Michelle Yeoh, Simu Liu and Daniel Dae Kim are among the headliners and honorees set to appear during The Asian American Foundation’s Heritage Month Summit and Celebration, as well as its inaugural awards dinner.
All three Hollywood talents are set to join fellow trailblazers, leaders and luminaries, along with more than 500 attendees, between May 5-6 in New York to celebrate the Api community and Taaf’s second anniversary. The two-day event will feature panels and roundtable discussions, tied to this year’s summit theme of “Together We Build,” daytime discussions will focus on efforts to address the rise in hate crimes, underfunding of Aapi communities and representation gaps in media and leadership.
That includes a fireside chat with Barbie and Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings star Liu moderated by ABC News’ Juju Chang, as well as a screening and panel of the upcoming Disney+ series American Born Chinese,...
All three Hollywood talents are set to join fellow trailblazers, leaders and luminaries, along with more than 500 attendees, between May 5-6 in New York to celebrate the Api community and Taaf’s second anniversary. The two-day event will feature panels and roundtable discussions, tied to this year’s summit theme of “Together We Build,” daytime discussions will focus on efforts to address the rise in hate crimes, underfunding of Aapi communities and representation gaps in media and leadership.
That includes a fireside chat with Barbie and Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings star Liu moderated by ABC News’ Juju Chang, as well as a screening and panel of the upcoming Disney+ series American Born Chinese,...
- 5/2/2023
- by Abbey White
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
CBS News and Stations announced an overhaul Monday that included a new studio in New York, and a new slate of programming. CBS News Miami also became the company’s 13th local streaming service, launching Monday.
The rebranding was announced by Neerah Khemlani and Wendy McMahon, presidents and co-heads of CBS News and Stations.
“We’re unlocking the power of CBS News – streaming the best of our reporting and storytelling on television to viewers everywhere,” Khemlani said in a statement. “From up-to-the-minute reporting from our new live news desk, signature interviews by Gayle King and Norah O’Donnell, adventures on ‘CBS Sunday Morning’ and ’60 Minutes,’ true crime on ’48 Hours’ – and reporting out of Washington to Kyiv to Beijing – we’re delivering a 24/7 experience with quality journalism from the best news brands in the business.”
The overhaul now brings together national and local live news in addition to content from CBS News’ long-standing shows,...
The rebranding was announced by Neerah Khemlani and Wendy McMahon, presidents and co-heads of CBS News and Stations.
“We’re unlocking the power of CBS News – streaming the best of our reporting and storytelling on television to viewers everywhere,” Khemlani said in a statement. “From up-to-the-minute reporting from our new live news desk, signature interviews by Gayle King and Norah O’Donnell, adventures on ‘CBS Sunday Morning’ and ’60 Minutes,’ true crime on ’48 Hours’ – and reporting out of Washington to Kyiv to Beijing – we’re delivering a 24/7 experience with quality journalism from the best news brands in the business.”
The overhaul now brings together national and local live news in addition to content from CBS News’ long-standing shows,...
- 1/24/2022
- by Lindsey Ellefson
- The Wrap
Christy Tanner, one of the architects of CBS’ early-to-market Cbsn streaming-news outlet, is leaving the company just as more media companies have begun to focus on creating news programming for mobile viewers.
She announced her exit to staffers on Thursday. “It’s been eight years since I joined CBS Interactive, five years since I joined CBS News Digital, and … never years since I took some solid time off,” Tanner wrote. “The fact is I haven’t wanted to miss a minute of the incredible opportunity it has been to work with you — building Cbsn into the leading streaming news service, transforming CBS News Digital into a powerhouse and establishing news as a pillar of CBS All Access, Paramount Plus and Pluto.”
Tanner, who joined CBS after working stints for Lionsgate and Washington Post Co., has risen through the ranks to become executive vice president of CBS News Digital, and in...
She announced her exit to staffers on Thursday. “It’s been eight years since I joined CBS Interactive, five years since I joined CBS News Digital, and … never years since I took some solid time off,” Tanner wrote. “The fact is I haven’t wanted to miss a minute of the incredible opportunity it has been to work with you — building Cbsn into the leading streaming news service, transforming CBS News Digital into a powerhouse and establishing news as a pillar of CBS All Access, Paramount Plus and Pluto.”
Tanner, who joined CBS after working stints for Lionsgate and Washington Post Co., has risen through the ranks to become executive vice president of CBS News Digital, and in...
- 6/17/2021
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
Elaine Quijano was on call for Cbsn the night of March 16 when word of the shootings in Atlanta broke. Coincidentally, she was in the middle of a pre-interview for an update to the streaming news network’s Asian Americans: Battling Bias, a 30-minute special that first aired last October and was expanded to an hourlong version March 31.
