Emmys: Listen to 66 Nominees on THR's ‘Awards Chatter' Podcast
Elizabeth Banks, best game show host (Press Your Luck) — LISTEN
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Javier Bardem, best limited/anthology series and supporting actor (Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story) — LISTEN
Kathy Bates, best drama actress (Matlock) — LISTEN
Cate Blanchett, best limited/anthology actress (Disclaimer) — LISTEN and LISTEN
Adam Brody, best comedy actor (Nobody Wants This) — LISTEN
Sterling K. Brown, best drama actor (Paradise) — LISTEN
Quinta Brunson, best comedy series, actress and writing (Abbott Elementary) — LISTEN
James Burrows, best comedy directing (Mid-Century Modern) — LISTEN
Bill Camp, best limited/anthology supporting actor (Presumed Innocent) — LISTEN
Stephen Colbert, best talk series and variety writing (The Late Show with Stephen Colbert) — LISTEN
Olivia Colman, best comedy guest actress (The Bear) — LISTEN
Bryan Cranston, best comedy guest actor (The Studio) — LISTEN
Mark Cuban, best structured reality program and reality competition host (Shark Tank) — LISTEN
Kaitlyn Dever, best drama guest actress (The Last of Us) — LISTEN
Colman Domingo, best comedy supporting actor (The Four Seasons) — LISTEN
Hannah Einbinder, best comedy supporting actress (Hacks) — LISTEN
Idris Elba, best narrator (Erased: WW2's Heroes of Color) — LISTEN
Cynthia Erivo, best comedy guest actress (Poker Face) — LISTEN
Giancarlo Esposito, best drama guest actor (The Boys) — LISTEN
Jimmy Fallon, best live variety special (SNL50: The Homecoming Concert) and best short form comedy/drama/variety series (The Tonight Show: During Commercial Break) — LISTEN
Colin Farrell, best limited/anthology series and actor (The Penguin) — LISTEN
Will Ferrell, best documentary/nonfiction special (Will & Harper) — LISTEN
Tina Fey, best variety special writing (SNL50: The Anniversary Special) — LISTEN
Selena Gomez, best comedy series (Only Murders in the Building) — LISTEN
Davis Guggenheim, best documentary/nonfiction special and directing (Deaf President Now!) — LISTEN
Jake Gyllenhaal, best limited/anthology actor (Presumed Innocent) — LISTEN
Kathryn Hahn, best comedy supporting actress (The Studio) — LISTEN
Tom Hanks, best narrator (The Americas) — LISTEN
Kevin Hart, best short form comedy/drama performer (Die Hart: Hart to Kill) — LISTEN
Ron Howard, best comedy guest actor (The Studio) — LISTEN
Jason Isaacs, best drama supporting actor (The White Lotus) — LISTEN
Rashida Jones, best limited/anthology actress (Black Mirror) — LISTEN
Jimmy Kimmel, best talk series (Jimmy Kimmel Live!), best short form comedy/drama/variety series (The Rabbit Hole with Jimmy Kimmel) and best game show and game show host (Who Wants to Be a Millionaire) — LISTEN
Diego Luna, best drama series (Andor) — LISTEN
Seth Meyers, best variety special writing (SNL50: The Anniversary Special) and best short form comedy/drama/variety series (Late Night with Seth Meyers Corrections) — LISTEN
Lorne Michaels, best scripted variety series and variety writing (Saturday Night Live), best live variety special (SNL50: The Anniversary Special and SNL50: The Homecoming Concert), best variety special writing (SNL50: The Anniversary Special) and best emerging media program (SNL 50th The Anniversary Special: Immersive Experience) — LISTEN
John Mulaney, best variety special writing (SNL50: The Anniversary Special) — LISTEN
Ryan Murphy, best limited/anthology series (Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story) — LISTEN
Ruth Negga, best limited/anthology supporting actress (Presumed Innocent) — LISTEN
Conan O'Brien, best live variety special (The Oscars) and best hosted nonfiction series/special and nonfiction program writing (Conan O'Brien Must Go) — LISTEN
Catherine O'Hara, best comedy supporting actress (The Studio) and best drama guest actress (The Last of Us) — LISTEN
Gary Oldman, best drama actor (Slow Horses) — LISTEN
Sheryl Lee Ralph, best comedy supporting actress (Abbott Elementary) — LISTEN
Ryan Reynolds, best unstructured reality program (Welcome to Wrexham) — LISTEN
Sam Rockwell, best drama supporting actor (The White Lotus) — LISTEN
Seth Rogen, best comedy series, actor, directing and writing (The Studio) — LISTEN
Mark Ronson, best live variety special (SNL50: The Homecoming Concert) — LISTEN
