logo
Brandon Bartlett interviews Juju Chang ahead of Nightline's 45th anniversary special

Brandon Bartlett interviews Juju Chang ahead of Nightline's 45th anniversary special

Yahoo24-03-2025

HENDERSON, Ky. (WEHT) – ABC's Nightline will be celebrating 45 years on the air on Monday night.
The program, known for its in-depth reporting and signature interviews, first launched during the Iran hostage crisis in 1979. It has tackled some of the biggest stories around the globe, shaping late night journalism.
Eyewitness News Anchor Brandon Bartlett spoke with Nightline Anchor Juju Chang on Monday to get a preview of the 45th anniversary special. You can view their full interview in the video player above.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Everything We Know About The 2025 Logie Awards: Nominations & How To Vote
Everything We Know About The 2025 Logie Awards: Nominations & How To Vote

Refinery29

time5 hours ago

  • Refinery29

Everything We Know About The 2025 Logie Awards: Nominations & How To Vote

The 2025 Logie Awards are almost here, and the nominations are filled with some familiar and fresh faces. The 65th annual TV WEEK Logie Awards will take place on August 3, 2025, hosted by comedian Sam Pang. It's a celebration of Australia's best small-screen talent, and we'll be blessed with some incredible red carpet fashion. The public will have a chance to weigh in on multiple awards, including the prestigious TV WEEK Gold Logie, where six of the seven nominees are women. Read on for everything you need to know about the star-studded event, including how to vote. Where will the 2025 Logies be held? The 2025 Logies will be held at The Star, Sydney. When are the 2025 Logie Awards and how can I watch? The 2025 Logie Awards will be broadcast live on Seven and 7plus on Sunday 3 August from 7pm AEST. Who is hosting the 2025 Logies? Comedian Sam Pang will be hosting the 2025 Logies for the third year in a row. How can I vote for the 2025 Logies? Voting is now officially open, and you can vote for your favourite talent over at TV WEEK. You don't have to vote for every category, but make sure you check your email after you've submitted your picks. You'll be required to verify your email; otherwise, your vote won't count. Voting is limited to one vote per person. Who's nominated in the 2025 Logie Awards? ABC has racked up the most nominations, with Fisk getting nods in four acting categories. Netflix is the most nominated streamer, which makes sense. Netflix's Apple Cider Vinegar, Heartbreak High, and Territory were popular in Australia and had a lot of buzz. -Ally Langdon -Hamish Blake -Julia Morris -Lisa Millar -Lynne McGranger -Poh Ling Yeow -Sonia Kruger Bert Newton Award for Most Popular Presenter -Hamish Blake, LEGO Masters