“My producer said, ‘There’s been a shooting,’ and I was relaying information to the activist [I was interviewing] in real time,” the anchor tells The Hollywood Reporter. “There was a silence on the other line, and then ...
“My producer said, ‘There’s been a shooting,’ and I was relaying information to the activist [I was interviewing] in real time,” the anchor tells The Hollywood Reporter. “There was a silence on the other line, and then ...
- 4/15/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Film + TV
Elaine Quijano was on call for Cbsn the night of March 16 when word of the shootings in Atlanta broke. Coincidentally, she was in the middle of a pre-interview for an update to the streaming news network’s Asian Americans: Battling Bias, a 30-minute special that first aired last October and was expanded to an hourlong version March 31.
“My producer said, ‘There’s been a shooting,’ and I was relaying information to the activist [I was interviewing] in real time,” the anchor tells The Hollywood Reporter. “There was a silence on the other line, and then ...
“My producer said, ‘There’s been a shooting,’ and I was relaying information to the activist [I was interviewing] in real time,” the anchor tells The Hollywood Reporter. “There was a silence on the other line, and then ...
- 4/15/2021
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
National correspondents Jericka Duncan and Adriana Diaz have been named new anchors of CBS Weekend News.
Duncan will anchor on Saturdays from Chicago, and Duncan will have Sunday duties from New York. Duncan will anchor this Sunday and Diaz will helm on Dec. 12. They will assume their permanent positions in January.
CBS News president Susan Zirinsky said that Duncan and Diaz “are outstanding journalists with extensive reporting experience. Adriana’s reporting has spanned China, North Korea and Latin America to today’s coverage of Covid-19’s devastating impact on the nation. Jericka has distinguished herself in reporting the toughest, highest-profile stories that have hit the courts and gripped the country including the trials of Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby and Breonna Taylor.”
The Covid-19 pandemic also has forced the news division to broadcast the newscast from across the country with various anchors because of the limitations on the CBS Broadcast Center in New York.
Duncan will anchor on Saturdays from Chicago, and Duncan will have Sunday duties from New York. Duncan will anchor this Sunday and Diaz will helm on Dec. 12. They will assume their permanent positions in January.
CBS News president Susan Zirinsky said that Duncan and Diaz “are outstanding journalists with extensive reporting experience. Adriana’s reporting has spanned China, North Korea and Latin America to today’s coverage of Covid-19’s devastating impact on the nation. Jericka has distinguished herself in reporting the toughest, highest-profile stories that have hit the courts and gripped the country including the trials of Harvey Weinstein, Bill Cosby and Breonna Taylor.”
The Covid-19 pandemic also has forced the news division to broadcast the newscast from across the country with various anchors because of the limitations on the CBS Broadcast Center in New York.
- 12/4/2020
- by Ted Johnson
- Deadline Film + TV
National correspondents Jericka Duncan and Adriana Diaz will take over as anchors of “CBS Weekend News,” the ViacomCBS unit said Friday, setting in place a more formalized structure for the weekend evening-news broadcast after its logistics were disrupted by the coronavirus pandemic.
Diaz will anchor the Saturday broadcast from Chicago and Duncan will anchor Sundays from New York.
Duncan will anchor the “CBS Weekend News” on Sunday, Dec. 6, while Diaz will start on December 12 from CBS News’ bureau in Chicago, located at Wbbm, a Chicago station owned and operated by the network. Both anchors will assume their permanent timeslots in January.
“Jericka Duncan and Adriana Diaz are outstanding journalists with extensive reporting experience,” said Susan Zirinsky, president of CBS News, in a statement. “Adriana’s reporting has spanned China, North Korea and Latin America to today’s coverage of Covid-19’s devastating impact on the nation. Jericka has distinguished herself in reporting the toughest,...
Diaz will anchor the Saturday broadcast from Chicago and Duncan will anchor Sundays from New York.
Duncan will anchor the “CBS Weekend News” on Sunday, Dec. 6, while Diaz will start on December 12 from CBS News’ bureau in Chicago, located at Wbbm, a Chicago station owned and operated by the network. Both anchors will assume their permanent timeslots in January.
“Jericka Duncan and Adriana Diaz are outstanding journalists with extensive reporting experience,” said Susan Zirinsky, president of CBS News, in a statement. “Adriana’s reporting has spanned China, North Korea and Latin America to today’s coverage of Covid-19’s devastating impact on the nation. Jericka has distinguished herself in reporting the toughest,...
- 12/4/2020
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
This is it, America – Election Day 2020. With President Donald Trump, his Democratic challenger Joe Biden and so many others declaring this “the most important election of our lifetimes,” it’s time for the final votes to be cast and tallied. Deadline will provide live coverage all day – and, likely, night – long, and here is a rundown of how to watch as the historic day unfolds.