Maya Rudolph, best character voice-over performance (Big Mouth) — LISTEN
RuPaul, best reality/competition program and host (RuPaul's Drag Race) and unstructured reality program (RuPaul's Drag Race: Untucked) — LISTEN
Keri Russell, best drama actress (The Diplomat) — LISTEN
Adam Sandler, best pre-recorded variety special (Adam Sandler: Love You) and best original music/lyrics (SNL50: The Anniversary Special) — LISTEN
Peter Sarsgaard, best limited/anthology supporting actor (Presumed Innocent) — LISTEN
Martin Scorsese, best comedy guest actor (The Studio) — LISTEN
Jason Segel, best comedy series and actor (Shrinking) — LISTEN and LISTEN
Martin Short, best comedy series and actor (Only Murders in the Building) — LISTEN
Sarah Silverman, best pre-recorded variety special (Sarah Silverman: PostMortem) — LISTEN
Jean Smart, best comedy actress (Hacks) — LISTEN
Ben Stiller, best drama directing (Severance) — LISTEN
John Turturro, best drama supporting actor (Severance) — LISTEN
Vince Vaughn, best TV movie (Nonnas) — LISTEN
Phoebe Waller-Bridge, best narrator (Octopus!) — LISTEN
Kristen Wiig, best original music/lyrics (Will & Harper) — LISTEN
Michelle Williams, best limited/anthology series and actress (Dying for Sex) — LISTEN
Steven Yeun, best character voice-over performance (Invincible) — LISTEN
Renée Zellweger, best TV movie (Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy) — LISTEN
Hans Zimmer, best documentary series/special music composition (original dramatic score) — LISTEN
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32 minutes ago
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Bill O'Reilly Predicts Stephen Colbert ‘Won't Last ‘Til May,' Foresees Shakeup at ‘The View': ‘She's Gone'
The 'No Spin News' host also says the 'Late Show' host "censored" the guest list – "unless you hate Trump" Bill O'Reilly says for years Stephen Colbert 'censored' his guest list to Trump-haters only, part of a broader bias at CBS, which wouldn't book the bestselling author because of his conservative politics – not that any of it matters now. The 'No Spin News' host said in separate segments this week that Colbert won't last until May, as new, 'more conservative' ownership begins to grab hold. But O'Reilly said the pictures is much bigger than Skydance, whose impending Paramount takeover is part of a broader sweep through corporate media that he predicted would also lead to a big shakeup on ABC's 'The View.' More from TheWrap Bill O'Reilly Predicts Stephen Colbert 'Won't Last 'Til May,' Foresees Shakeup at 'The View': 'She's Gone' | Video 'Family Guy' Sets Next Halloween, Holiday Specials at Hulu 'Star Trek: Starfleet Academy' Introduces a New Next Generation in Comic-Con Teaser | Video 'Star Trek: Strange New Worlds' Reveals Captain Pike as a Puppet in Comic-Con Season 4 Teaser '[Colbert's] done. He's through,' the former Fox News host said. 'They say his show will be on till May. It won't. … What sunk him was not just his vitriolic approach to Trump. He censored his program. You could not get on his program unless you hated Trump.' O'Reilly said he'd logged 75 late-night appearances over the years – including with David Letterman, Jay Leno and Jimmy Kimmel – but that Colbert wouldn't have him. 'I did actually appear with Colbert way, way back one time,' O'Reilly noted. 'But Colbert would never invite anybody who didn't hate Trump.' That went broadly for CBS, O'Reilly said – despite that he's sold millions of books with several No. 1 debuts for historical nonfiction titles like 'Killing Lincoln' and 'Killing Kennedy,' he just couldn't get booked on the network. '[Jane] Pauley wouldn't put us on, and I emailed her directly,' O'Reilly said. 'Didn't even consider it.' In a separate segment, O'Reilly said all four networks – CBS, NBC, ABC and Fox – are changing dramatically because of Trump, predicting a major shakeup at 'The View.' 'Joy Behar is a hater,' he said of the 'View' panelist. 'No doubt about it. And she's going — by the way, not going to be around much longer. And this [Anna] Navarro woman, she's going, too. Disney's going to have to revamp that whole thing.' Watch both segments in the videos above. The post Bill O'Reilly Predicts Stephen Colbert 'Won't Last 'Til May,' Foresees Shakeup at 'The View': 'She's Gone' | Video appeared first on TheWrap.
