Indo-Canadian comic and youtube sensation Lilly Singh is moving on from the gabfest and has signed a first-look deal with Universal Television Alternative Studio, a division of Universal Studio Group, to develop unscripted projects. She also heads Unicorn Island Productions, and intends to focus on projects under that banner

LOS ANGELES – Indo-Canadian comic and youtube sensation Lilly Singh’s NBC talk show “A Little Late With Lilly Singh,” will come to an end after two years, the latest sign that TV networks are rethinking how to handle a widening array of wee-hours programs as viewing habits shift.

Singh is moving on from the gabfest and has signed a first-look deal with Universal Television Alternative Studio, a division of Universal Studio Group, to develop unscripted projects. She also heads Unicorn Island Productions, and intends to focus on projects under that banner, reported Variety

“A Little Late” airs weeknights at 1:35 a.m., following “Tonight” with Jimmy Fallon and “Late Night” with Seth Meyers. NBC did not immediately announce whether another program would replace Singh’s, but the network is believed to be considering options other than talk shows.

 “I have a desire to make longer form content telling underrepresented stories, which is difficult to execute on a nightly show,” Sigh said in a statement. Among her new efforts is a comedy project with Netflix in which she will star. It is executive produced by Kenya Barris and his Khalabo Ink Society, along with writers/executive producers Nell Scovell and Diya Mishra.

NBC is the latest network to recalibrate its late-night line-up in recent months. Conan O’Brien, who is the longest-serving of TV’s current late-night crop, is slated to end his “Conan” on TBS in June after more than a decade on the air. Comedy Central, which at one time boasted three different half-hour programs, has recently bet more heavily on its “Daily Show,” hosted by Trevor Noah. The program was expanded to 60 minutes from its traditional half-hour running time

NBC in February announced plans to test “The Amber Ruffin Show,” a comedy-talk show made for its Peacock streaming service, on a handful of Friday nights on the broadcast network in place of repeats of “A Little Late,” reported Variety.