You can keep abreast of called states with the Electoral Map on our homepage, and watch our poll closing times to get a sense of where things stand at any given moment. There promises to be no shortage of drama, along with the potential for a 2016-esque GOP surprise or a 2018-like blue wave. But prognosticators gonna prognosticate, while Americans await their new president.
If you haven’t voted yet, please do. Then follow all the action of the strangest election in the strangest year.
You can keep abreast of called states with the Electoral Map on our homepage, and watch our poll closing times to get a sense of where things stand at any given moment. There promises to be no shortage of drama, along with the potential for a 2016-esque GOP surprise or a 2018-like blue wave. But prognosticators gonna prognosticate, while Americans await their new president.
If you haven’t voted yet, please do. Then follow all the action of the strangest election in the strangest year.
- 11/3/2020
- by Patrick Hipes and Erik Pedersen
- Deadline Film + TV
The final debate of the 2020 presidential election cycle is tonight in Nashville, with the second nationally televised meeting between President Donald Trump and Democratic challenger Joe Biden set to begin at 9 p.m. Et/6 p.m. Pt at Belmont University.
NBC News White House correspondent Kristen Welker will moderate the debate, which will be simulcast across a total of 16 broadcast and cable networks and available on several streaming services and digital platforms. You can also watch the livestream on Deadline (courtesy of PBS NewsHour) here:
Like the first debate on September 28 in Cleveland — which drew 73.1 million viewers across the networks, the third-highest total ever — tonight’s debate will be 90 minutes without commercial interruption, with the subject matter (chosen by Welker) across six 15-minute segments to include fighting Covid-19, American families, race in America, climate change, national security and leadership.
The Commission on Presidential Debates, which organizes the proceedings, has tweaked...
NBC News White House correspondent Kristen Welker will moderate the debate, which will be simulcast across a total of 16 broadcast and cable networks and available on several streaming services and digital platforms. You can also watch the livestream on Deadline (courtesy of PBS NewsHour) here:
Like the first debate on September 28 in Cleveland — which drew 73.1 million viewers across the networks, the third-highest total ever — tonight’s debate will be 90 minutes without commercial interruption, with the subject matter (chosen by Welker) across six 15-minute segments to include fighting Covid-19, American families, race in America, climate change, national security and leadership.
The Commission on Presidential Debates, which organizes the proceedings, has tweaked...
- 10/23/2020
- by Patrick Hipes
- Deadline Film + TV
Fox News’ Chris Wallace, NBC News’ Kirsten Welker, and C-span’s Steve Scully will each moderate one of three Presidential Debates leading up to the 2020 election, taking center stage in seminal events in the campaign to win the White House later this year.
The non-profit Commission on Presidential Debates said Wednesday that the three debates would each be 90 minutes long, as would a separate vice-presidential debate moderated by Susan Page of USA Today. The events will start at 9 p.m eastern.
The moderator choices are notable because they do not include what has typically been a staple for events such as these – one of the main evening-news anchors from one of the broadcast networks, or a weekday anchor from a cable-news outlet. NBC News’ Lester Holt, ABC News’ Martha Raddatz and CNN’s Anderson Cooper and Wallace moderated the 2016 presidential debates, while CBS News’ Elaine Quijano moderated that year’s vice-presidential event.
The non-profit Commission on Presidential Debates said Wednesday that the three debates would each be 90 minutes long, as would a separate vice-presidential debate moderated by Susan Page of USA Today. The events will start at 9 p.m eastern.
The moderator choices are notable because they do not include what has typically been a staple for events such as these – one of the main evening-news anchors from one of the broadcast networks, or a weekday anchor from a cable-news outlet. NBC News’ Lester Holt, ABC News’ Martha Raddatz and CNN’s Anderson Cooper and Wallace moderated the 2016 presidential debates, while CBS News’ Elaine Quijano moderated that year’s vice-presidential event.
- 9/2/2020
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
Updated: The broadcast networks are sticking to one hour per night of coverage of the Democratic and Republican national conventions, while some of the cable and streaming networks are planning more expansive coverage.
The broadcast network plans to go live from 10 Pm to 11 Pm Et each evening are in line with previous cycles, as NBC, ABC and CBS devoted an hour of primetime to major speeches and commentary.
The broadcast and cable networks have been waiting to finalize their plans as it became clear that the conventions will be almost all virtual, as Democrats last week scrapped plans for speakers in the host city of Milwaukee and Republicans abandoned a large-scale convention amid the pandemic. Instead, President Donald Trump says that he plans to deliver a speech from the White House or at Gettysburg, Pa, the site of the bloodiest Civil War battle.
The onus will be on both parties...
The broadcast network plans to go live from 10 Pm to 11 Pm Et each evening are in line with previous cycles, as NBC, ABC and CBS devoted an hour of primetime to major speeches and commentary.
