Seth Meyers Loses Out On Late-Night Emmy Nom As Colbert, Kimmel & Stewart Battle It Out In Talk
The Late Night host has missed out on an Emmy nomination in the Outstanding Talk Series category after it went down to only three places this year.
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The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, Jimmy Kimmel Live! and The Daily Show, which is hosted on Monday nights by Jon Stewart, will compete in the category after also fending off competition from upstarts such as buzzy YouTube show Hot Ones and Everybody's Live with John Mulaney.
Last year, The Daily Show, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Late Night with Seth Meyers and The Late Show with Stephen Colbert were nominated in the category, with The Daily Show winning.
In 2023, The Daily Show with Trevor Noah, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Late Night with Seth Meyers, The Late Show with Stephen Colbert and The Problem with Jon Stewart were nominated, with The Daily Show also winning.
This year's submissions were The Daily Show, Everybody's Live with John Mulaney, Peacock's Hart to Heart, CNN's Have I Got News For You, YouTube series Hot Ones, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, Late Night with Seth Meyers, The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, Midnight Snack with Julie Chan, The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Dropout's Very Important People, Real Time with Bill Maher and Watch What Happens Live with Andy Cohen.
Midnight Snack with Julie Chan was the surprise submission but it couldn't help get 14 submissions, which would have translated into a fourth nomination.
The TV Academy's rules mean that if a category scores between eight and 19 submissions, the number of submissions will be divided by four and rounded to the nearest whole number.
Elsewhere in late-night, Saturday Night Live is expected to compete directly against Last Week Tonight with John Oliver in the Outstanding Scripted Variety Series category. Full nominations come out later this morning.
The 77th Primetime Emmys will take place on September 14 and will air on CBS.
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Yahoo
15 minutes ago
- Yahoo
I'm about to have my 3rd kid. This is the advice I'm giving myself.
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In this edition of Yahoo's "" column, Margolin — who is herself expecting her third child — gives advice on how to prepare older kids for the arrival of a new sibling. She also shares the three key conversations to have with your partner, children and family ahead of time. When a new baby arrives, the entire family system reorganizes. Psychologists call this a normative crisis — a totally expected, but major disruption to family structure and roles. It's not just adding a baby. It's subtracting predictability, control and often sleep. Everyone's sense of place gets shaken up, and that can cause stress (and growth). Suddenly, the house that was running on a (semi) functional routine is now fueled by baby poop, two-hour sleep stretches and trying to figure out when you can shower again. The whole system tilts. 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Pretend the doll is crying. Ask your kid what they think the baby needs. Let them 'help.' This isn't just cute — it's how little brains process big stuff. The more familiar this whole new 'baby life' feels, the less overwhelming and scary it'll feel once it's happening in real life. And that means fewer meltdowns, tantrums and unwanted behavior for you! Talking about the baby early and often also helps. Not in a 'you're gonna be a big brother, yay!' way, but in a 'this will feel exciting and really different' way. Be real and be repetitive. It means preparing them for what life with a new baby might look like. For example, try explaining that 'babies cry a lot because they don't know how to use words yet. We help them feel safe until they grow their words — just like we helped you.' Once the baby arrives, enlist older siblings as helpers by giving them a job to do. 'Alright! Baby needs a new outfit. Do you want to pick?' 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Yahoo
15 minutes ago
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16 minutes ago
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