Jay Leno
The late-night host said goodbye to Conan O’Brien—and flipped his backstabber Jay Leno the bird.
Jo Koy talks saying no to Chelsea Handler, refusing to take no as an answer from Netflix, and reacts to Jay Leno’s recent apology on “The Last Laugh” podcast.
Stand-up comic Jo Koy opens up about his long, rejection-filled road to becoming a worldwide comedy sensation on The Last Laugh podcast.
While on the show, Union recalls she contorted herself into someone she didn’t recognize. “At the end of all this, my goal is real change,” she says. “It starts from the top down.”
From Jon Stewart’s departure to Jimmy Fallon’s fateful hair ruffle and Jimmy Kimmel’s tearful plea, the 2010s were a time of major upheaval in the late-night landscape.
On this week’s episode of “The Last Laugh” podcast, the stand-up comic and co-star of “Black-ish” and “Grown-ish” defends his right to “make mistakes.”
The late-night host responded to the president’s complaint (echoing Jay Leno) that late-night comedians are “totally one-sided” and “unwatchable.”