Latest news with #talkshow
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
The Late Show with Stephen Colbert: next episode, guests and everything we know about the talk show
When you buy through links on our articles, Future and its syndication partners may earn a commission. The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is CBS's entry in the late night talk show field, with the former host of The Colbert Report bringing his satire and comedy to audiences at the end of their day. That's in addition to featuring guests from the world of entertainment, politics, business and more. Colbert took over The Late Show from the retiring David Letterman in 2015. Over his run to date the show has been nominated for 26 Emmys, including Outstanding Variety Talk Series/Outstanding Talk Series every year since 2017. Keep up with when the next episode of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is and who is going to show up as a guest right here, as well as what else you need to know about it. The Late Show with Stephen Colbert is on its summer hiatus, with no new episodes from June 26 to July 11. Reruns of the late night talk show will air every week night on CBS at 11:35 pm ET/PT. Here is the slate of guests for The Late Show with Stephen Colbert this week, June 27-July 4: Friday, June 27 Allison Williams Damson Idris Performance by Model/Actriz Original airdate June 18, 2025 Monday, June 30 Colman Domingo Gary Oldman, Jack Lowden, Kristin Scott Thomas and Jonathan Pryce from the cast of Slow Horses Original airdate June 11, 2025 Tuesday, July 1 Mariska Hargitay Senator Tammy Duckworth Original airdate June 16, 2025 Wednesday, July 2 John C. Reilly Eva Victor Original airdate June 12, 2025 Thursday, July 3 Natalie Portman Dawn Staley Performance by Wednesday Original airdate May 21, 2025 Friday, July 4 Mark Hamill Cristin Milioti 'Rescue Dog Rescue' with Mark Hamill Original airdate June 4, 2025 Before taking over the tonight show, Stephen Colbert was a comedian best known for his time on The Daily Show with Jon Stewart and then hosting his own spinoff news satire, The Colbert Report. On The Colbert Report, Colbert played a character with an overly-enthusiastic sense of patriotism commenting on the daily news. The show won seven Emmys and a Peabody Award, which honors "excellence in storytelling that reflects the social issues and the emerging voices of our day." Outside of The Colbert Report and The Late Show, Colbert has some other acting credits, including Strangers with Candy, Monsters vs Aliens, The Mindy Project, Rick and Morty, Our Cartoon President and Girls5eva. Colbert is also a massive fan of Lord of the Rings, which he will often incorporate into his show when he has the chance. Leading The Late Show band is Grammy-nominated multi-instrumentalist Louis Cato. Throughout Cato's career, he has worked with the likes of Beyoncé, Mariah Carey, John Legend, Talib Kweli, Snarky Puppy, David Sanborn, George Duke, Bobby McFerrin, Marcus Miller, John Scofield and A Tribe Called Quest. He also has his own solo record, Starting Now, and another record, Reflections, expected to come out later in 2023. To tune into The Late Show with Stephen Colbert live, you need access to your local CBS channel. That can be done with a traditional pay-TV cable package, a TV antenna that receives local broadcast feeds or a live TV streaming service that carries CBS, like Fubo, Hulu with Live TV and YouTube TV. Cordcutters also have the ability to tune in live if they sign up for Paramount Plus with Showtime, which gives them access to their local CBS channel's feed. If you subscribe to the base Paramount Plus plan, then you can watch The Late Show with Stephen Colbert on-demand. YouTube also offers clips from The Late Show with Stephen Colbert the day after each episode. But if you want to see the full episodes, you need to have one of the above options.


