Playing Phil Spector and Jack Kevorikian wasn't enough for Al Pacino. So HBO enlisted him to play every murderer in their biopics. Including Amanda Knox. Check out the sketch below!
SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE presented The Weather Channel's very first soap opera, aptly titled 'Stormy Skies,' on last night's episode. Turns out, the sudser has a lot of the same production elements - and flubs - as its regular programing. Check it out below!
On last night's SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE cold opening, President Obama celebrates the Senate's decision to begin a gun control debate by welcoming Senators Joe Manchin and Pat Toomey to explain some of their proposals. Check it out below!
On last night's SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE, a performance of HOWL OF THE LANDLORD goes awry when all of the actors happen to suffer from acute short term memory loss. Check it out below!
On last night's SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE skit, 'Junior Prom,' the dance is funded by some rich guy that lives on top of a hill. His repayment? He wants to dance with the kids. Check out the sketch below!
For some reason, NBC Sports executives hired John Tesh and his incompetent brother to write an NBA on NBC theme song, on last night's SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE. Check out the skit below!
SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE presented an indepth look at the British punk band IAN RUBBISH AND THE BIZZAROS on last night's episode - as well as the crumbling of the band over their different views on the late Margaret Thatcher. Check out the sketch below!
Vince Vaughn finally returned to host SATURDAY NIGHT LIVE last night after many years away. To get back into the swing of things, he got a little help from the most vital part of the show: the audience. Check out his opening monologue below!
Billy (Vince Vaughn) and Nick (Owen Wilson) are salesmen whose careers have been torpedoed by the digital world. Trying to prove they are not obsolete, thet defy the odds by talking their way into a coveted internship at Google, along with a battalion of brillian college students. But, gaining entrance to this utopia is only half the battle. Now they must compete with a group pf the nation's most elite, tech-savvy geniuses to prove that necessity really is the mother of re-invention.
On December 4, 1998, Gus van Sant's shot-for-shot remake of Alfred Hitchcock's 1960 classic horror film PSYCHO was released in theaters. The film has gone down in history as one of the most 'pointless' remakes, according to the great film critic Roger Ebert.
ABC Family's '25 Days of Christmas,' cable's biggest programming event of the year, returns with 25 continuous days of holiday-themed entertainment for the whole family. Below, Tia Mowry brings you her favorite romantic moments from the upcoming holiday programming events!
THE WATCH is coming to theaters on July 27th from 20th Century Fox. The Sci-fi comedy was written by Evan Goldberg, Seth Rogen, Jared Stern and directed by Akiva Schaffer. Its cast includes Jonah Hill, Ben Stiller, Vince Vaughn and Rosemarie DeWitt.
One of television's most popular holiday traditions will be back this year as TBS presents the 15th Annual edition of 24 Hours of A CHRISTMAS STORY, beginning Christmas Eve at 8 p.m. (ET/PT).
Minutes prior to the start of the Olympic games in Vancouver on Friday, February 12, NBC aired an abbreviated version of 'We Are the World 25 for Haiti', a recording to benefit the victims of the Haiti earthquake. The full video can be seen below. The single is available for download from iTunes with proceeds going directly to the We Are the World Foundation.
ET has released new footage of Quincy Jones and Lionel Richie's all-star recording of We Are the World to benefit Haitian earthquake victims. The pair assembled 100 actors and musicians for the re-recording, which ET's Mary Hart, who was grated access to the recording, calls 'phenomenal again.' She reported that some filming of the even was done in 3-D. BroadwayWorld brings you this latest footage from ET, featuring Pink and Mary J. Blige.
Quincy Jones and Lionel Richie have begun work on the latest all-star recording of We Are the World to benefit Haitian earthquake victims. The pair assembled 100 actors and musicians for the re-recording, which ET's Mary Hart, who was grated access to the recording, calls 'phenomenal again.' She reported that some filming of the even was done in 3-D. BroadwayWorld brings you ET's newly released inside-the-recording footage!