Late-night comics aren't heroes to the degree that doctors and scientists are during these dark times. But there are some evenings they've come pretty close.
Spending time with familiar faces right before bedtime can be as soothing as a glass of warm milk, even if our TV pals are struggling to put on shows without interns on deck to wipe their foreheads. In fact, watching them work without a net has been a huge part of the fun.
Most of the big names have been broadcasting from their homes, recruiting family members as sidekicks and crew members.
"The Tonight Show" has been gloriously hijacked by Jimmy Fallon's daughters, who would rather be watching TV than appearing on it. The theme for "Jimmy Kimmel Live," currently being performed by 5-year-old Jane Kimmel, just might be the feel-good song of the year.
We now know that Conan O'Brien has a bust of Teddy Roosevelt in his home office and that Fallon gets to his basement by zipping down a children's slide.
Some hosts have taken the bare-bones approach to the extreme. John Oliver and Stephen Colbert are using "sets" that make "Wayne's World" look like a Cecil B. DeMille production.
Others are being more creative. Seth Meyers has been broadcasting from a crawl space in his attic; Samantha Bee took to the woods, where she hunted down those animated bears from the Charmin commercials.
All the comics are still getting used to not having a live audience.