The broadcast and cable networks have been waiting to finalize their plans as it became clear that the conventions will be almost all virtual, as Democrats last week scrapped plans for speakers in the host city of Milwaukee and Republicans abandoned a large-scale convention amid the pandemic. Instead, President Donald Trump says that he plans to deliver a speech from the White House or at Gettysburg, Pa, the site of the bloodiest Civil War battle.
The onus will be on both parties...
- 8/11/2020
- by Ted Johnson
- Deadline Film + TV
Andrea Mitchell almost drowned in balloons when she covered the 2008 Republican National Convention, and was forced to swat them away as she tried to tell MSNBC viewers what was taking place on the ground.
In 2020, the longtime NBC News and MSNBC correspondent will have plenty of air.
Fewer TV journalists will be on the ground at either the Milwaukee site previously selected for the Democratic National Convention or the Jacksonville or Charlotte venues Republicans had chosen to televise their selection process. Mitchell realizes the viewing public is likely to miss some spectacle – and so will the journalists, who were often put through their paces in various arenas and amphitheaters before the TV cameras went on. Mitchell recalls having to get hold of a seating chart and do the equivalent of sprints around the areas reserved for various state delegations so she could practice getting from one place to another while talking to TV audiences.
In 2020, the longtime NBC News and MSNBC correspondent will have plenty of air.
Fewer TV journalists will be on the ground at either the Milwaukee site previously selected for the Democratic National Convention or the Jacksonville or Charlotte venues Republicans had chosen to televise their selection process. Mitchell realizes the viewing public is likely to miss some spectacle – and so will the journalists, who were often put through their paces in various arenas and amphitheaters before the TV cameras went on. Mitchell recalls having to get hold of a seating chart and do the equivalent of sprints around the areas reserved for various state delegations so she could practice getting from one place to another while talking to TV audiences.
- 8/11/2020
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
Super Tuesday isn’t just about politicians competing in primary elections, though it’s certainly mostly about that. On top of the political contests, we’ve also got a bunch of news networks competing for your attention, with every network putting their normal primetime programming aside for hours and hours of election coverage. CBS News is no exception, as it’ll devote plenty of time Tuesday evening to election results.
Broadcast CBS will start with the “CBS Evening News” with Norah O’Donnell at 6:30 p.m Et. After a break for local news, it’ll return for a three-hour special report on the Super Tuesday results, beginning at 8 p.m. Et/5 p.m. Pt. Those on the West Coast will get a bonus updates during the 8 p.m. hour after the special report ends.
Norah O’Donnell will continue to anchor, with plenty of CBS News correspondents chiming in as well,...
Broadcast CBS will start with the “CBS Evening News” with Norah O’Donnell at 6:30 p.m Et. After a break for local news, it’ll return for a three-hour special report on the Super Tuesday results, beginning at 8 p.m. Et/5 p.m. Pt. Those on the West Coast will get a bonus updates during the 8 p.m. hour after the special report ends.
Norah O’Donnell will continue to anchor, with plenty of CBS News correspondents chiming in as well,...
- 3/3/2020
- by Phil Owen
- The Wrap
Meet Saturday Night Live’s new cast additions for its upcoming 45th season. Chloe Fineman, Shane Gillis and Bowen Yang have been tapped as new featured players on NBC’s venerable late-night sketch comedy program.
Yang joined SNL as a staff writer last season and is co-host of the Las Culturistas podcast. The promotion of Yang, son of Chinese immigrants, marks a milestone for representation on the program where he will be the first full-time East Asian cast member.
The deficiency, which led to SNL production designer Akira Yoshimura being recruited to play Asian Star Trek character Sulu in a 2017 Star Trek skit featuring Chris Pine, was addressed on the show by then-new cast member Melissa Villaseñor in a sketch about the 2016 Vice-Presidential debate. “Hello, I’m the new Hispanic cast member,...
Yang joined SNL as a staff writer last season and is co-host of the Las Culturistas podcast. The promotion of Yang, son of Chinese immigrants, marks a milestone for representation on the program where he will be the first full-time East Asian cast member.
The deficiency, which led to SNL production designer Akira Yoshimura being recruited to play Asian Star Trek character Sulu in a 2017 Star Trek skit featuring Chris Pine, was addressed on the show by then-new cast member Melissa Villaseñor in a sketch about the 2016 Vice-Presidential debate. “Hello, I’m the new Hispanic cast member,...
- 9/12/2019
- by Nellie Andreeva
- Deadline Film + TV
Donald Trump’s State of the Union address almost didn’t happen this year because of the government shutdown, but here we are. This will likely be the big political event of the week, and the networks are treating it like it with nearly every single one of them delivering both the speech itself and studio analysis. And CBS News is delivering not one, but two separate State of the Union presentations.