Australia, 9Network -Julia Morris, I'm A Celebrity… Get Me Out Of Here!, Network 10 -Ricki-Lee, Australian Idol, Seven Network -Sonia Kruger, The Voice, and Dancing With The Stars, Seven Network -Todd Woodbridge, Tipping Point Australia, Australian Open, The Olympic Games Paris 2024 and Paris 2024 Paralympic Games, 9Network -Zan Rowe, Take 5 With Zan Rowe and ABC New Year's Eve, ABC Graham Kennedy Award for Most Popular New Talent -Guy Montgomery, Guy Montgomery's Guy Mont Spelling Bee, ABC -Hailey Pinto, Home and Away, Seven Network -Jenny Tian, Taskmaster Australia, Network 10 -Kate Miller-Heidke, The Voice, Seven Network -Kylah Day, Territory, Netflix -Sofia Levin, MasterChef Australia, Network 10 Ray Martin Award for Most Popular News or Public Affairs Presenter -Ally Langdon, A Current Affair, 9Network -David Speers, Insiders, ABC -Michael Usher, 7NEWS and 7NEWS Spotlight, Seven Network -Peter Overton, 9News, 9Network -Sarah Ferguson, 7.30, ABC -Tara Brown, 60 Minutes and Dangerous Lies: Unmasking Belle Gibson, 9Network TV WEEK Silver Logie for Best Lead Actor in a Drama -Lloyd Griffith, Return To Paradise, ABC -Michael Dorman, Territory, Netflix -Robert Taylor, Territory, Netflix -Sam Corlett, Territory, Netflix -Sam Neill, The Twelve, BINGE / FOXTEL -Tai Hara, Return To Paradise, ABC TV WEEK Silver Logie for Best Lead Actress in a Drama -Alycia Debnam-Carey, Apple Cider Vinegar, Netflix -Anna Samson, Return To Paradise, ABC -Anna Torv, Territory, Netflix -Ayesha Madon, Heartbreak High, Netflix -Kaitlyn Dever, Apple Cider Vinegar, Netflix -Lynne McGranger, Home and Away, Seven Network TV WEEK Silver Logie for Best Lead Actor in a Comedy -Aaron Chen, Fisk, ABC -Ben Miller, Austin, ABC -Clancy Brown, Good Cop/Bad Cop, Stan -Luke Cook, Good Cop/Bad Cop, Stan -Michael Theo, Austin, ABC -Patrick Brammall, Colin From Accounts, BINGE / FOXTEL TV WEEK Silver Logie for Best Lead Actress in a Comedy -Harriet Dyer, Colin From Accounts, BINGE / FOXTEL -Jenna Owen, Nugget is Dead: A Christmas Story, Stan -Kitty Flanagan, Fisk, ABC -Leighton Meester, Good Cop/Bad Cop, Stan -Sally Phillips, Austin, ABC -Vic Zerbst, Nugget is Dead: A Christmas Story, Stan TV WEEK Silver Logie for Best Supporting Actor -Ashley Zukerman, Apple Cider Vinegar, Netflix -Darren Gilshenan, Colin From Accounts, BINGE / FOXTEL -Glenn Butcher, Fisk, ABC -Mark Coles Smith, Apple Cider Vinegar, Netflix -Matt Nable, Apple Cider Vinegar, Netflix -Sam Delich, Territory, Netflix TV WEEK Silver Logie for Best Supporting Actress -Aisha Dee, Apple Cider Vinegar, Netflix -Chloé Hayden, Heartbreak High, Netflix -Julia Zemiro, Fisk, ABC -Marg Downey, The Newsreader, ABC -Michelle Lim Davidson, The Newsreader, ABC -Tilda Cobham-Hervey, Apple Cider Vinegar, Netflix Best Drama Program -Bump, Stan -Heartbreak High, Netflix -Return To Paradise, ABC -Territory, Netflix -The Newsreader, ABC -The Twelve, BINGE / FOXTEL Best Miniseries or Telemovie -Apple Cider Vinegar, Netflix -Critical Incident, Stan -Fake, Paramount+ -How To Make Gravy, BINGE / FOXTEL -Human Error, 9Network -Plum, ABC Best Entertainment Program -ABC New Year's Eve, ABC -Australian Idol, Seven Network -Countdown 50 Years On, ABC -Dancing With The Stars, Seven Network -The Voice, Seven Network -Vision Australia's Carols by Candlelight, 9Network Best Current Affairs Program -60 Minutes, 9Network -7.30, ABC -7NEWS Spotlight, Seven Network -A Current Affair, 9Network -Australian Story, ABC -Four Corners, ABC Best Scripted Comedy Program -Austin, ABC -Colin From Accounts, BINGE / FOXTEL -Fisk, ABC -Good Cop/Bad Cop, Stan -Melbourne International Comedy Festival, ABC -Optics, ABC Best Comedy Entertainment Program -Gruen, ABC -Hard Quiz, ABC -Have You Been Paying Attention?, Network 10 -Sam Pang Tonight, Network 10 -Thank God You're Here, Network 10 -The Weekly with Charlie Pickering, ABC Best Competition Reality Program -Alone Australia, SBS -Australian Survivor: Brains V Brawn II, Network 10 -LEGO Masters Australia, 9Network -MasterChef Australia, Network 10 -My Kitchen Rules, Seven Network -The Block, 9Network Best Structured Reality Program -Farmer Wants A Wife, Seven Network -Gogglebox Australia, Network 10 -Married At First Sight, 9Network -Muster Dogs: Collies & Kelpies, ABC -Shark Tank Australia, Network 10 -The Real Housewives of Sydney, BINGE / FOXTEL Best Lifestyle Program -Better Homes and Gardens, Seven Network -Do You Want To Live Forever?, 9Network -Gardening Australia, ABC -Grand Designs Australia, ABC -Restoration Australia, ABC -Travel Guides, 9Network Best News Coverage or Public Affairs Report -Betrayal of Trust, Four Corners, ABC -Building Bad, 60 Minutes, 9Network -Courage & Science, A Current Affair, 9Network -Cyclone Alfred, 7NEWS, Seven Network -Melbourne Protests, Sunrise, Seven Network -Trump Assassination Attempt, 7NEWS, Seven Network Best Factual or Documentary Program -Big Miracles, 9Network -Ego: The Michael Gudinski Story, Seven Network -Miriam Margolyes Impossibly Australian, ABC -The Assembly, ABC -Tsunami: 20 Years On, 9Network -Unbreakable: The Jelena Dokic Story, 9Network Best Sports Coverage -2024 AFL Finals Series, Seven Network -2024 State of Origin, 9Network -2025 Australian Open Finals, 9Network -Australia v India: Border – Gavaskar Trophy, Kayo -Sports / FOXTEL -CommBank Matildas V China PR, Network 10 -The Olympic Games Paris 2024, 9Network / Stan Sport Best Children's Program -Bluey, ABC -Ginger and the Vegesaurs, ABC -Hard Quiz Kids, ABC -Little J & Big Cuz, NITV / ABC -Play School, ABC -Rock Island Mysteries, Network 10

