Giving back. Jennifer Aniston joined the Thursday, April 2, episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live! with a huge surprise for a fan.
15.03.2020 - 21:27 / deadline.com
By Bruce Haring
pmc-editorial-manager
Jimmy Kimmel Live!, which previously announced it will air encore presentations for two weeks, will move to 12:05 AM ET starting Tuesday, March 17, and ABC News’sNightline will air at 11:35 p.m. ET for four nights.
ABC announced the late-night programming swap to deliver the latest COVID-19 updates from ABC News while Kimmel is on repeats.
Nightline is devoting its show to sole coverage of COVID-19 and the global and domestic effects of the outbreak. It
Giving back. Jennifer Aniston joined the Thursday, April 2, episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live! with a huge surprise for a fan.
Jimmy Kimmel is bringing joy to deserving people even while stuck at home.
Jennifer Aniston used her star power on Thursday to brighten the day of a coronavirus frontline worker who tested positive for COVID-19. The "Morning Show" star, 51, appeared as a surprise guest on "Jimmy Kimmel Live!" for the purpose of surprising a cardiovascular nurse from Utah who contracted the novel virus.
Jimmy Kimmel is bringing joy to deserving people even while stuck at home.
Jimmy Kimmel is bringing joy to deserving people even while stuck at home.
What happens when you think you're pranking somebody, only to be the one getting pranked? Ask Modern Family star Jesse Tyler Ferguson. In the above exclusive sneak peek from tonight's Jimmy Kimmel Live, Ferguson thinks he's pranking his Modern Family costar Eric Stonestreet with the help of Jimmy Kimmel and his crew, but the joke is quite literally on Ferguson.
By Nellie Andreeva
Jimmy Kimmel is joining many of his fellow late-night hosts in resuming production amid the coronavirus pandemic.The ABC host tweeted that Jimmy Kimmel Live! will resume production March 30, with episodes produced remotely and guests joining via video chat.Kimmel has been producing short segments that he calls "Quarantine Minilogues" from his home during stay-at-home mandates.
Global’s “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert” and “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” are returning to business as usual, well, sort of.
ABC’s “Jimmy Kimmel Live” and Showtime’s “Desus and Mero” are joining the parade of late-night series that will return in full with fresh episodes as of March 30.
Even Courteney Cox is spending her social distancing time bingeing Friends. The actress appeared on Jimmy Kimmel Live's latest at-home minilogue on Wednesday night and revealed that while she's stuck at home, she's using her newfound downtime to finally revisit the show that made her a household name.
Jimmy Kimmel may be doing his show from home but he’s not hard up for guests.
Reruns of “Jimmy Kimmel Live” will be pushed back a half-hour in the coming week as ABC seeks to give a bigger platform to “Nightline” episodes focused on the coronavirus pandemic.
By Denise Petski
Former Democratic presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg made his hosting debut on Jimmy Kimmel Live Thursday night (March 12) to an empty audience.
The months ahead may put — more strongly than in our lifetimes so far — the adage “the show must go on” to the test, and may indeed break it for good. One example: Pete Buttigieg’s booking as the guest host of “Jimmy Kimmel Live” just as talk shows began their process of shedding audiences before shutting entirely for an indefinite period in the midst of the coronavirus crisis.
Former presidential candidate Pete Buttigieg guest-hosted Thursday's episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live, even though the show was one of several late-night programs which had pivoted to filming audience-free in the wake of the coronavirus outbreak. Mayor Pete addressed the elephant in the room — or not in the room, as the case may be — right away in his opening monologue.
Jimmy Kimmel discussed how "everyone now seems to think they're an expert on the coronavirus" during Tuesday's episode of Jimmy Kimmel Live! The ABC host added that he is guilty of the assumption and said, "I get in a group of people. I speak as if I've been a professor of immunology at Stanford for 35 years." "Everybody seems to know at least something about this now and knowledge, as you know, is power," he said.