The big one will be a special edition of “CBS Evening News” on CBS proper. This broadcast, which will begin at at the 9 p.m. Et/6 p.m. Pt scheduled start time for Trump’s speech, will be hosted by Jeff Glor with contributions from “Face the Nation” moderator Margaret Brennan and CBS News correspondentsNancy Cordes, Major Garrett, Nikole Killion and Ed O’Keefe, along with others.
There are two ways to watch this special edition of “CBS...
The big one will be a special edition of “CBS Evening News” on CBS proper. This broadcast, which will begin at at the 9 p.m. Et/6 p.m. Pt scheduled start time for Trump’s speech, will be hosted by Jeff Glor with contributions from “Face the Nation” moderator Margaret Brennan and CBS News correspondentsNancy Cordes, Major Garrett, Nikole Killion and Ed O’Keefe, along with others.
There are two ways to watch this special edition of “CBS...
- 2/6/2019
- by Phil Owen
- The Wrap
It’s election day, and you know what that means — tons of coverage from every major news network. And, yes, that includes CBS, which will have a three-hour CBS News midterm election special and plenty of additional coverage on the free CBS News streaming service.
On TV, CBS News’ coverage will start at 8 p.m. Et/5 p.m. Pt and be led by “CBS This Morning” anchors Norah O’Donnell, Gayle King, John Dickerson and Bianna Golodryga, along with “CBS Evening News” anchor Jeff Glor.
That broadcast you can find on television, as well as streaming through the CBS All Access service. You don’t need a cable login for that, but it does cost $5.99 a month for the subscription. However, if you’ve never used All Access before you can get a free seven-day trial here.
Also Read: How to Stream NBC News and MSNBC's Midterm Election Night Results Coverage Live
Meanwhile,...
On TV, CBS News’ coverage will start at 8 p.m. Et/5 p.m. Pt and be led by “CBS This Morning” anchors Norah O’Donnell, Gayle King, John Dickerson and Bianna Golodryga, along with “CBS Evening News” anchor Jeff Glor.
That broadcast you can find on television, as well as streaming through the CBS All Access service. You don’t need a cable login for that, but it does cost $5.99 a month for the subscription. However, if you’ve never used All Access before you can get a free seven-day trial here.
Also Read: How to Stream NBC News and MSNBC's Midterm Election Night Results Coverage Live
Meanwhile,...
- 11/6/2018
- by Phil Owen
- The Wrap
Hurricane Florence has yet to swirl over North Carolina, but the nation’s TV-news operations are already setting up to meet her.
“It’s a large area, and we really want to be able to cover a big part of it,” says Wendy Fisher, vice president of newsgathering for ABC News, which has already dispatched multiple crews of anchors, reporters, camera operations and technicians to various points in the southeastern U.S. “Most hurricanes “hit the beach and then they peter out” she adds. “This one, there are warnings that it will linger. We kind of have to cover several different stories,” ranging from the storm itself to the consequences of its aftermath.
All the big news networks have plans to cover Hurricane Florence, which meteorologists predict will slam into the U.S. east coast later this week. It is now a category 4 hurricane and has sustained winds of 130 miles per hour.
“It’s a large area, and we really want to be able to cover a big part of it,” says Wendy Fisher, vice president of newsgathering for ABC News, which has already dispatched multiple crews of anchors, reporters, camera operations and technicians to various points in the southeastern U.S. “Most hurricanes “hit the beach and then they peter out” she adds. “This one, there are warnings that it will linger. We kind of have to cover several different stories,” ranging from the storm itself to the consequences of its aftermath.
All the big news networks have plans to cover Hurricane Florence, which meteorologists predict will slam into the U.S. east coast later this week. It is now a category 4 hurricane and has sustained winds of 130 miles per hour.
- 9/12/2018
- by Brian Steinberg
- Variety Film + TV
New York -- The season opener of Saturday Night Live spoofed James Cameron's Avatar with a skit that shows actor Ryan Gosling struggling with insomnia -- all because he can't fathom why the famed director used the Papyrus font for the 2009 worldwide blockbuster.
"I forgot about it for years," Gosling says, "but then I remembered that Avatar -- the giant international blockbuster -- used Papyrus as its logo."
"[Cameron] just highlighted Avatar, clicked the dropdown menu and he randomly selected Papyrus," he tells his therapist, played by Kate McKinnon, "like a thoughtless child, just wandering by a garden, yanking leaves along the way."
Watch: Alec Baldwin Returns as Donald Trump in Scathing 'SNL' Season 43 Premiere Cold Open
The next morning, the font's creator, Chris Costello, received a flurry of emails asking him if he saw the skit.
"I woke up this morning, Sunday, and my email was full. I had a lot...
"I forgot about it for years," Gosling says, "but then I remembered that Avatar -- the giant international blockbuster -- used Papyrus as its logo."
