Crude Trump-Putin joke lands Stephan Colbert in trouble

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The marquee for "The Late Show with Stephen Colbert" is seen on the Ed Sullivan Theater in Manhattan, New York, August 21, 2015. Colbert is set to host the show, which was previously presented by David Letterman. REUTERS/Andrew Kelly

A crude joke about U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin has sparked a social media storm with calls for late-night TV show host Stephen Colbert to be fired competing with praise for his outspoken remarks.

It triggered a #FireColbert trending Twitter hashtag, with Trump supporters on Wednesday calling for a boycott of CBS Corp advertisers, some people accusing Colbert of being homophobic, others accusing left-wingers of hypocrisy, and still more defending the comedian.

“Colbert’s homophobia rant was disgusting and we won’t tolerate this anti-LGBTQ behavior,” wrote Scott Presler, chairman of Virginia Beach Young Republicans, on Twitter.

“#FireColbert? Please… I wish I could buy him a drink,” tweeted a user with the handle @kingofsorrow954.

CBS on Wednesday declined to comment on Colbert’s remarks, which follow a surge in popularity for “The Late Show” since the host stepped up his scathing nightly attacks on Trump. Colbert has also remained silent on the social media reaction.

Colbert told his audience that the joke was in response to Trump’s appearance on the CBS political show “Face the Nation” over the weekend, when the Republican president walked out after telling host John Dickerson that he liked to call the Sunday morning news show “Deface the Nation.”

The White House did not immediately return a request for comment on Colbert’s monologue. Colbert, 52, has been attracting the biggest audiences for late-night U.S. television in recent months with his blistering attacks on Trump.

Some 3 million people watch “The Late Show,” according to ratings data, which has challenged the genial formula of topical jokes, games and celebrity guests seen on NBC rival “The Tonight Show” with Jimmy Fallon.

“If we don’t go after his network sponsors or affect their ratings base, he will just get more popular,” tweeted a user called @hackenbush77.

Social media monitoring company Brandwatch said on Wednesday that the #FireColbert hashtag had been used 200,000 times since Monday and there had been more than 10,000 tweets about persuading brands to pull their ad dollars from CBS.