Katy Perry returned to her roots with long black locks on Monday.
21.01.2021 - 08:29 / deadline.com
It was all smiles in late-night as Stephen Colbert and Jimmy Kimmel celebrated the inauguration of President Joe Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris.
The Late Show was live tonight with Colbert almost giddy as he admitted that today was “extremely emotional” and that he cried a lot during the swearing in ceremony.
“You did it. You survived the last four years and your reward is a shiny new old president,” he joked. But he said that he had “zero gloat” in him and was rather filled with “enormous
Katy Perry returned to her roots with long black locks on Monday.
“Buck yeah,” Stephen Colbert exclaimed upon kicking The Late Show on Monday night. While his greeting may nod to the Tampa Bay team that took home the Lombardi Trophy at Super Bowl LV, the late-night host celebrated that “in a larger sense, normality won” during the big game.
Stephen Colbert enlisted the help of Tom Hanks and Sam Elliott for a very special Super Bowl ad Sunday.
It’s safe to say few people outside Boone, North Carolina, had heard of Foggy Pine Books before last night, but that changed once Stephen Colbert, Tom Hanks and Sam Elliott pitched in to give the pandemic-hit local bookstore a Super Bowl-sized boost.
Former President Donald Trump is in quite the bind as his defense attorneys flew the coop just less than two weeks before his impeachment trial. With the ex-Commander-inChief lawyer-less, The Late Show host Stephen Colbert said it’s just “rats fleeing a sinking rat,” during his opening monologue on Monday.
Just a couple of days in and the Joe Biden presidency is already a big change of pace.
Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Kimmel, Seth Meyers and James Corden all celebrated the inauguration of President Joe Biden and Donald Trump's exit from the White House. The hosts, who all publicly condemned the Trump presidency, didn't hold back as they talked about the Inauguration Day ceremony and the outgoing president, widely discussing the relief they felt at the arrival of a new administration. Here are the highlights from, and :Going live with his wife, Evie, by his side, Colbert
Stephen Colbert celebrated the U.S. getting a “shiny new, old president” during Wednesday’s live special of the “Late Show”.
“And it ends just as it began.” Jimmy Kimmel has enlisted the help of Billy Bush in a return to that infamous Access Hollywood bus incident to bid farewell to Donald Trump.
Donald Trump’s final day in office has finally come and television’s late night hosts could not be more excited to welcome President-elect Joe Biden and his administration. Stephen Colbert, James Corden and more late-night personalities celebrated the final day of the Trump administration in their own ways, from cranking out their final roasts to featuring musical numbers inspired by the president’s hectic days.
Donald Trump has just hours left in office and TV’s late-night hosts are taking all the shots they can before President-elect Joe Biden’s officially takes over the White House on Wednesday.
The first night that The Late Show with Stephen Colbert beat The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon in total viewers after his opening night, the bespectacled host sprung for pizza for his crew.
Wednesday, Jan. 13, 2021 will go down in history as the day that Donald Trump became the first president in America’s history to be impeached for a second time — and you’d better believe that television’s late-night talk show hosts had a field day roasting the former “Celebrity Apprentice” star.
Stephen Colbert may be good at a lot of things but doing an Irish accent isn’t one of them.
EXCLUSIVE: Stephen Colbert is to host a live edition of The Late Show following Joe Biden’s inauguration as President.
Stephen Colbert continued to criticize Republican lawmakers and politicians who have disagreed with efforts to impeach Donald Trump for inciting an insurrection. The Late Show host, who previously called the mob attacking the U.S. Capitol “homegrown terrorists,” questions GOP figures’ calls for unity and their willingness to practice what they preach.
Nearly a week may have passed since the violent attack on the U.S. Capitol by supporters of Donald Trump, but January 6, 2020 will go down in history as a dark day for Americans.
What a week it was, and a somewhat weary Stephen Colbert took it upon himself in a rare Friday appearance to try and recapture all of its nuances and news in one monologue.
Numerous Americans including politicians and Hollywood figures called for President Trump’s removal from office, citing impeachment or the 25th amendment, as his supporters violently stormed the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday.