“No one knew about that,” Whoopi Goldberg’s granddaughter Amara Skye says of the secret she let slip about the star’s love life on “Claim to Fame.”
Author: Erin Jensen, USA TODAY
‘The View’ (finally) replaces Meghan McCain with conservative co-host and another familiar face
Alyssa Farah Griffin, former White House director of strategic communications, and Ana Navarro are new “View” hosts.
Brett Favre’s daughter Brittany sacked on ‘Claim to Fame’: His advice, her biggest regret
Brittany Favre-Mallion is out on ABC’s “Claim to Fame.” She shares her dad Brett’s thoughts on the show and how it feels to be labeled a villain.
Chris Cuomo denies trying to influence coverage of Andrew, reveals new show in first TV interview
Ousted CNN anchor Chris Cuomo appeared on NewsNation’s “Dan Abrams Live” Tuesday, his first TV interview since being fired in December.
Will Mayim Bialik or Ken Jennings be named ‘Jeopardy!’ host? Everything we know
“Jeopardy!” returns for Season 39 in September. Will Mayim Bialik or Ken Jennings be named permanent host? Somebody cue the Final Jeopardy! music.
5 summer cocktails made with broth that don’t taste ‘like you’re drinking soup’
Broth sounds like an odd thing to add to your cocktail, but it can add a shot of nutrition and is “really refreshing,” says Kellyann Petrucci.
MSNBC hires former White House press secretary Jen Psaki for streaming show, more
Jen Psaki, who exited her position as press secretary on May 13, will begin appearing on MSNBC in the fall, network President Rashida Jones revealed.
‘Young Rock’ renewed, but ‘Magnum, P.I.,’ ‘Kenan’ canceled as networks wield the ax: Updates
The Rock will be back next season but TV shows starring Kenan Thompson, Ted Danson are dead, along with CBS’ remake of “Magnum, P.I.”
‘Jeopardy!’ champ Mattea Roach’s 23-game streak ends when she loses by just $1
Reigning champ Mattea Roach “absolutely” did not know the answer to Friday’s “Final Jeopardy!” clue.
‘I hadn’t seen roles like this’: TV strives to give autism the accurate portrayal it deserves
“As We See It” star Albert Rutecki hopes series viewers get that people on the autism spectrum are “complex humans who have our own wants and needs.”