Jimmy Kimmel debuted a major quarantine glow-up during Thursday's
06.04.2020 - 19:53 / etcanada.com
Stars are bringing the world together.
On Monday, Lady Gaga partnered with Global Citizen and the World Health Organization to announce a new COVID-19 benefit TV special to air on networks in America and around the world.
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“One World: Together at Home” will be fronted by Global’s “The Late Show” host Stephen Colbert, along with his late-night rivals Jimmy Fallon and Jimmy Kimmel, Deadline reported.
The special
Jimmy Kimmel debuted a major quarantine glow-up during Thursday's
Trevor Noah has taken to self-isolation.
Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel and Stephen Colbert came together for a good cause.
To thank the many people working on the frontlines during the coronavirus pandemic, Lady Gaga tapped some of the biggest names in Hollywood for a special benefit concert in partnership with Global Citizen and the World Health Organization.
It was a late-night crossover for the ages.
Pop music superstar Lady Gaga on Monday announced a worldwide telecast featuring Paul McCartney, Lizzo, Billie Eilish and others to support healthcare workers responding to the global coronavirus outbreak.
Lady Gaga is teaming up with U.S. late night hosts Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel, and Stephen Colbert for a historic global broadcast to raise funds to fight the coronavirus.
A coronavirus benefit concert called One World: Together at Home has been announced, featuring performances from Billie Eilish, Paul McCartney and Coldplay‘s Chris Martin.
Lady Gaga is teaming up with U.S. late-night hosts Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel, and Stephen Colbert for a historic global broadcast to raise funds to fight the coronavirus.
Signaling just how cross-network the special will be, late-night rivals Jimmy Kimmel, Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Fallon have been set as co-hosts. Gaga is helping with the show's music curation.
The show must go on. After late-night shows went on temporary hiatus due to the coronavirus pandemic, many of their hosts found ways to improvise with at-home monologues. That trend has now taken off, as a number of shows have returned to broadcast with fully filmed-at-home episodes.
Most late-night talk shows ( make that most shows, period) have gone on temporary hiatus due to the coronavirus pandemic, 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 Seth Meyers, Andy Cohen, Stephen Colbert, and John Oliver, will be returning to TV with full episodes filmed from their homes.
After Niall Horan turned his London apartment into the Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon stage Wednesday night, returning late-night hosts will also need artists to fill in as home entertainment.
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.
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.
Jimmy Kimmel and Jimmy Fallon's kids are contributing to their dads' at-home late-night shows. During the most recent episodes of and , the hosts have proudly used artwork made by their kids to open their shows.
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 late-night lineup was officially on hiatus this week amid widespread social distancing efforts aimed at slowing the spread of the novel coronavirus. But despite telling viewers his show would go without new episodes for at least two weeks, Stephen Colbert wasn’t content to leave his viewers with reruns. The “Late Show” host surprised fans on Monday with a special “social distancing edition,” airing on CBS during the show’s normal time slot — which he hosted from his bathtub.