BTS will perform two songs on The Tonight Show
Digest more
President Donald Trump just can't quit late-night TV. Another social media post proved that the president keeps up with what hosts are saying, prompting Jimmy Kimmel to step up and defend his fellow "late-night morons" from the leader of the free world.
"Jimmy Kimmel Live" has secured the No. 1 spot in late night among adults 18-49 for the third consecutive week, continuing a strong run in the key demographic, according to Nielsen live-plus-same-day data for the week of March 9.
Conan O'Brien reflects on the decline of late-night TV and the moment he realized the industry was changing.
Tomorrow, live from London, it will be Saturday night. The UK version of the NBC format that has come to define late night television across five decades is about to launch. Saturday Night Live UK
Jimmy Kimmel didn’t need a long rebuttal to President Donald Trump’s latest swipe at late-night TV, just a single line that captured the absurdity of a feud that refuses to fade. “You know what? You’re welcome.
Also very funny to describe a duel as being between two consenting adults. You know, because if only one person consents, that’s murder,” said Seth Meyers, host of “Late Night.”
Even if Trump didn't influence CBS's decision to end 'The Late Show,' its effects on political comedy will be dire
A longtime Tallahassee bakery got a shout out on late night television from one of Hollywood's A-listers. Ryan Gosling raved about the "Pop-Tart"-style pastries from The Cake Shop on Capital Circle Northeast,
Mark Normand says Late Night is 'dying' — how the stand-up comic keeps up in a changing comedy scene
Comedian Mark Normand explained how social media-fueled partisanship prevents audiences from enjoying comedy as people focus on determining political stances instead.