"[Cameron] just highlighted Avatar, clicked the dropdown menu and he randomly selected Papyrus," he tells his therapist, played by Kate McKinnon, "like a thoughtless child, just wandering by a garden, yanking leaves along the way."
Watch: Alec Baldwin Returns as Donald Trump in Scathing 'SNL' Season 43 Premiere Cold Open
The next morning, the font's creator, Chris Costello, received a flurry of emails asking him if he saw the skit.
"I woke up this morning, Sunday, and my email was full. I had a lot...
- 10/3/2017
- Entertainment Tonight
TV news talking heads will be arguing for days who had the worst night at the vice presidential debate: Donald Trump’s running mate Mike Pence, Hillary Clinton’s running mate Tim Kaine or moderator Elaine Quijano of CBS News. While that gets sorted out, here are the top takeaways from Tuesday’s kerfuffle: Audience's deafening silence. In marked contrast to the first presidential debate between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, the audience in the hall at the veep…...
- 10/5/2016
- Deadline TV
Vice presidential candidates Tim Kaine and Mike Pence squared off in their first (and only!) televised debate Tuesday, and even though this face-off didn’t come with its own Will & Grace revival episode, it still made for a memorable 90 minutes of television.
VideosSaturday Night Live Season Premiere: Alec Baldwin Makes His Debut as Donald Trump — Grade the Episode!
And while you’re free to debate over which potential VP “won” Tuesday’s big event, Team TVLine is — as always — shining a light on some of the evening’s subtler winners and losers. Moderator Elaine Quijano, the late Ronald Reagan...
VideosSaturday Night Live Season Premiere: Alec Baldwin Makes His Debut as Donald Trump — Grade the Episode!
And while you’re free to debate over which potential VP “won” Tuesday’s big event, Team TVLine is — as always — shining a light on some of the evening’s subtler winners and losers. Moderator Elaine Quijano, the late Ronald Reagan...
- 10/5/2016
- TVLine.com
Vice presidential candidates Tim Kaine and Mike Pence faced off at Tuesday's debate moderated by CBS News' Elaine Quijano, and while Twitter users fixated on dad jokes about the two running mates, they also praised Quijano for her stern reactions to Kaine and Pence's constant interruptions and speaking over one another. After the two vice presidential candidates continued to interrupt each other in their answers, Quijano broke in: "Gentlemen, the people cannot understand either one of you when you speak over each other. I would please ask you to wait until the other is finished." { "nid": 935098, "type":
read more...
read more...
- 10/5/2016
- by THR Staff
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
It took about 20 minutes for Donald Trump’s 1995 tax return to pop up during the first and only vice presidential debate on Tuesday. Indiana Gov. Mike Pence defended Trump saying he used the tax code “brilliantly” to avoid paying federal income taxes for years. The returns “show that he faced some pretty tough times 20 years ago,” Pence told moderator Elaine Quijano. “But he used the tax code just the way it’s supposed to be used and he did it brilliantly.” Also Read: Donald Trump Calls CNN VP Debate Coverage 'Biased and Very Dumb' Democratic vice presidential nominee Tim Kaine then interrupted,...
- 10/5/2016
- by Itay Hod
- The Wrap
One of the highlights of the first Presidential debate was the firestorm of reactions that poured in from Hollywood. Everyone from Mark Ruffalo to Leslie Jones, Colin Jost, Maria Shriver and more had something to say (there was no shortage of priceless Trump zingers), and you can expect everyone to be out in full force again tonight for the 2016 Vice Presidential Debate. The theatrics may be a little toned down tonight thanks to the absence of Trump, but all eyes will be watching Tim Kaine (D) and Mike Pence (R) very closely as they go head-to-head for the first time.
Read More: Presidential Debate 2016: Hollywood Reacts to Trump and Hillary
Tonight’s debate, which marks the only debate between the candidates for Vice President this election cycle, is divided into nine time segments of 10 minutes each. Moderator Elaine Quijano will ask a question at the start of each segment,...
Read More: Presidential Debate 2016: Hollywood Reacts to Trump and Hillary
Tonight’s debate, which marks the only debate between the candidates for Vice President this election cycle, is divided into nine time segments of 10 minutes each. Moderator Elaine Quijano will ask a question at the start of each segment,...
- 10/5/2016
- by Zack Sharf
- Indiewire
Republican VP candidate Gov. Mike Pence of Indiana faces off against his Democratic counterpart Sen. Tim Kaine on Tuesday night's vice presidential debate. The event, moderated by CBS News correspondent and Cbsn anchor Elaine Quijano, will take place at Longwood University in Farmville, Va., at 6 p.m. Pt/9 p.m. Et. The event comes a little more than a week after Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton took the stage for their first presidential debate on Sept. 26. The VP debate will air live on ABC, CBS, Fox and NBC, as well as CNN, Fox News and MSNBC. Twitter will be streaming
read more...
read more...