Forbes
4 days ago
- Entertainment
- Forbes
Tamron Hall Shares A Behind-The-Scenes Look At Her Talk Show
New York City, May 13, 2025 — Tamron Hall, Emmy award winning talk show host, invites Forbes ... More contributor Corein Carter on set for a behind-the-scenes look at the making of her hit daytime show When I stepped onto the set of The Tamron Hall Show on a rainy New York morning, I was immediately greeted with warmth—and a little humor. Inside her dressing room, Tamron Hall is seated under a hair dryer, radiating calm. The Emmy-winning host and executive producer of her eponymous daytime show greets me with a warm smile as I enter. 'This is a television exclusive,' she jokes. 'I've never done an interview under the dryer.' Tamron Hall's director-style chair on set, a signature fixture behind the scenes of her acclaimed ... More daytime talk show. That's how the day begins: authentically unscripted and with plenty of heart. It's exactly the energy you'd expect from a woman who's built one of the last thriving syndicated talk shows on television — on her own terms. But that's Tamron Hall—wherever she is, she's fully present. And this day, I was invited to follow her for a full 'Day in the Life' on set. I settle in next to her, intrigued to pull back the curtain on what it truly takes to balance motherhood, business leadership and the magic that happens on camera. Watch Full Video Interview with Tamron Hall Here As the glam team works their magic, Hall talks about the part of her morning that no audience ever sees. 'When I wake up, the first thing I do is pray before I even step out of bed,' she says. 'Then I get my son ready for school. That's a non-negotiable.' She laughs, adding: 'Yes, I have a five-year-old and we do six shows a week, two tapings on Wednesdays and Fridays. The show doesn't start until he's on the bus.' Hall says softly. 'And you don't get to see me getting my son out the door, but that's how I start every day. I'm up around 5:45. Then it's emails, notes, getting him to the bus. The show begins after that.' The Business Behind the Brand NYC, May 13, 2025 — Tamron Hall gets camera-ready with longtime hairstylist Johnny Wright and head ... More makeup artist Raul Otero ahead of filming her daytime talk show As glam continues—no heat on the hair, just healthy molding, her team later tells me—I ask Hall about her mindset as not just a host, but as a business leader. While the Hall the public sees is effortlessly poised, the Tamron Hall I witnessed that day is also a shrewd businesswoman. 'People don't realize this is a small business,' she explains. 'I get a budget to produce this show. Disney gives us the freedom to build it. But if it's not good? They won't back it. I've stopped apologizing for wanting the best product imaginable. I'm competitive. I want this to be excellent.' NYC, May 13, 2025 — Tamron Hall celebrates the cookout-themed episode with Ja Rule, Case, and DJ ... More Cassidy after their live performance of 'Livin' It Up' on set. That business acumen is exactly what has allowed The Tamron Hall Show—one of daytime's few remaining independently-driven syndicated talk shows—to not just survive, but thrive in an increasingly consolidated media landscape. I nod, taking in her words about the realities of building a lasting career. 'It's a work in progress,' Hall says, her tone both candid and grounded. 'You don't have to lose your soul. But you do have to make sacrifices. There are going to be days when you can't do what you want—but that doesn't mean you can't still have a full life.' It's a seamless mix of preparation and purpose as the team gets ready to bring an unforgettable episode to life. Beneath the business drive is a deeper mission. 'There are so many moments that remind me this is bigger than TV,' Hall says. One such moment left a lasting impression. Mia and Mya Pauldo, identical twin basketball players, appeared on the Tamron Hall Show to showcase ... More their skills and talk about their journey 'We did a show about veterans waiting for living donors. A viewer was watching from home, and God told her to do something. She reached out to the organization we featured and ended up donating an organ. We later reunited her with the man she saved. There wasn't a dry eye in the house.' It's a throughline in Hall's work—creating space for human connection. Though many episodes do tackle emotional topics, Hall clarifies that The Tamron Hall Show is never about trauma for trauma's sake. Cameron Pipkins, who saved his brother's life with a bone marrow transplant, is surprised by Tamron ... More Hall with a family trip to Disney World. 'We talk about life,' she says. 'It's about resilience, joy, and the full human experience. We've done everything from Kirk Franklin discussing the discovery of his biological father, to our 'I Survived My Vacation' episode, where a guest overcame a life-threatening fall. Those stories aren't just about hardship—they're about the human spirit.' Hall proves her show is anchored by intention—every guest, every story, every surprise being rooted in something real. She believes people respond because her show doesn't exploit their stories. 'We have over a thousand episodes of proof that we protect what people share with us,' Hall adds. The show is a testament to how storytelling can serve a greater purpose, with each segment offering more than just a moment—it offers meaning. As we make our way toward the studio, Hall moves effortlessly between roles—wrapping a quick meeting with station affiliates, fitting in a parent-teacher conference over Zoom, and preparing for an evening dinner celebrating Taraji P. Henson's latest film. A Day In The Life - On Set with Tamron Hall The balancing act is relentless—and intentional. 'Sometimes I can't be at every event at my son's school,' she admits. 'But we just spent Mother's Day in New Orleans. We walked to the aquarium, rode the trolley, and had an amazing time. That's what matters. One moment doesn't define our bond.' And neither does one title define Hall's career. Backstage, I ask her about another lesson: how she manages to remain multifaceted in an industry that often tries to define women by one role. 'I do it all—because I can,' Hall says firmly. 'As a Black woman, we didn't always have the opportunity to be multifaceted. Now I do. So I'm embracing it.' A copy of Tamron Hall's new children's picture book Harlem Honey, inspired by her son Moses and ... More celebrating the culture and community of Harlem. Hall lights up as she talks about her children's book Harlem Honey and a recent 90s-inspired fashion shoot. 