With Stephen Colbert's time on Comedy Central winding down ahead of a big move to CBS, the comedian decided to temporarily hand over his Colbert Report to a special guest Monday night. Enter President Barack Obama, who interrupted a Colbert rant
(CNN) — Come December 18, we'll have to say goodbye to our favorite blowhard political character, "Stephen Colbert." That's the day the real Colbert will retire "Colbert" the character as he signs off from his Comedy Central show, "The Colbert Report
(All times eastern). The final six chefs receive their black jackets and compete in a solo dinner challenge involving Omaha Steaks, and one contestant is sent home during dinner service on “Hell's Kitchen” (Fox at 8 p.m.). The remaining five prepare
President Barack Obama will be among Stephen Colbert's final guests on The Colbert Report. "I am so honored to be sitting down with the man who sat down with Bill O'Reilly," Colbert said on his show Thursday, announcing
'The Colbert Report' host Stephen Colbert has been teasing his biggest show ever for awhile now, including a stopover in Washington, D.C. and a long-form chat with President Barack Obama, but even he can't possibly have