Yahoo
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- Yahoo
How Stephen Colbert Has Pushed Back Against CBS With the Help of His Late Night Peers
If you're not watching 'The Late Show With Stephen Colbert' right now, you're missing appointment television. To say the gloves have come off since Colbert's cancellation announcement last week would be a gross understatement. Not that Colbert really ever held back on his opinions, but a host scorned hath more fury. On Thursday, July 24, he even introduced a monologue cut-away segment 'Show Un-Cancelled.' Of course, that announcement turns out to be a fake-out — and the graphic used for it supposedly cost $40 million. That one's light hearted — no more scathing than what 'Arrested Development' threw down in its last season on Fox (anyone old enough to remember that reference?). Throughout the first week of shows as a fallen angel, however, Colbert repeatedly seemed to play chicken with his network, CBS, and its parent company, Paramount, which just got the OK from the Trump Justice Department for a merger with Skydance (set to close August 7.) 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'The Tonight Show' host also sang about Trump's continued Epstein drama and his late night interests in the song below. Comedy Central seems to have gotten the last laugh — so far, at least — on the whole debacle. The AI-segment seen 'round the world this week came courtesy of 'South Park,' who delivered perhaps the most blistering satire of President Donald Trump yet. This came just hours after the series closed a deal with Paramount to continue for another five years, and just a day before the Justice Department approved the merger. The Wednesday, July 23 episode of 'South Park' also spoke quite literally to the Skydance deal in a scene involving none other than Jesus Christ. 'You guys saw what happened to CBS,' Christ mutters through gritted teeth. 'Well guess who owns CBS? Paramount! You really want to end up like Colbert? Then on July 25, former 'Late Show' legend David Letterman, Colbert's predecessor, chimed in on his YouTube channel. 'I don't think it was money… it was pure cowardice,' Letterman said, going on to praise 'precise, crisp, witty political satirist' Colbert. He then addressed CBS/Paramount's decision, saying 'What the fuck is Skydance, honest to Christ? Is it a discount airline? Is that what it is? I think one day, if not today, the people at CBS, who have manipulated and handled this are going to be embarrassed because this is this is gutless. I only wish this could happen to me… Fighting with network television management was number one in the playbook.' But no one went harder on Paramount than Colbert himself. In its statements discussing 'The Late Show' cancellation, Paramount repeatedly made mention of the show's $40 million annual losses. This figure has been questioned, and it was a number referenced repeatedly by Colbert all week. 'I could see us losing $24 million, but where could Paramount have possibly spent the other 16… Oh yeah,' he said on the July 21 episode. 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Fox News
5 hours ago
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David Letterman calls out CBS' 'pure cowardice' for canceling 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert'
"The Late Show" creator David Letterman slammed CBS' decision to cancel the long-running late-night show, now hosted by Stephen Colbert, as "pure cowardice" and asserted that the network mistreated his successor by canceling the show. Appearing on his former executive producer's podcast, "The Barbara Gaines Show," on Friday, Letterman — who created The Late Show 32 years ago — said he didn't believe the network's claim that the show was canceled for financial reasons, and he sharply criticized both CBS and Paramount for their handling of the situation. "This is pure cowardice," Letterman said. "They did not do the correct thing. They did not handle Stephen Colbert — the face of that network — in the way he deserves to have been handled." The former "Late Show" host tore into Paramount's $16 million settlement with President Donald Trump over the editing of a "60 Minutes" interview with former Vice President Kamala Harris, stating that the company "decided they didn't care about freedom of the press." Letterman theorized that Skydance Media, the soon-to-be owners of Paramount, wanted to avoid trouble with Trump by getting rid of Colbert, an outspoken critic of the president, before officially acquiring the company. He referred to the founder of Skydance, David Ellison, as "the Oracle twins" during his blistering takedown of the company. "The Ellison twins, the Oracle boys, they don't want any trouble along the lines of freedom of the press or free speech or freedom of expression," he claimed. "They don't want to get their hands dirty. They don't want the government going after them, because that concept of freedom of the press and freedom of speech — that's so old-fashioned." In a hypothetical conversation between Skydance's owner and CBS executives, Letterman laid out how he thought the conversation about getting rid of Colbert may have gone. "So they say to the CBS people, 'Geez, what about that kid, Stephen Colbert? He's always shooting his mouth off about the administration. We don't want any trouble from that guy,'" he said. "So the CBS people say, 'Hey, boys, here's what I'm going to do. Not only are we going to get rid of that guy, we're going to get rid of the entire franchise so you don't have to worry about another guy. It's gone, buddy.'" Although "The Late Show" was reported to be losing approximately $40 million a year for the network, Letterman didn't seem to believe that was an appropriate excuse to cancel the show. "Here's what I know. If they were losing this kind of money, you're telling me losing this kind of money happened yesterday?" he questioned. "I'll bet they were losing this kind of money a month ago. I'll bet they were losing this kind of money six weeks ago. Or they have never been losing money."