Last Night on Late Night: Stewart and Colbert Are Not Above Schadenfreude
Plus Mel Gibson as Jimmy Kimmel on our regular late-night roundup.
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Plus Mel Gibson as Jimmy Kimmel on our regular late-night roundup.
Plus the E-Trade talking baby gets political on our regular late-night roundup.
Olbermann and Scarborough ordered to simmer down.
Plus: Ken Burns's documentary on the late-night wars in our regular late-night roundup.
Plus, Stephen Colbert asks for the 'Tonight Show' on our regular late-night roundup.
Also, Stewart finally talks NBC on our regular late-night roundup.
"Right now, the food industry creates patients for the health-care industry," says the author of 'Food Rules.'
This time, it's Sarah Palin's crowd that appears larger than it really is.
He would have gotten away with it, if it wasn't for that meddling Jon Stewart!
"His own organs have turned against him, or should I say, 'have been turned against him.'"
McCain's "Internet Freedom Act" is the exact opposite of what it sounds like.
Cable-company flub accidentally describes the show pretty well.
Even for fans like me, 'How I Met Your Mother' has always felt like a clear update of 'Friends': You've got your Manhattan hangout, your friends from college, two geek males plus one womanizer, and the unsettling feeling that all that warm likability could curdle with a few bad episodes.
There's actually a perfectly good reason why CNN's reporter texts while driving.
They promise not to make you look like a fool.
John Bolton, William Kristol, and others explain why 'The Daily Show' is the best place to get their views heard.
Jon Stewart gets a boost from a highly unscientific online poll.