"Don't alienate the deplorables," Bee warned, reflecting on Clinton's very true message about "half of Trump supporters" in a campaign speech last Friday. "You can't win a four-way-race with just 'plorables.'"
"You think if a bunch of damn Muslims had took this place over, the cops and the media would be diddling around like this? The blacks, the Muslims, the Mexicans, they get all the attention ...
Welcome to the second part of our ongoing series, examining all the ways that the artistic and entertainment communities have been trying to warn America that Donald Trump was up to no good. Our latest: ...
Sarah Silverman, a the 44-year-old comedian, not necessarily known as a major actress, brings depth and humanity to her first dramatic starring role in 'I Smile Back.'
Viewers expecting a biting satire or commentary on Donald Trump's political candidacy -- and his incendiary remarks -- were disappointed, as the show punted rather than risk alienating their host.
There wasn't much in Trevor Noah's childhood in Johannesburg to suggest that he would one day host America's preeminent satirical program, starting with apartheid-era South Africa having virtually no tradition of professional comedy — nor, ...
The friction between being in on the joke and stuck in a bad one doesn't exist with Colbert, which is perhaps why the debut episode of his new show was such a weird and wonderful ...
More than 45 women have accused comedian Bill Cosby, 77, of sexual misconduct dating back to the late 1960s.
All things change, and everything ends, and after Wednesday we will no longer be living in a world in which David Letterman is on television five nights a week.
Before we say goodbye to "Dave," let's look at the highlight reel.
"I found I could speak louder and was more comfortable if I was doing it in someone else's crazy voice."
In March, John Oliver addressed America's neglect of its crumbling infrastructure -- an issue which has come back in the spotlight in the aftermath of the tragic Philadelphia Amtrak crash Tuesday night.
Yeah, he's a curmudgeon, and he's far from perfect. But he's the kind of curmudgeon you always knew meant well and were happy to find in your living room.
Whatever Cecily Strong was going to say about President Barack Obama at the 2015 White House Correspondents' Association dinner, there was no way it would sting as much as what he inadvertently said about her.