In comedy, few are as influential — and elusive — as Jim Downey. During his 30-year tenure as a writer on “Saturday Night ...
This is a highly edited version of the sermon Rabbi Fellman delivered to her congregation over the High Holy Days. Rosh ...
President Donald Trump’s hand-picked prosecutor for the Eastern District of Virginia, Lindsey Halligan, is facing scrutiny ...
The former White House press secretary sparked controversy with comments about Vice President JD Vance's wife during her ...
Scott Jennings said, 'Why shouldn’t the president use a made-up video to respond to a rally with a made-up reason?' ...
Roy Wood Jr. talks about his book, 'The Man of Many Fathers,' doing comedy in a polarized country and what he learned in radio and on 'The Daily Show' ...
ABC’s Jimmy Kimmel also poked fun about his remarks during his late-night show Thursday night: “No president, nobody, has ...
Artists take on vengeance in a shutdown, the hounds of Pam Bondi, and more ...
With Jeff Darcy's retirement as a political cartoonist, the newsroom evolves, focusing on AI and restructuring to enhance reporting amid industry shifts.
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Funny Story About Biden ‘Not Weaponizing’ the DOJ...
Trump admin suffers blow in James Comey case He Won the $2 Billion Powerball. Now He’s Buying Up Lots Burned in the L.A. Fires. 10 Divorced Men On The Moment They Knew Their Marriage Was Over Why does ...
Nearly a third of Americans suggested some violence could be justified in order to get the U.S. back on track, according to a new survey. The NPR/PBS News/Marist poll, published this week, found that ...
A new PBS News/NPR/Marist poll shows that nearly a third of Americans believe that political violence may be necessary to set the country on track. Cynthia Miller-Idriss, a professor who studies ...
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