How HBO's 'The Mortician' explores the horrors of the 'business of death'
How HBO's 'The Mortician' explores the horrors of the 'business of death'

USA Today

time14 hours ago

  • USA Today

How HBO's 'The Mortician' explores the horrors of the 'business of death'

Watching HBO's "The Mortician" docuseries transported me to my own 2002 funeral story, and memories of the aggressively solemn funeral-home director upselling my distraught mother with increasingly extravagant urns for my father's ashes. To our growing horror, the pinky ring-wearing salesman pushed an absurd marble number with an attached frame featuring a man in a full kilt, Balmoral bonnet and competition bagpipes. My puffy-eyed brother broke the sales spiel with, "But my dad didn't play the bagpipes." The atrocities documented in director Joshua Rofé's three-part series (which concludes Sunday, June 15, 9 ET/PT) about a funeral business gone wildly wrong are far graver than an overpriced urn. The dark, illegal mortuary practices depicted in the series exploded in the 1980s, and brought the once-respected Lamb Funeral Home in affluent Pasadena, California, into scandal, sparking ghoulish legal drama and and coverage on ABC's "Nightline." However, Rofé was inspired to delve into the story because of the trusting customers and neighbors who were preyed upon by the family-owned funeral home at their most vulnerable moments, when dealing with the loss of a loved one. "There was this crazy scandal," Rofé tells USA TODAY. "But I was intrigued by the idea of this family drama being a murder-mystery noir that explores the business of death and everything around that, the grief and loss." Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle. The series centers on David Sconce, the high school football star and fourth-generation Lamb operator. His great-grandfather, Lawrence Lamb, founded the funeral home in 1929, run by Sconce's mother, Laurieanne, and her husband, Jerry. David took over the cremation side of the business in the 1980s and implemented drastic, illegal changes to increase profits. David carried out mass cremations, removed corpses' gold jewelry and dental fillings and illegally harvested corpses' organs for sale, prosecutors charged. In 1989, he pleaded guilty to 21 felony counts, which included violence by his group of employees on rival morticians. Rofé was surprised that Sconce agreed to extensive interviews, which started immediately after he was paroled in 2023 on unrelated 2011 gun charges (Sconce is shown being picked up at the prison gates). "I've interviewed people who the average person would consider scary," says Rofé. "But he was often devoid of humanity. To find someone who just lacks empathy is really hard." While denying most of the egregious charges, Sconce still defends the group cremations, claiming that "comingling of ash" in impossible-to-clean mortuary kilns is unavoidable. 'There's ash in there from dozens of people. It's a fact; it's how things are," Sconce says emphatically in the series premiere. "To me, the commingling of ash is not a big deal. I don't put any value in somebody after they're gone and dead. As they shouldn't when I'm gone and dead. It's not a person anymore." How was Sconce caught in 'The Mortician' In the '80s, Sconce set up a mass illegal cremation center in the remote desert of Hesperia, California. The cremation site was so prolific that a nearby World War II veteran, who had participated in the liberation of the notorious Auschwitz concentration camp, recognized the unmistakable smell of burnt corpses and alerted the police. "He said, 'I smell the burning flesh. That is a smell I will never forget,'" says Rofé. "That is what brings the operation down." Was Sconce's family involved in the illegal activities? Sconce's parents, including his seemingly empathetic mother, were swept up in the charges. This was shocking, considering Laurieanne, the funeral organist, was such an outwardly comforting presence to the mourners at Lamb Funeral Home. She was convicted in 1995 on nine charges, including conspiracy to remove body parts and unlawful authorization of the removal of eyes, hearts, lungs and brains from corpses. Each parent and David served more than three years in prison because of the scandal. "Many eyewitnesses testified that Jerry and Laurieanne were deeply involved," says Rofé. "This is a family drama in the sense that they were all in the trenches together." Have there been changes to prevent the crimes seen in 'The Mortician'? "The Mortician" features funeral professionals who decry the abhorrent practices depicted and point out changes made following the crimes at the Lamb Funeral Home — which had its license revoked by a state board on March 30, 1989, providing the nail in the coffin of the family business. My dear dad's ashes (presumably it's mostly his ashes) have a happy, bagpipe-free home in a simple urn placed in the living room. "The majority of the people in the mortuary business are exactly the type of people you want to encounter in your moment of grief," says Rofé. "But in any business, you run into somebody who cares about nothing but the bottom line. In this series, we examine what happens when that's the business of death."

What ‘insecure' Barbara Walters was really like off-camera — and how she convinced Oprah Winfrey not to have kids
What ‘insecure' Barbara Walters was really like off-camera — and how she convinced Oprah Winfrey not to have kids

New York Post

time17 hours ago

  • New York Post

What ‘insecure' Barbara Walters was really like off-camera — and how she convinced Oprah Winfrey not to have kids

