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Jamie Lee Curtis Decries Stephen Colbert Cancellation

Jamie Lee Curtis Decries Stephen Colbert Cancellation

Yahoo28-07-2025
Hot off another Emmy nomination for 'The Bear' and looking ahead to her upcoming Disney sequel, 'Freakier Friday,' Oscar-winner Jamie Lee Curtis is set to make her first ever-appearance on 'The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.' But, she will be among the show's last guests. The series is set to end in 2026, a decision that Curtis now calls 'awful.'
'It's bad,' Curtis told Variety of being interviewed by Colbert. 'I'm excited that I will get to be on his show in about two weeks. I've never been on his show. I really like him. He's smart and funny and a lovely human.'
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Curtis is not the first star to voice her disappointment in the 'Late Show' ending. Ben Stiller wrote on X that CBS was axing 'one of the best shows they have,' while Adam Scott was even more blunt, saying 'This is absolute bullshit and I for one am looking forward to the next 10 months of shows.'
Colbert's late night rival Jimmy Kimmel also wrote on an Instagram story, 'Love you, Stephen. Fuck you and all your Sheldons, CBS.'
Speaking with NPR, Curtis expanded on her thoughts on the slew of politically-backed cancellations. 'They just cut NPR and, you know, public broadcasting — yes, they're trying to silence people, but that won't work. Won't work. We will just get louder,' she said.
For more on 'The Late Show' cancellation, check out IndieWire's reporting and this think piece from our own Ben Travers.
Curtis, meanwhile, is enjoying the string of successes in her career. Speaking with Variety about her role in 'The Bear,' she said, 'It's a beautiful show and I'm thrilled to be a part of it. I love it. I'm a fan of the show. I was a fan from the beginning and so I just love the stories they tell and the characters they create.'
As for the forthcoming 'Freakier Friday,' out on August 8, she described it as 'a movie for today.' 'It is a happy, nostalgic, funny, sweet, heartfelt, Disney movie right at the end of the summer,' Curtis continued. 'There haven't been a lot of movies for women, and this is a love letter to every mother, grandma, sister, cousin and daughter.'
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'They Are Next': Trump Sends Chilling Warning To Jimmy Kimmel, Other Hosts
'They Are Next': Trump Sends Chilling Warning To Jimmy Kimmel, Other Hosts

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time8 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'They Are Next': Trump Sends Chilling Warning To Jimmy Kimmel, Other Hosts

President Donald Trump on Wednesday fired another salvo against late-night TV hosts Jimmy Kimmel and Jimmy Fallon as well as radio icon Howard Stern, saying they could soon follow in the footsteps of 'Late Show' host Stephen Colbert, who was canceled last month by CBS. 'Colbert has no talent,' he said. 'Fallon has no talent. Kimmel has no talent. They're next. They're gonna be going.' Colbert's show was canceled as CBS' parent company, Paramount, attempted to complete a merger that required federal approval. The company also paid Trump $16 million to settle a lawsuit that most legal experts believed was without merit. Critics said the company was trying to win Trump's favor to help the deal pass FCC muster. It was approved shortly after Colbert was canceled, despite being the highest-rated late-night show. CBS said Colbert was canceled because his show was losing money, with some reports claiming the show was losing between $40 million and $50 million a year ― a number Colbert has seemed skeptical of during his evening monologues. Trump predicted the other shows would follow in Colbert's footsteps. 'I hear they're gonna be going,' he said, without elaborating on where he heard that. 'I don't know, but I would imagine, because... Colbert has better ratings than Kimmel or Fallon.' A reporter in the room also said that Stern 'announced' that he was 'parting ways' with SiriusXM. That hasn't happened. However, the US Sun reported that Sirius would cancel Stern when his contract expires at the end of this year. That report has not yet been verified. Trump was a frequent guest on Stern's show years ago, but clips from those broadcasts frequently resurface and embarrass the president. Just last month, a 2006 clip went viral in which Trump said he had no real 'age limit' for dating. 'I don't want to be like Congressman Foley, with, you know, 12-year-olds,' he said, referring to a GOP lawmaker who was forced to step down in 2006 after he sent lewd messages to young male congressional pages. The clip resurfaced as Trump was trying to distance himself from late convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, who was once a close friend. Trump on Wednesday said he 'hasn't heard' Stern's name in a while. 'I used to do his show. We used to have fun,' he said, then added that Stern's show 'went down' when he endorsed Hillary Clinton for president in 2016. Trump has spent years railing against late-night shows and hosts that make fun of him, attacking them and threatening their corporate parents. After watching Seth Meyers in January, he called the host 'dumb and untalented' and 'merely a slot filler for the Scum that runs Comcast.' Then he took aim at the company itself. 'These are not shows or entertainment, they are simply political hits, 100% of the time, to me and the Republican Party,' Trump said. 'Comcast should pay a BIG price for this!' Trump seems to have a special degree of hatred for Kimmel. During his first term, Trump reportedly tried to have Kimmel censored.

RushTok is back. TikTok still can't get enough of sorority recruitment
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time10 minutes ago

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RushTok is back. TikTok still can't get enough of sorority recruitment

The internet's favorite programming is back on: #RushTok season is officially upon us. If this is your first time tuning in, 'rush' is the informal name for the recruitment process in which college students in the U.S. vie for a spot in a Greek organization at their campus. On #RushTok, potential new members (PNMs) document their experience rushing different sororities, typically those affiliated with the National Panhellenic Conference. The phenomenon first went viral in 2021, thanks to the University of Alabama. The hashtag #BamaRush now has more than 1.3 million posts, setting the blueprint for how pledge week plays out on TikTok. Since then, #RushTok has evolved into a full-blown internet subculture, with more than 67 million posts at the time of writing. Across the world, people tune in for a behind-the-scenes look at the recruitment process. Current pledges are building excitement, while viral personalities return for their fourth and final year. RushTok has essentially become its own reality TV show (think Dance Moms or Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders but in bite-size content). Young women try to get into their dream sorority, and the internet comes along for the ride. 'Bama rush tok is my superbowl,' one TikTok user posted. 'Guys who are we rooting for?' another asked. With 2025 recruitment well underway, content ranges from simple OOTD videos to high-energy choreographed dances. Brands are swarming the comments to get in on the action (as are plenty of confused Europeans). Peripheral content ramps up during this time, too, including parodies that highlight the homogeneity of the content. One creator, DestineeMoreh, returns each year to break down the costs behind the flood of 'outfit of the day' posts on the For You Page. The phenomenon has even inspired its own Lifetime documentary, set to premiere later this month. A number of schools are involved, but ask anyone—Bama Rush is the main event. While major players are already warming up, recruitment events at the University of Alabama don't officially begin for a few more days. According to UA's Panhellenic Association, recruitment runs from August 9 through 17. If last year's content is anything to go by, it'll be over-the-top, chaotic, and very American.

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