By Dino-Ray Ramos
06.04.2020 - 07:23 / deadline.com
By Dino-Ray Ramos
Associate Editor/Reporter
Once again, Last Week Tonight came from what John Oliver likes to call the “empty white void” to shed more light on how certain people in leadership positions in our country are handling the coronavirus outbreak. Spoiler alert: some of them are doing a good job while others, well, not so much.
After giving us a taste of Jeremy Renner’s album “The Medicine” he started off by saying, “I hate this moment in human history so much.”
Earlier this week,
By Dino-Ray Ramos
Wendy Williams showed love to John Oliver after he spent several minutes during his Sunday night show to rant about how authentic she is. “So, there’s this guy, his name is John Oliver and I don’t know whether you know who he is but he’s wildly popular,” Wendy, 55, introduced John during her April 21 Wendy @ Home show. “He knows who our show is, he gets our messiness and I love that,” she said.
Education Secretary John Swinney has said he expects schools to be closed until “at least” the summer break.
By Dino-Ray Ramos
Long before “Tiger King” became a streaming obsession, Joe Exotic caught the attention of John Oliver.
WWE is continuing about its shooting for weekly episodic television's live tapings in spite of the coronavirus scare and was recently deemed to be an "essential business" by Florida governor Ron DeSantis and Orange County (Florida) Mayor Jerry Demings.
Three years before Joe Exotic rose to coronavirus-era stardom as one of the iconoclastic characters on Netflix's much-binged docuseriesTiger King, he was spotlighted on HBO's Last Week Tonight as a potential 2016 presidential election third-party candidate.
John Oliver has found the latest target for his coronavirus ire: Amazon.
By Dino-Ray Ramos
John Oliver has a bone to pick with Jared Kushner.
By Dino-Ray Ramos
Jeremy Renner’s ex-wife, Sonni Pacheco, issued a response to the actor’s request to lower his child support payments.
The coronavirus pandemic sent most late-night talk shows (make that most shows, period) on temporary hiatus, but their hosts are finding ways to improvise — and some are returning with full episodes sooner than expected. Many began offering fans their daily takes on the latest headlines via at-home monologues and short videos, and now some, including Stephen Colbert and HBO's John Oliver, will be returning to TV with full episodes filmed from their homes.
The coronavirus pandemic sent most late-night talk shows (make that most shows, period) on temporary hiatus, but their hosts are finding ways to improvise — and some are returning with full episodes sooner than expected. Many began offering fans their daily takes on the latest headlines via at-home monologues and short videos, and now some, including Stephen Colbert and HBO's John Oliver, will be returning to TV with full episodes filmed from their homes.
The coronavirus pandemic sent most late-night talk shows (make that most shows, period) on temporary hiatus, but their hosts are finding ways to improvise — and some are returning with full episodes sooner than expected. Many began offering fans their daily takes on the latest headlines via at-home monologues and short videos, and now some, including Stephen Colbert and HBO's John Oliver, will be returning to TV with full episodes filmed from their homes.