TV

CBS throws Letterman set into Dumpster

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Letterman fans dumpster-dive for thrown out set pieces.
Matthew McDermott
Matthew McDermott
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Thanks, Dave. Now get out!

CBS wasted no time in kicking David Letterman’s set to the curb. Sentimental fans gathered outside the Ed Sullivan Theater🌌 on Thursday to watch as stagehands unceremoniously crushed and sawed through iconꦡic pieces of the “Late Show” backdrop the day after the final show.

“I can’t believe they’re just demolishing the whole thing. It♍’s shocking,” said Stephanie Strausz, of Manhattan, who scored a second-row ticket to Wednesday’s star-studded finale.

“It should go in the Smithsonian, not the Dumpsꦬter,” she said.

The ​George ​Washington Bridge at the back of Letterman’s set was an iconic piece of the show until the very end.AP

Strausz was one of many “Late Show” l✃overs who successfully snagged a keepsake from a theater Dumpster that overflowed with red audience seats and bi♍ts of the bridges that made up the set behind Letterman’s desk.

More than a dozen fans w𒀰aited for the workers and security to clear out Thursday evening bef🍃ore descending on the talk-show trash like vultures, scavenging for salvageable relics.

“Show business. They don’t waste much time,” executive producer Rob Burnett said via Instagram, ne☂xt to a photo he took of the gutted theater.

There were a few things stagehands carefully carried o🃏ut, including Letterman’s on-air desk — which was covered in bubble wrap and headed for the Smithsonian — a replica of the George Washington Bridge, loaded into a van, and furniture and instruments belonging to band leader Paul Shaffer.

Most of tಞhe costumes and some props were sent to a costume warehouse in Yonkers.

Letterman said farewell on Wednesday after 33 years in late-night television.