That's what DVRs are for. My wife and I watch Kimmel, Colbert, Seth Meyers and the Daily Show as a playback the following evening.I bet most of the protesters don't even stay up to watch Jimmy Kimmel Live
That's what DVRs are for. My wife and I watch Kimmel, Colbert, Seth Meyers and the Daily Show as a playback the following evening.I bet most of the protesters don't even stay up to watch Jimmy Kimmel Live
I’ve never been more assured that Nexstar’s deal with Tegna won’t go through.
No, that's what the Sony Betamax is for:That's what DVRs are for. My wife and I watch Kimmel, Colbert, Seth Meyers and the Daily Show as a playback the following evening.
No, that's what the Sony Betamax is for:
Ah, thanks for that. I'm one of those monologue-and-musical-guest-only YouTube viewers, so I've never seen his signoff -- or watched a complete show, for that matter.It's a running joke. Every night since 2005, Jimmy includes in his sign-off:
"Apologies to Matt Damon, we ran out of time."
"He was like a kid at Christmas when he came up to tell me he had the money to buy [WYOU in Scranton PA],” recalled Preston Padden, a former Fox and ABC executive who has known Sook for decades. Fox Corp. and Wall Street Journal parent News Corp share common ownership.
Ah, thanks for that. I'm one of those monologue-and-musical-guest-only YouTube viewers, so I've never seen his signoff -- or watched a complete show, for that matter.
With a start time of 11:35pm PT, I imagine 'on demand' next day viewing is how most on the west coast watch these shows.That's what DVRs are for. My wife and I watch Kimmel, Colbert, Seth Meyers and the Daily Show as a playback the following evening.
While it got a lot harder, I am not calling it a dead letter. In theory Carr and Cruz can still agree to relax some regulations that still make it possible (the 39% cap is the only real question) but Cruz may still be mad at Carr on principle alone. Deservedly so.I’ve never been more assured that Nexstar’s deal with Tegna won’t go through.
With a start time of 11:35pm PT, I imagine 'on demand' next day viewing is how most on the west coast watch these shows.
Do you really record and watch all 4 of these shows everyday?
I don't find them that interesting, or funny. Except for The Daily Show. Late night TV, for me, hasn't been destination viewing, or must see TV since Letterman on NBC.
BTW what do you not like about Jimmy Fallon?They start at 11:35 ET, too...so I'd expect the east coast would do the same.
Right now, yes. Recording is set-it-and-forget it and playback isn't that big a deal. Unless there's a guest we want to see, it's about 11 minutes for each show, so if they're all on (I'd say half of the time, at least one show is on hiatus and nobody does Friday shows), it's 45-ish minutes total, or less than the length of one of their shows.
Our evening TV routine basically is to start with Kimmel/Colbert/Seth/Daily Show (in that order---leading off with Rachel Maddow on Mondays) then any current show we happen to be watching (right now, it's Only Murders in the Building on Hulu and The Morning Show on Apple TV+) followed by a classic show (we're re-watching The West Wing currently). It's a little over two hours if everyone is on, and that's plenty of TV for us for one night.
Different strokes. My wife and I are both writers and theater kids. Some of the jokes land, some don't and we can have fun mentally deconstructing it all. In fact, the thing I love about Seth is that he does that in real time. He'll critique the joke, interact with Wally the cue card guy.
BTW what do you not like about Jimmy Fallon?
I had no idea NBC still has cue card guys.In fact, the thing I love about Seth is that he does that in real time. He'll critique the joke, interact with Wally the cue card guy.
Yeah. NBC is very old-school. Wally, in fact, does both Seth and SNL. Seth explained off-air with the audience recently:I had no idea NBC still has cue card guys.
Cool.Yeah. NBC is very old-school. Wally, in fact, does both Seth and SNL.
Here's a quick clip of the interaction...this is from eight months ago:
The real X factor is litigation at the state level to block the merger—or delay it past the imposed deadline before Nexstar is forced to pay a big breakup fee to Tegna. Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont is not happy with Nexstar's conduct preventing Kimmel from airing on WTNH (something WTNH has been forced to report on) but the state is likely to sue because the Tegna-Nexstar merger would outright extinguish the newsroom of either WTNH or WTIC-TV. AGs in California and Colorado are definitely likely to sue as the same threat of shuttered newsrooms directly impact their state capitols (Sacramento and Denver, respectively).
coloradosun.com
"Principles" don't seem to take priority over politics for that particular individual. Remember, the candidate he ran against and now supports said horrible things about his wife and father. I'm sure Cruz will get on board with the agenda as history would suggest.While it got a lot harder, I am not calling it a dead letter. In theory Carr and Cruz can still agree to relax some regulations that still make it possible (the 39% cap is the only real question) but Cruz may still be mad at Carr on principle alone. Deservedly so.
AP is reporting Sinclair is bringing Kimmel back.