'When I got this talk show, it was a dream come true,' she says. 'But I didn't stop dreaming.' When I asked Tamron what 'success' looks like now, after seven seasons, syndication, and countless accolades, her answer wasn't about ratings or Emmys. It was something much deeper — and more human. The real legacy of her show isn't just in who watches — it's in who feels recognized. Who feels represented. Who finally sees someone asking the questions they've long held inside. Hall's version of success isn't about visibility. It's about impact. Of course, no on-camera presence is a solo act. Behind the scenes, Hall's longtime stylist Johnny Wright and head makeup artist Raul Otero are integral parts of the process. L to R: Raul Otero (makeup artist) and Johnny Wright (hairstylist) and discuss perfecting her look ... More for The Tamron Hall Show 'She's a pixie queen,' says Wright, who has styled Hall since he was 21. 'We keep her hair chic, healthy, and elevated—no heat, no damage.' For Otero, the goal is to enhance Hall's natural beauty. 'Tamron has such a regal presence,' he says. 'We create a look that's expensive but effortless. That complements who she is.' As we move through the halls of the studio, one thing becomes clear: The Tamron Hall Show runs on more than just scripts and cameras. It runs on trust. Hall doesn't just show up for the show — she shows up for her people. And that's why the people around her show up for her. 'This isn't just about me,' she says as she walks briskly from glam to stage. 'I'm surrounded by a team of people who care deeply about this show. We move fast. We change outfits in 20 minutes. We meet with stations between tapings. And no one's complaining — because they're invested.' Tamron Hall and Forbes contributor Corein Carter ride the elevator to the stage, moments before ... More showtime begins Her glam team, Wright and Otero, echo that sentiment. They've worked with Hall for decades combined and have learned how to adapt, innovate, and create on the fly. 'There's no overthinking with Tamron,' Wright tells me. 'She trusts us. That's why we can make quick switches, go from daytime neutral to full fashion glam, and never skip a beat.' Otero adds, 'We build looks that reflect her personality — clean, sophisticated, powerful. But it's collaborative. She knows what she likes, and she gives us space to bring that vision to life.' What's rare is how this trust extends beyond just beauty — it's in the scripting, the pacing, even how she preps the audience. Tamron Hall and her producer review the run of show just moments before cameras roll on the ... More cookout-themed episode. 'We script our shows about a week or two out,' Hall says. 'By the time I walk on stage, I've already revisited what we wrote, refreshed my memory, and worked with the team to tighten it. This show doesn't just happen — we build it.' There's a rhythm to how Hall leads: present, precise, but full of grace. She'll command a room while complimenting a producer's necklace. She'll jump from affiliate meetings to cookout segments with Ja Rule and Case — without ever seeming rushed. And maybe that's the secret sauce: the culture she's created feels like family, not just production. In an industry known for turnover and burnout, Tamron's show thrives on mutual respect, shared vision and an unwavering standard of excellence. The rain has thrown off plans for an outdoor taping, but no one's panicking. If anything, the storm becomes part of the story. The show must go on — just indoors now, with the same signature joy and precision. Tamron Hall gets mic'd up and ready to roll, just moments before stepping on set for her daytime ... More talk show. 'I've done live television my entire career — MSNBC, the Today Show, breaking news, hurricanes, election nights, you name it,' she tells me, now mic'd up and moments away from stepping into the spotlight. 'So this? A little rain? That's nothing. You pivot. You keep going.' The controlled chaos of The Tamron Hall Show begins to settle into a rhythm. Outfits are zipped, notes are finalized, producers shuffle backstage with clipboards and laptops in hand. There's less than five minutes until go-time. She turns to me one last time before walking on stage. 'The moment I step out there and feel the love—that never gets old,' she says. 'It's like a rocket ship.' But Tamron? She's calm. 'This is where I thrive,' Hall tells me, 'We treat every episode like it's live. It keeps us sharp." Tamron Hall just moments before stepping on set for her daytime talk show She peeks out toward the studio audience and smiles The band cues up. The audience starts to cheer. The curtains opens. And just like that, Hall is in her element — powerful, poised and completely in command of her stage. Backstage, I take a quiet second to let it all sink in. The team, the prep, the purpose — it all builds toward this one moment. Not just a talk show, but a world she built with intention. Hall walks out to applause, welcoming the TamFam, bringing grace and grit to every second of airtime. And what strikes me most? It's not performance. It's presence. Real, rooted, unshakeable. She isn't just ready for showtime. She is the show. Legendary Comedian Bill Bellamy join Tamron Hall Show As the day winds down, I ask Hall what she's learned on this journey. And when it comes to defining herself? 'I'm going to consistently find ways to use my voice—to grow this show, to create more, and to show my son that it's okay to dream big. And yes,' she smiles, 'sometimes that means I'll go home and do a terrible job at Lego. But that's life. Tamron Hall and Forbes contributor Corein Carter share a final laugh while chatting about the day's ... More highlights after wrapping on set Spending a day with Tamron Hall made one thing abundantly clear: her magic lies not just in what happens in front of the camera, but in the intentionality behind every moment—on set, in business and in life. And when it comes to defining herself? 'I'm going to consistently find ways to use my voice—to grow this show, to create more, and to show my son it's okay to dream big. And yes,' she laughs, 'sometimes that means I'll go home and do a terrible job at Lego. But that's life.' In a world that often asks women—especially Black women—to choose, Hall is proof that you can be all of it: the host, the mother, the wife, the executive, the dreamer and the legacy in motion. Hall doesn't just run a show—she creates space for stories, for truth and for women to see what's possible. She's reshaping what leadership, grace and authenticity look like on and off camera.