- 10/5/2016
- by THR Staff
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Eight days after presidential candidates Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton traded barbs in their first televised debate, it’s time to hear from their respective seconds in command.
PhotosFirst Presidential Debate Roundup: Presenting the Real Winners & Losers
Vice presidential candidates Mike Pence and Tim Kaine are set to take the stage at 9/8c on Tuesday at Longwood University in Farmville, Va., in a debate moderated by CBS News’ Elaine Quijano.
Tuesday’s debate will be divided into nine 10-minute segments. Each segment will begin with an opening question from Quijano, to which each candidate will be given two minutes to respond.
PhotosFirst Presidential Debate Roundup: Presenting the Real Winners & Losers
Vice presidential candidates Mike Pence and Tim Kaine are set to take the stage at 9/8c on Tuesday at Longwood University in Farmville, Va., in a debate moderated by CBS News’ Elaine Quijano.
Tuesday’s debate will be divided into nine 10-minute segments. Each segment will begin with an opening question from Quijano, to which each candidate will be given two minutes to respond.
- 10/5/2016
- TVLine.com
Tonight’s vice presidential debate doesn’t exactly have Donald Trump v. Hillary Clinton buildup. Republican Mike Pence once described himself as “Rush Limbaugh on decaf” and Tim Kaine is a former missionary who will most likely attempt to liven up the debate by speaking Spanish. CBS News’ Elaine Quijano will moderate Tuesday’s showdown between the vice presidential candidates at Longwood University in Farmville, Virginia. Let’s get ready to rumble, or at least shift in our seats. However, just because both Kaine and Pence are considered safe choices within their parties doesn’t mean nothing memorable can happen.
- 10/5/2016
- by Brian Flood
- The Wrap
Everyone from Mark Ruffalo to Katie Couric weighed in on Tuesday night's vice-presidential debate, which saw Hillary Clinton's running mate, Sen. Tim Kaine, face off against Donald Trump's vp candidate, Gov. Mike Pence, of Indiana. The battle, moderated by CBS News correspondent and Cbsn anchor Elaine Quijano, came a week after more than 84 million viewers tuned in to watch Trump and Clinton go head-to-head Sept. 26. Hours before the debate kicked off, the Republican National Committee's site Gop.com accidentally went live with pre-written articles declaring Pence the winner and recounting some of the night's biggest
read more...
read more...
- 10/4/2016
- by Meena Jang, Arlene Washington
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
Tonight’s vice presidential debate doesn’t exactly have Donald Trump v. Hillary Clinton buildup. Republican Mike Pence once described himself as “Rush Limbaugh on decaf” and Tim Kaine is a former missionary who will most likely attempt to liven up the debate by speaking Spanish. CBS News’ Elaine Quijano will moderate Tuesday’s showdown between the vice presidential candidates at Longwood University in Farmville, Virginia. Let’s get ready to rumble, or at least shift in our seats. Just because both Kaine and Pence are considered safe choices within their parties doesn’t mean nothing memorable can happen. And...
- 10/4/2016
- by Brian Flood
- The Wrap
With a little over three weeks to go until the first one-on-one face-off between Democratic contender Hillary Clinton and Republican hopeful Donald Trump, moderators have been set for the upcoming series of presidential debates.
RelatedFall TV 2016: Your Handy Calendar of 120+ Premiere Dates
The Commission on Presidential Debates has announced that Lester Holt of NBC Nightly News will oversee the first presidential debate, to be held on Monday, Sept. 26.
The second, town hall-format debate between Clinton and Trump will be moderated by ABC News’ Martha Raddatz and CNN’s Anderson Cooper, on Sunday, Oct. 9.
Bringing the presidential debates to a close,...
RelatedFall TV 2016: Your Handy Calendar of 120+ Premiere Dates
The Commission on Presidential Debates has announced that Lester Holt of NBC Nightly News will oversee the first presidential debate, to be held on Monday, Sept. 26.
The second, town hall-format debate between Clinton and Trump will be moderated by ABC News’ Martha Raddatz and CNN’s Anderson Cooper, on Sunday, Oct. 9.
Bringing the presidential debates to a close,...
- 9/2/2016
- TVLine.com
The Commission on Presidential Debates announced Lester Holt, Martha Raddatz, Anderson Cooper and Chris Wallace as the moderators for the Donald Trump vs. Hillary Clinton debates. NBC’s Holt will kick things off on Sept. 26 at Hofstra University. The next event is a vice presidential debate, moderated by CBS’ Elaine Quijano on Oct. 4 at Longwood University in Farmville, Virginia. CNN’s Cooper and ABC’s Raddatz will share the stage on Oct. 9 at Washington University in St. Louis, and Fox News’ Chris Wallace gets the final duties on Oct. 19 at University of Nevada. Also Read: Gabe Sherman's Shocking Roger Ailes...
