This is a subpoena. This is President Trump. sizzling this is President Trump when you respond to a subpoena. Any questions . So remember, just say. No. No. No. No more oreos. Close enough. Its the late show with Stephen Colbert. Tonight oh, no she didnt. Plus, stephen welcomes Elisabeth Moss matt bomer and comedian stephen rogers, featuring jon batiste and stay human. And now, live on tape from the ed sullivan theater in new york city, its Stephen Colbert cheers and applause stephen happy friday. Happy friday. Hey, everybody hello hello, my friends. Hello. Hello, jon. Audience Stephen Stephen Stephen Stephen stephen cheers and applause stephen thanks, everybody. Down here, up there. In the corner over there. Thank you very much. Welcome, one and all, welcome, dear friendly neighborhood late show. Im your host, Stephen Colbert. Happen friday, everybody. Happy friday. cheers and applause weve all earned it, matty. Donald trump is back in the country. He was right. We should have built t
One of the americans waking up this morning to a bump in your paycheck . Tax cuts hitting the bank account as three more Corporate Giants join the ranks of companies sharing tax cuts with employees. And tminus three days before kickoff of the king of all football games. Super bowl lii, defending champs new England Patriots taking on the philadelphia eagles. By the way, if youre watching the big game sunday. The company that says heck, why not win a pile of cash in the process . Win view chairman and former tivo ceo tom rogers how your ability to predict football and fan behavior during a game can bring you as much as 25,000 and make you richer monday morning. Plus a preview what analysts are calling the super bowl of tech earnings and charlie says twitter is surging today. He knows why, were less than an hour to the closing bell. Lets start the countdown. For breaking news for those of you waiting for one of the biggest unicorn ipos in recent history. Hold your horses. Airbnb Just Anno
Julian Fellowes highly anticipated new period drama The Gilded Age, dubbed the US Downton Abbey , is less than a week away, and will bring a new cast of glamorous characters to screens.
The New Yorker contributor Michael Shaw’s cartoon of 1 March 2004 would have been one candidate. Its arch question, “Gays and lesbians getting married – haven’t they suffered enough?”, seems to encapsulate how an unlikely issue, consistently championed, achieved a broader vision of “gay liberation” than many dreamed could be attained so rapidly.
Thanks to works of scholarship like Charles Kaiser’s The Gay Metropolis and The Deviant’s War by Eric Cervini, it has become clear that the seemingly impossible is often achievable. With The Engagement, Issenberg adds to such proof that one can write LGBTQ+ history in a way that is engaging, authoritative and impeccably sourced.