Daily Mail
4 days ago
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Heidi Klum, 52, turns heads in a busty strapless mini dress as she arrives at Jimmy Kimmel Live! before opening up about emigrating to the US
Heidi Klum was a vision as she arrived at Jimmy Kimmel Live! in Los Angeles on Thursday. The supermodel, 52, put on a busty display in a strapless black mini dress that showed off her sensational figure. The sizzling ensemble featured a corset style top which flowed into a skirt with a pink satin fold. She added inches to her slender frame with a pair of black heels and sheer black tights. Shielding her eyes with a pair of stylish sunglasses, the beauty appeared in good spirits as she arrived for her appearance on the talk show. During the show, Heidi opened up about her living in the US, having been born and brought up in Germany. The supermodel, 52, put on a busty display in the number which showed off her sensational figure She explained to host Diego Luna: 'I think being a foreigner, helped me a lot coming to this country. I think people found me more interesting because I had an accent. 'I think that helped me in a way coming form Germany. It made more kind of more exotic or something like that.' Heidi continued: 'I came in 1994 and I went first to Miami and I did a lot of, you know, test photo shoots there and then I went to New York City and just fell in love with New York City. 'I lived there for many years and now I live here in Los Angeles for many years. I have four kids. 'One in New York, and three here in Los Angeles and now they're all, you know, one is at NYU New York, another one is now going to Parsons in New York and I have another one here. 'So, I mean they are all over the place now. Going to college, which is crazy, I only have one more baby at home, 15 years old. They're all grown ups. 21, 20, 19, and 15.' After her appearance on the show, Heidi stunned as she left the shoot location in another head turning outfit. The star looked incredible in a beige sleeveless blazer and matching trousers. She explained to host Diego Luna: 'I think being a foreigner, helped me a lot coming to this country. I think people found me more interesting because I had an accent' After her appearance on the show, Heidi stunned as she left the shoot location in another head turning outfit Beaming as she left the venue, she toted her belongings in a stylish brown leather bag. Her appearance come after Heidi celebrated her son Johan Riley Fyodor Taiwo Samuel's graduation from Campbell Hall on June 18. She gushed on Instagram: 'Cheering you on today and every day, congratulations Johan! My heart is full of joy and pride.' The 18-year-old donned a classic cap and gown for the ceremony, held at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in downtown LA, amid the ICE raid protests. Notable alumni of the Studio City private school include filmmaker Paul Thomas Anderson, actress Dakota Fanning, her younger sister Elle Fanning, Modern Family alum Ariel Winter, and the Olsen twins. Joining Heidi at the graduation festivities on Wednesday was her 19-year-old son Henry Günther Ademola Dashtu Samuel, who beamed beside his baby brother. Not pictured was Johan's famous father - four-time Grammy winner Seal - who is next scheduled to headline the Moroccan music festival Jazzablanca 2025 in Casablanca on July 3. Heidi and the 62-year-old R&B belter are also proud parents of 15-year-old daughter Lou and he adopted her 21-year-old daughter Leni (with Flavio Briatore) in 2009 during their seven-year marriage, which ended in 2012. The Emmy-winning host makes her triumphant return to the 10-episode 21st season of design competition Project Runway premiering July 31 on Freeform, Disney+, and Hulu. 'It's felt like coming home, really like coming home,' Heidi gushed to People in May. 'I can do it with my eyes closed, even though I'm judging clothes, so I have to have my eyes open, but I can do it with my eyes closed. 'I just love fashion so much, and I love how interested they are and how they're champing at the bit to get a spot in the fashion industry. So, it's so fun to give them a platform to show what they can do.' OG Project Runway judge Nina García and celebrity stylist Law Roach will join Klum as judges while Project Runway season 4 champ Christian Siriano returns as a mentor to the designers. Germany's Next Topmodel producer-host previously hosted Project Runway for 16 seasons spanning 2004-2018 before exiting to co-host rival competition Making the Cut on Amazon Prime Video alongside Tim Gunn for three seasons spanning 2020-2022.


