THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER 52 AUGUST 21, 2019
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Singh, dressed in a knee-length
white vest and matching saddle
shoes, her long raven hair dan-
gling in a ponytail, is something
of a unicorn herself. Not only
is she one of the few females to
brave broadcast TV’s late night
airwaves since Joan Rivers
famously flamed out on Fox more
than 30 years ago, she’s also the
first openly bisexual woman
of color to sit in a host’s chair.
Perhaps as significantly, she’s the
first internet-bred star in broad-
cast late night, too.
While her name and face might
not be familiar to the tradition-
ally older demographic that
tunes in to late night, Singh,
30, is hardly new to the post-
broadcast generation of viewers
who wouldn’t know a Jimmy from
a Seth or a Stephen, let alone a
Carson (of Last Call With Carson
Daly, whose NBC time slot she’s
taking over). For the past nine
years, she’s been building her
own uniquely personal, extraor-
dinarily successful brand on
YouTube, where nearly 15 million
fans know her as Superwoman
(the name of her channel) and
consider her something between
a star and a best friend. Her
2013 post in which she poked
fun at women’s getting-ready
rituals has been viewed nearly
29 million times. Another, the
music video Voi ces in 2016, has
grabbed 9.5 million. And an
interview with Michelle Obama
has 2.3 million. Even Singh’s
more mundane life updates
attract huge numbers, like the
2018 Instagram post in which she
introduced the world to her new
puppy. It drew more than 700,000
likes (or roughly the same num-
ber of people who tuned in to
Daly’s Last Call before he called it
quits, after 17 years, in May).
Internet stars have (sort of)
crossed over before. YouTube
comic Miranda Sings landed
a Netflix series. Grace Helbig
parlayed her awkward humor into
a talk show on E! (after Chelsea
Handler bolted for Netflix). But
none has ventured this deeply
into the white-hot (emphasis
on white) center of mainstream
entertainment. And late night
TV — even at the ungodly start-
ing time of 1:35 a.m. — is an
altogether different league with
an altogether different audi-
ence and different demands. So,
naturally, Superwoman is feeling
the pressure these days. “There’s
a small part of me that’s like, ‘Is
everyone going to like this?’ ” she
acknowledges after she’s done
throwing footwear at the writers
(some of them later even put on
the slippers). “That’s obviously a
fear. But I’m going to do what I’ve
always done, which is make some-
thing that I think is good, that is
authentic to me. That’s what has
gotten me my success thus far.”
SINGH INHERITED HER HUSTLE FROM
her father, who after leaving
India’s Punjab for Canada with
her mother in the 1970s tried
out furniture sales and working
security before he opened a slew
of gas stations when she was at
university. “I’ve imitated him
quite a bit,” she acknowledges,
rattling off all the jobs she has
held down — collection agent,
drive-thru cashier at Canadian
fast food chain Harvey’s, camera
saleswoman, dance instructor.
Her adolescent years in the
Toronto suburbs were a picture of
Singh’s YouTube
videos, which
for many years
she shot in her
parents’ home
in Canada, have
pulled 3.1 billion
lifetime views.
Jimmy Fallon (left) and Seth Meyers welcomed Singh to the NBC family March 14
with champagne and an invitation to sit behind the Tonight Show desk.
hen Lilly Singh runs a pitch meeting, she comes bearing
gifts. “Live your best life in the office — you don’t have
to wear shoes!” she announces to the writers she’s
assembled on this scorching August afternoon in a drab
conference room off Melrose Avenue in Hollywood,
where they’ ll be discussing ideas for her new NBC late
night show, A Little Late, which premieres Sept. 16. She
proceeds to toss out pairs of fluffy white unicorn slippers.
normalcy: While her parents were
hard at work creating opportuni-
ties for Singh and her older sister,
Tina, she was listening to rap
music in her bedroom, idolizing
Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson and
dreaming of a career in entertain-
ment. By 2010, she was a senior at
York University still living with
her parents and wondering what
she’d do with a degree in psy-
chology, and she was struggling
with depression.
That’s when Singh discovered
YouTube. There was AKTV, a
brown kid from Canada just like
her, talking about Indian stereo-
types and freestyle rapping from
his bedroom, and Helbig, upload-
ing daily dispatches about life as
a post-grad. For a girl with big
dreams who was feeling utterly
alone, those videos became a
lifeline. Soon she worked up the
courage to create a channel — the
name Superwoman came from
her first MSN Messenger screen
name, cribbed from the early
2000s rap song by Missy Elliott
protege Lil’ Mo — and posted
a video of her own, a spoken-
word poem that she later took
down because it was “so crazy.”
Amazingly, it got 70 views. “I was
like, ‘Whoa, I am famous,’ ” says
Singh. “It boggled my mind. How
did these people find this video?
Who were they and why were
they watching?”
It was enough positive rein-
forcement that Singh kept going,
immediately throwing herself
into multiple posts a week despite