Taylor Swift has officially entered the Kamala era.
Shortly after the conclusion of Tuesday's presidential debate, the pop star formally endorsed the vice president for the presidency, surprising all seven of them who thought the AI-generated “endorsement” of Swift that Trump posted last month was real.
Late Night with Seth Meyers lost its band. The Late Late Show lost, well, everything. Now this.
Probably a recent article in Variety magazine. Passive-aggressive attempts to make you feel guilty Swift's move to step off the sidelines resonated, and maybe she'll inspire more entertainers to stop singing, dancing and acting and start giving us what we really want: half-assed political opinions.
Thanks, everyone!
Fallon's show won't grow
“The Tonight Show” suddenly scaled back.
NBC agencies are now Trump jokes decreased by 20% Jimmy Fallon's show will no longer air original episodes every Friday. While other late-night shows are already on that schedule, “The Tonight Show's” cuts reflect the continuing decline of the format.
Late Night with Seth Meyers lost its band. The Late Late Show lost, well, everything. Now this.
Jimmy Kimmel recently suggested that late-night TV could be dead within 10 years, and at this rate, his prediction could be off by more than 20%.
“Curve” rash
Larry David is doing pretty… pretty well in his post-Curb Your Enthusiasm life. The professional misanthrope has just announced a 10-city fall tour, scheduled to begin in Denver, Colorado on September 20th.
Will he get political? The comedian is a self-described liberal. He was furious at Alan Dershowitz. This is because he sided with Donald Trump on legal issues, so we'll have to wait and see, but it won't be cheap either way.
The cheapest tickets at the Mile High City's Paramount Theatre are nearly $300, and his Bernie Sanders impersonation leaves a lot to be desired.
A lesson for UCLA extremists?
This may seem like a recipe for disaster, but it is also a necessity for universities today.
Phelim McAleer's play “Seventh of October,” which depicts the Hamas terror attack through verbatim survivor testimonies, will be performed at UCLA's Fowler Museum, Lennart Auditorium on the anniversary of the massacre.
Yes, this is one of many American universities where violent anti-Israel protests erupted in the months following the attacks.
McAleer is no stranger to controversy, and knows the play's provocative subject matter will draw attention. Will any pro-Palestinian protesters watch it to find out where the current war began? The bigger question is how long the corporate media will continue to ignore it.
“I'm… Beetlejuice.”
In 1989, it only took two words to convince audiences that Michael Keaton was the right man for the role of the Dark Knight.
“I'm Batman,” Keaton growls at the villain, proving that Mr. Mom could play a superhero too.
Now, at a young age of 73, the actor wants audiences to know him by a different name.
Michael Keaton Douglas.
The actor's real name is Michael DouglasBut when he entered show business, another star had that name – Kirk Douglas's son, to be exact – so he chose Michael Keaton instead.
He's in good company: David Bowie is only Bowie because his real name, David Jones, was already taken by someone called The Monkees.
At this point, few people will call the actor by his real name or his long new nickname, and if his latest film continues to be a huge box office success, we'll all be calling him “Beetlejuice” from now on.
New Women on Lorne
“Saturday Night Live” is adding three new faces to the show's 50th season this fall.
Ashley Padilla, Emil Wakim, and Jane Wickline will appear on the season premiere on September 28. We'd hate to assume their voting preferences based solely on their new employers, but rumor has it that they're already hard at work pitching softball jokes about coconut trees and sassy autumns.





