While the new broadcast season will bring many potential delights, a handful of fall entries fall far short.
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The best parts of an awards show are never the actual awards, though. Here are 9 of the weirdest, best parts of Monday’s show.
The 66th prime-time Emmys air at 5 p.m. Monday on NBC with host Seth Meyers. Follow us here for live updates.
Beyonce closed this year’s MTV Video Music Awards show with an epic, nearly 20-minute performance.
The beloved assistants to the hit Discovery series “Mythbusters” Kari Byron, Tory Belleci and Grant Imahara are leaving the show, according to E! Online.
At 10 a.m. today, FXX will celebrate its latest acquisition by launching the longest around-the-clock marathon in TV history
Don Pardo, the durable television and radio announcer whose booming baritone became as much a part of the cultural landscape as the shows and products he touted, died Monday. He was 96.
Craig Ferguson is close to a deal to launch an early-evening talk show starting in fall 2015.
“The Big Bang Theory” is one of the few television shows that can approach the NFL in viewership. CBS executives still didn’t hesitate to temporarily move TV’s top-rated comedy to a different night to make room for football.
Police were called to Alec Baldwin’s New York City apartment building, but this time he wasn’t the one in trouble.
They typically wear plain clothing with nothing as fancy as a button or a zipper, travel by horse-drawn buggy and shun modern conveniences like electricity, but the negative portrayal of Amish people in television shows like “Breaking Amish” and “Amish Mafia” is inaccurate in some eyes.
‘Wizard Wars’ could push Vegas magic in a better direction.
Three of the actor’s four Oscar-nominated performances, as well as his “Happy Days” introduction as Mork, can be found on TV starting Friday.
Netflix is announcing performances by stand-up comedians including Bill Cosby and Chelsea Handler, set to roll out this fall. It’s the latest in the original-content initiative from this subscription Internet channel.
Matt Iseman is in his fifth season of providing commentary for a “American Ninja Warrior” that’s yet to crown a winner. He thinks this finally may be the year.