Barbara Walters was the first million-dollar woman on TV. But behind the scenes, the legendary interviewer and 'The View' founder was a difficult and calculating star who did not have 'the strongest moral compass,' according to her book editor Peter Ethers. 'She was obsessed with three things: She was obsessed with money, fame and power,' he reveals in a new documentary 'Tell Me Everything,' streaming June 23 on Hulu. 15 Barbara Walters worked tirelessly to become the first million-dollar woman on TV. Bettmann Archive 'A lot of the relationships she developed were career moves, and she was a pretty transactional person,' Ethers added of Walters, who passed away in 2022 at age 92. This included striking up a relationship with Donald Trump's mentor, the notorious lawyer Roy Cohn, who helped get her father's tax evasion charges dropped. Even though Cohn was gay, the pair considered getting married. 'Roy Cohn was famous, so he was worthwhile to Barbara,' Post columnist Cindy Adams, one of Walters' closest friends, says in the documentary. 'Barbara was famous so it was worthwhile for Roy. They were two people who loved PR. 'Did they really do anything together? I don't think so,' Adams says with a chuckle. The film unites colleagues and friends to speak about the woman who made it her business to talk to everyone from Taylor Swift to Fidel Castro, Richard Nixon to Monica Lewinsky — subjects who were not always happy with the turns Walters's interviews could take. 15 Walters and notorious lawyer Roy Cohn considered marraige — even though he was gay — a new documentary reveals. Penske Media via Getty Images 15 Oprah Winfrey reveals in 'Tell Me Everything' how Walters' life made her not want children. Harpo Productions But her fame came at a price, as she sacrificed much of her personal life for her career. 'I used to say to her all the time, 'I wish you could enjoy your success as much as the rest of us.' I don't think she ever did,' former 'Nightline' co-host Cynthia McFadden, a longtime friend of Walters, told The Post. 'Like many people who rise to the top, Barbara really had two competing drives,' McFadden added. 'She was unbelievably self confident. She had nerves of steel — she could not have done what she did otherwise. But she was also deeply insecure about what she should wear, where she should eat, where she should go. 15 Walters adopted Jackie with her former husband Lee Guber in 1968. 15 The pair had a fraught relationship through the years, but friends said they loved each other. Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images 'That combination kept her in a highly competitive state and sometimes she was not able to enjoy her success. That's, to me, so sad. I was certainly proud of her, but I don't think she ever felt she'd arrived.' Oprah Winfrey, who followed in Walters' footsteps by elevating the celebrity interview to an art form, reveals that watching Walters with her adopted daughter, Jackie, helped her decide not to have children. 'She had a charged, complex relationship with her daughter and I could see why. It's one of the reasons why I never had children,' Winfrey says in the film. 15 Walters started her TV career as a 'Today Girl' at NBC, where she was not allowed to ask one question until her male co-host had asked three. Bettmann Archive 'I remember her telling me once that 'There's nothing more fulfilling than having children' and 'You should really think about it,' Winfrey recalls. 'And I was like, 'OK, but I'm looking at you -— so, no!'' McFadden told People it was Walters's own relentless ambition that complicated the relationship with Jackie, now 56: 'She couldn't understand someone like Jackie, who wasn't racing to the top. They were just so dispositionally and physically unlike each other. It was a struggle.' The 2024 biography 'The Rulebreaker: The Life & Times of Barbara Walters,' by Susan Page, claimed that, as teenager, Jackie was 'drinking booze, popping Quaaludes and smoking pot' and that 'at thirteen, she would sneak out of the apartment in fishnet stockings and a miniskirt to party at Studio 54 and return home at four in the morning.' 15 Walters' second husband was theater impresario Lee Guber. 15 Walters and Merv Adelson, seen here in 1988, were married twice. Getty Images After Jackie ran away from home at 16, Walters hired a Green Beret soldier to track her down in New Mexico and deliver her to an 'emotional growth school' in Idaho. Jackie was 8 years old when Walters signed a deal worth $1 million a year to co-host ABC's evening news program with Harry Reasoner — who reportedly created a hostile work environment for her. The documentary includes footage that takes viewers back to Walters' first days on TV. In 1961, she joined NBC's 'Today' show as a 'Today Girl' after a short-lived stint in advertising which she quit after, Walter said, her boss became 'overly amorous.' 