2020 was a year of technical challenges.
04.12.2020 - 19:24 / etcanada.com
Stephen Colbert offered his thoughts on the monolith debate during Thursday’s “Late Show”.
The host dedicated a bit of his “Quarantinewhile” segment, calling it “mon-while,” to the mystery metal structures after one popped up in the Utah desert, Romania and later on at the top of a California mountain.
Telling viewers the Utah desert monolith was “gone-olith,” he later shared his theory: “Folks, it’s no coincidence that these monoliths appeared just before the great conjunction of Jupiter and
2020 was a year of technical challenges.
A Late Show host Stephen Colbert, suggesting the investigation into his son’s tax affairs is a way of getting at him. Mr Biden appeared in a pre-taped interview alongside his wife Dr Jill Biden due to air on Thursday night.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden gave their first post-election joint interview to A Late Show host Stephen Colbert on Thursday, and one excerpt already has filtered out.
Stephen Colbert poked fun at that Tom Cruise coronavirus rant during Wednesday’s “Late Show”.
Friday night’s edition of “Late Show” found host Stephen Colbert reminiscing about the show’s 2019 visit to New Zealand.
With the coronavirus pandemic still raging on, many late-night show hosts are having to rely on their family for help with some of their popular segments. That’s what happened to “Late Show” host Stephen Colbert on Thursday during his “First Drafts” sketch.
Stephen Colbert on Thursday during his «First Drafts» sketch. The 56-year-old comedian called in his wife, Evie, to help read out some disastrous first drafts of holiday cards. «You, miss, you, miss, right there. Lovely to meet you.
Megan The Stallion has sat down with Stephen Colbert to discuss her debut album ‘Good News’ – and how both Beyoncé and body positivity have shaped her life.Appearing on Colbert’s US chat show, Megan was asked by Colbert who gives her the better advice – Beyoncé or JAY-Z.“JAY-Z gives the fun advice,” she immediately responded.“Like say if I’m havin’ a bad day, he’ll be like, ‘Girl you need to be somewhere drivin’ a boat. Turn up.
Stephen Colbert was “so happy” about filming a Friday episode of “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert” that he celebrated the new “Star Wars” show starting production soon.
Will Ferrell is done with Buddy the Elf and has turned into a very scruffy Santa Claus.
Late-night will undoubtedly be a bit different under a Joe Biden Presidency and Stephen Colbert has started to think what that might envision.
If viewers of Global‘s “The Late Show” have noticed something a bit off-kilter about host Stephen Colbert, he offered an explanation in a new cover story for Vanity Fair.
Stephen Colbert is dealing with a new illness that’s affecting his ability to stand up. The 56-year-old late-night host has been struggling with a lot in 2020, not the least of which being having to figure out how to continue doing his show with coronavirus lockdown restrictions preventing him from having a live studio audience. In addition, the comedian was diagnosed with a medical condition called benign positional vertigo.
Stephen Colbert is living with benign positional vertigo. The host covers the holiday issue of and reveals that he developed the condition a week before the presidential election, shortly before this interview took place.According to Mayo Clinic, benign positional vertigo often has no cause and includes symptoms like dizziness, nausea and a loss of balance.
Being the president of the United States had its pros and cons.
The pandemic lockdown hasn’t been all bad for Stephen Colbert.
More than four years since his time in the White House, former president Barack Obama says there are aspects of the job he misses.
nearly ceased while his legal team baselessly argued against Biden’s victory in several now-failed lawsuits. “He knows that if he comes out of his bunker and sees his shadow, he’ll only have six more weeks of president,” joked Stephen Colbert on The Late Show.
President Barack Obama told Stephen Colbert on Late Show last night that the Trump Administration’s response to the Covid-19 pandemic has been “shambolic,” and that if the government had “done the work” at the beginning of the pandemic “there is no doubt we would have saved some lives and, ironically, the economy would be better.”