- 9/2/2016
- by Brian Flood
- The Wrap
The Republican and Democratic National Conventions will be streamed live on Twitter, thanks to a partnership between the social networking platform and CBS News’ online news service, Cbsn. The stream will include Cbsn anchors and correspondents Josh Elliott, Elaine Quijano and Vladimir Duthiers providing complete coverage and analysis from both Cleveland and Philadelphia. “Twitter is the fastest way to find out what’s happening in politics and to have a discussion about it,” Twitter CFO Anthony Noto said. “By bringing the live discussion of the Republican and Democratic national conventions together with Cbsn’s live video stream of the proceedings,...
- 7/11/2016
- by Brian Flood
- The Wrap
CBS is scrapping the storied “CBS Evening News” brand on weekends and replacing it with “CBS Weekend News,” starting this weekend. The new weekend newscast will have fresh anchors and will feature content from Cbsn, the network’s live-streaming news service. Cbsn anchors Reena Ninan and Elaine Quijano will host the weekend show, replacing Jim Axelrod on Saturdays and Jeff Glor on Sundays, who are both staying with the network. The move aims to align CBS’ TV and broadband operations while cutting costs at the same time. “CBS Evening News” was often preempted by live sporting events on weekends. Also...
- 5/3/2016
- by Brian Flood
- The Wrap
Reena Ninan and Elaine Quijano will anchor CBS News’ evening newscasts on Saturday and Sunday, which are being rebranded as CBS Weekend News starting this weekend. Jim Axelrod, who has anchored the Saturday edition since 2012, and Jeff Glor, who has anchored Sundays, “remain in important roles in the organization,” CBS News said. Axelrod continues as senior national correspondent and Glor as national correspondent and 60 Minutes Sports contributor. Ninan and Quijano also…...
- 5/2/2016
- Deadline TV
Updated With Full List: PBS and CBS were the big winners tonight as the National Academy of Television Arts & Sciences unveiled its 35th annual News & Documentary Emmy Awards. The pubcaster walked away with a leading 11 trophies, followed by the Eye with 10. ABC picked up three wins, the only other network with more than two. PBS came into the ceremony with a field-leading 43 nominations, one more than CBS.
The Lifetime Achievement Award went to William J. Small, who was CBS News Washington Bureau chief from 1962-74 and later President of NBC News, President of United Press International, and Chairman of News & Documentary at NATAS. “Throughout the ’60s and ’70s and into the 1980s, he was a key figure in the dramatic evolution of network news, NATAS Chairman Chuck Dages said of Small. “Recruiting the likes of Dan Rather, Bob Schieffer, Diane Sawyer, Lesley Stahl, Bill Moyers, and many others, he changed...
The Lifetime Achievement Award went to William J. Small, who was CBS News Washington Bureau chief from 1962-74 and later President of NBC News, President of United Press International, and Chairman of News & Documentary at NATAS. “Throughout the ’60s and ’70s and into the 1980s, he was a key figure in the dramatic evolution of network news, NATAS Chairman Chuck Dages said of Small. “Recruiting the likes of Dan Rather, Bob Schieffer, Diane Sawyer, Lesley Stahl, Bill Moyers, and many others, he changed...
- 10/1/2014
- by The Deadline Team
- Deadline Film + TV
As the search for answers in the Boston Marathon bombing continues, so does the extensive TV coverage. Here is a roundup of the reporting offered by the morning shows Tuesday.
Good Morning America: In Boston, George Stephanopoulos spoke with Bill Iffrig, the 78-year-old marathon runner who was knocked off his feet by the first blast. His fall was captured on video and has become one of the lasting images of the tragedy. Iffrig is fine and was helped across the finish line.
Another lasting image: The sight of bystanders rushing toward the wounded. Gma puts names to some of those heroes’ faces.
Good Morning America: In Boston, George Stephanopoulos spoke with Bill Iffrig, the 78-year-old marathon runner who was knocked off his feet by the first blast. His fall was captured on video and has become one of the lasting images of the tragedy. Iffrig is fine and was helped across the finish line.
Another lasting image: The sight of bystanders rushing toward the wounded. Gma puts names to some of those heroes’ faces.
- 4/16/2013
- by EW staff
- EW.com - PopWatch
IMDb.com, Inc. takes no responsibility for the content or accuracy of the above news articles, Tweets, or blog posts. This content is published for the entertainment of our users only. The news articles, Tweets, and blog posts do not represent IMDb's opinions nor can we guarantee that the reporting therein is completely factual. Please visit the source responsible for the item in question to report any concerns you may have regarding content or accuracy.