15 Walters interviewed Muammar el- Quaddafi from his tent in Tripoli, Libya, in 1989. í©ABC NEWS On 'Today,' she was only allowed to ask a question of a guest after her male co-host had asked three. She joined ABC's '20/20' in 1979 and stayed there for 25 years, scoring interviews with stars including the actor Christopher Reeve after he was paralyzed in a horseback-riding accident. In 1999, Walters's interview with Monica Lewinsky drew about 50 million viewers — an interview that, Winfrey unhappily admits in the film, Walters stole from her. She had an infamous feud with glamorous fellow ABC star Diane Sawyer, and the film reveals it was so bad that the two kept to different floors at work. 'Barbara felt that Diana was given advantages that she wasn't,' McFadden told The Post. 15 Walters scooped an interview with Monica Lewinsky from Oprah Winfrey, in 1999. ABC '[Sawyer] was more beautiful than [Walters] was, she was married to this fabulous man [director Mike Nichols]. [Walters] was always chasing after Diane … it was hard. 'I have never known any two women who worked any harder than those two.' McFadden said much of the angst came from Roone Arledge, who ran the news division by encouraging 'rough competition,' though the two women later became friendly. 'She was undermined and maligned by her male colleagues relentlessly,' David Sloan, Walters' longtime producer at ABC, told The Post. 15 Walters infamously quizzed a young Taylor Swift about her love life in 2014. ABC News But it instilled a 'fearlessness' that 'benefited her in the booking game,' Sloan added. 'When one of her competitors landed something that she wanted, she could be very determined — for example, calling [the interview subject] sometimes while that interview was actually being taped. 'Barbara's ambition to get the world's biggest, most famous names — for example, the Queen of England, the Pope, Jacqueline Kennedy — never came to pass, nor did they for anyone else. But her fierceness in the booking game got her the gets perhaps more than any competitor.' 'It's important that we don't denigrate her competitive side and determination,' McFadden noted. 'She never stopped. She picked up the phone and she wasn't waiting to be presented with her next interview.' 15 The interviewer had a rocky relationship with ABC News co-host Harry Reasoner that led to her leaving for '20/20.' Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images Walters went on to create ABC's daytime show 'The View' in 1997 at age 67. She was still as fierce as ever — in the documentary, Bravo's Andy Cohen recalls how she 'lunged' at him when he joked about her not having watched the movie 'American Hustle' because she was old. ''How dare you insult me on my own show,'' he recalls her saying. 'I got my ass handed to me by Barbara Walters.' Walters was married three times: to businessman Robert Henry Katz from 1955 to 1957; theater impresario Lee Guber (1963-1976), with whom she adopted Jackie; and TV producer Merv Adelson twice, from 1981 to 1984 and again from 1986 to 1992. 15 Walters with President Richard Nixon. 15 Cynthia McFadden said the person Walters was most nervous of was Katherine Hepburn. í©1991 American Broadcasting Companies, Inc. 'She liked being important to a man. She didn't have patience for somebody who was stupid,' Adams says in the film. 'She didn't love it if you were nobody, either — you had to be somebody.' Her other romances included Alan Greenspan, the former Chair of the Federal Reserve, and Virginia Senator John Warner, whom she later interviewed alongside his wife Elizabeth Taylor. The film also touches upon her affair with married Massachusetts Senator Ed Brooke. Of that relationship, Adams recalls, 'We all said 'Barbara, what are you doing? This is not quite right.' She said, 'Oh no, but he's so exciting and he's so great.'' 15 Walters founded 'The View' and is seen here with a plethora of the show's early co-hosts. Disney General Entertainment Content via Getty Images Walters eventually stopped the affair to prevent scandal, she later said. 'She was not a perfect person, but I had a tremendous amount of admiration for her,' McFadden said. As for her daughter, McFadden told The Post, 'They both did their best. They disappointed each other and they loved each other … I don't doubt for a second there was love between them.' Jackie does not appear in the film, and Imagine Entertainment exec Sara Bernstein told The Post, 'We know she is very private, but she didn't try to stop the film.' In the end, though, there is the axiom 'work doesn't love you back.' 'I think she felt that her greatest accomplishment — her peerless career — led to her greatest regret, because it often required her to sacrifice any semblance of a personal life. Or even a normal life outside of the glare and the fame,' Sloan said. 'In her apartment, she had a needlepoint pillow that was embroidered with this saying: 'Once upon a time, when there was time.' That was revealing, I thought,' he added. 'Barbara pretty much only had time for this storied career. Choosing one over the other was a sadness at the end of her life. She knew that.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store