to expect. I think the F-bombs was the
one thing where I was told, we might want to be a little bit
cautious there but, listen, we want to give you range to be who you
are."
The debut one-hour “Late Night” episode was taped Friday in front of
a live audience from Philly concert venue Union Transfer. The show
aired at 1 a.m. EST on ESPN and will tape the next four Friday
nights. The schedule coincides with the last week of the NFL’s
regular season and the playoffs.
Comedian Seth Herzog warmed up the crowd and joked the event had a
no-phones policy so Kelce wouldn’t smash them like he did in a viral
moment at Penn State.
The Philly slant couldn’t be missed — they filmed a bit where a
female fan spewed bites of a hoagie into the mouth of, well, Jason
Kelce from the future, and Barkley played to the crowd when he
picked the Eagles to win the Super Bowl — but the real Kelce said he
wanted a show that would appeal to fans nationwide.
Smash hit or not, there are no promises from ESPN of anything beyond
the limited run.
“We really just wanted to try something fun to do and I think
everybody was on board to experiment and see what happens,” Kelce
said. “I do think there's room for this, especially within the
football season.”
After Kelce participated in a skit with parents Ed and Donna,
celebrated with a fastest beer-chugging winner and shared a cold one
at the bar with Eagles great Harold Carmichael, he broke down the
show the same way he would as an Eagle in the postgame locker room.
“It’s game day,” Kelce said. “Plenty of errors, just like a game.
Plenty of things to clean up. But just so happy with how it went.”
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