Fox News
6 days ago
- Entertainment
- Fox News
The Quiz #447
Which snack food's slogan asserts their product is 'dangerously cheesy'? Play. Share. Listen with host of talk radio show The Rich Zeoli Show, Rich Zeoli.


Daily Mail
23-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Daily Mail
Ellen DeGeneres slammed by comic icon who says 'creepy and weird' talk-show star was 'not nice' to them
A veteran comedian is weighing in on their interactions with Ellen DeGeneres in an unfiltered and unflattering account. Ellen was a titan of daytime TV for nearly two decades before her talk show ended in 2022 amid a torrent of allegations about its 'toxic' work environment. The 67-year-old Presidential Medal of Freedom winner has since maintained that she was 'kicked out of show business' for being 'mean.' Now Ellen, whose public persona was founded on her image as the 'Queen of Nice,' has seen her kindness brought into question yet again, this time by the comedian Margaret Cho. 'Ellen was like really weird and not nice to me for most of my career,' Margaret, 56, alleged during an appearance on The Kelly Mantle Show. has contacted Ellen's representatives for comment but hasn't heard back yet. Margaret remarked that their connection went back to when they were both rising comedians, before Ellen achieved nationwide prominence in the late-1980s thanks to a successful appearance on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson. 'I opened for her in the 1980s when she was a headliner in comedy clubs and not – way, way before her big fame,' Margaret remembered. 'So then, when I would do later, when I would do her talk show in the 2000s, she acted like we just met. And I'm like: 'B****, what?'... Like, that's weird. We go way back,' she said, calling Ellen's conduct 'creepy and weird.' She then alleged that when David Bowie made an appearance on Ellen's show, 'he was so excited that, the night before, that I had come to his show wearing this giant Chinese emperor outfit.' Margaret stated: 'He was really thrilled about it and he talked at length about it, and she cut it out of the show, which made me so mad.' She claimed the 'producer, which was a really good friend of mine, had to call me and tell me: 'I can't believe she did this but she cut it out of the show, but you need to know that he was going on and on about your outfit. He loves you. God said your name.'' Margaret took the view that Ellen's decision to delete the footage was 'so rude,' although she acknowledged: 'I don't know if it was personal. Maybe it was for time. But still, I'm gonna take it personally, just 'cause I decided to.' After Ellen's show ended in 2022 in a maelstrom of controversy about the backstage treatment of staff, she largely withdrew from the spotlight. She and her wife Portia de Rossi led a mainly private life in Montecito, a Santa Barbara enclave that is also home to such celebrities as Oprah Winfrey, Prince Harry and Megan Markle and Katy Perry and Orlando Bloom. Last year she staged a comeback, going on tour with an act called Ellen's Last which was filmed as the Netflix special For Your Approval. While promoting her tour, she addressed the scandal that had overshadowed her career, saying she was 'kicked out of show business' for being 'mean.' She recalled: 'The hate went on for a long time and I would try to avoid looking at the news. The "be kind" girl wasn't kind. That was the headline,' via Rolling Stone. Sarcastically saying there are 'no mean people in show business,' she noted: 'I became this one-dimensional character who gave stuff away and danced up steps.' Ellen joked: 'Do you know how hard it is to dance up steps? Would a mean person dance up steps? Had I ended my show by saying: "Go f*** yourself," people would've been pleasantly surprised.' She confessed she 'didn't know how to be a boss' and pointed out she learned to practice her profession at 'Charlie's Chuckle Hut' rather than at business school. 'The show was called Ellen and everybody was wearing T-shirts that said "Ellen" and there were buildings on the Warner Brothers lot that said Ellen, but I don't know that that meant I should be in charge,' she observed.