Entertainment
Louis C.K. Jokes About Old Age, Regrets in Netflix Hollywood Bowl Show
Louis C.K.’s highly anticipated headlining comedy show at the Hollywood Bowl Tuesday night was as good a sign as any that the headwinds he faced in the fallout from his 2017 sexual misconduct scandal are now at his back.
In other words, he’s as good as uncanceled.
The late addition of C.K. to this year’s Netflix Is a Joke Festival last month — one that jointly announced an upcoming “Ridiculous” stand-up special on Netflix, reuniting the embattled comedian with the streamer that helped launch him to comedy superstardom through the 2010s — was met with shock from critics and enthusiasm from fans who’ve stayed loyal to him through two independently released specials and more.
Netflix’s stand-up chief Robbie Praw stood by the decision in an interview this week, telling Variety that he reteamed with C.K., who admitted to masturbating in front of female comics after multiple women accused him of sexual misconduct at the height of the #MeToo movement, because he remains “really popular” and is “putting out great stuff.”
“When our members sit and open up Netflix, they have a decision to make of what they want to watch. This is just about giving them an option,” Praw said.
If C.K. knew just how much a stir his return to the mainstream has made when he took the stage at the Hollywood Bowl on Tuesday, he didn’t show it while running through the same touring set he honed on the road and filmed in November while performing for three nights at Manhattan’s Beacon Theater for the New York Comedy Festival.
Staging the hour-long set in a production drenched in Netflix Red lighting and a massive “Netflix Is a Joke Fest” erected standing stage left, C.K. didn’t have to make any sort of grand gesture to show that he was back. Netflix had already done that heavy lifting for him. But at the end of the night, he did briefly nod to the reunion through his audience’s standing ovation.
“That was my last show, last time telling those jokes, and I’m really happy I got to tell them to you,” he said. “Thank you very, very much for coming. Thank you to Netflix. I really appreciate the gig.”
He’d just capped his set with a nine-minute segment on the merits of dating women his own age and meant-to-shock riff on how men’s preoccupation with “barely legal” women is really a roundabout way of toying with pedophilia (“You’re this close to being the worst thing you can ever be, but you’re not!”) — both topics that wouldn’t feel out of place in his earlier work.
And while my seat mate had gone into the Louis C.K. Comeback Show blind and left feeling like his work was a little too interested in the comic’s bodily functions, whether that involves eating a semen-glazed cracker, torturing his balls or dreaming of peeing on a baby, others were visibly elated to see their favorite comic at work.
“He’s the best living standup we have,” one attendee gushed in the procession to the exit signs.
“Hands down the funniest guy I’ve ever seen,” a female guest said.
“Legendary, bro!” another enthused.
While never directly mentioned in the “Ridiculous” material, C.K. has not shied from the sex scandal that’s defined his career for the last decade in his other recent specials “Sincerely Louis C.K.” in 2021 and “Sorry” in 2022. Specifically in “Sincerely,” which won the Grammy Award in 2022 for Best Comedy Album, he joked that the preceding years had seen him weather “global amounts of trouble” and that he’d gotten used to eating in public by himself as strangers gave him the finger.
Elsewhere, C.K. has folded references to the controversy, its fallout and questions of consent into self-deprecating, controversial routines. He’s continued touring, notably selling out Madison Square Garden along the way.
But themes that stuck out in the comic’s last performance of “Ridiculous” is the new material’s interest in aging, death, wisdom and regret. He’s never shied from lacing his dark humor with cynicism and even anger; the latter especially came to light in a segment about putting his father in a nursing home after his mother died. (“We wanted to put him there because two reasons: Number one, we didn’t want to look at him, and number two, it’s illegal to murder him.”)
And while self-interrogation has always been a part of his act, there came an at-times weary introspection to the material when it came to getting older and living with his choices.
Take, for instance, the call-and-response bit where after he said, “I’m so old,” and the crowd yelled, “How old are you?” he named three increasingly bleak truths about approaching 60, concluding, “I’m so old that I live in the present for the first time — not because of wisdom, but from fear, because there’s too much of the past and not enough of the future.”
He later joked, “The thing about life that I have learned is that life is too long, it’s way too long. It’s way too long. Because you can have a good life, but then you’re still alive after that one. And also, you kind of figure life out, you figure out the world, and then it changes completely.”
“Here’s the thing about getting old,” he said elsewhere. “I don’t feel bad for somebody that gets old, because you don’t have to do it. Getting old is what happens when you don’t die for a long time. That’s all it is.”
C.K. was one of comedy’s most prominent figures before his career was derailed nine years ago. Confirming the sexual misconduct allegations in a statement at the time, he said the accounts were true and expressed remorse. The controversy led to widespread professional consequences, including canceled projects, the loss of distribution deals and a broader retreat from mainstream platforms.
“These stories are true,” C.K. said. “At the time, I said to myself that what I did was OK because I never showed a woman my dick without asking first, which is also true. But what I learned later in life, too late, is that when you have power over another person, asking them to look at your dick isn’t a question. It’s a predicament for them. The power I had over these women is that they admired me. And I wielded that power irresponsibly.”
His reteam with Netflix for their stand-up festival and “Ridiculous” streaming this summer is one that in recent years seemed impossible, even with the platform’s commitment to incendiary-but-lucrative acts like Dave Chappelle. C.K.’s relationship with Netflix dates back to before the misconduct scandal, when the company released multiple stand-up specials, including licensing his “Hilarious” and “Live at the Comedy Store” and producing “2017,” the latter arriving just months before the allegations surfaced. Netflix subsequently shelved all plans for additional projects.
Now, C.K.’s appearance at this year’s Netflix Is a Joke Fest marks a notable benchmark in his gradual return to large-scale, mainstream stages.
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Entertainment
Jimmy Kimmel Compares Trump’s Iran Negotiation Strategy to Sex
Jimmy Kimmel compared President Donald Trump’s negotiating tactics with Iran to bad sex, mocking the administration’s handling of the escalating conflict in the Middle East
“But this is how he does it. For him, a negotiation, it’s like sex,” Kimmel joked on Wednesday night’s episode of “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” “He’s bad at it. It mostly consists of flailing around. And he can only do it for a short amount of time before he starts yelling that he’s finished.”
The ABC late-night host spent most of his opening segment roasting reports that the White House is nearing a deal with Iran despite the continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz and rising tensions in the region.
“The details of this supposed deal are still very much in flux,” Kimmel said. “As in, what the flux are we doing over there?”
Kimmel also mocked Trump over reports that a proposed agreement with Iran could include a uranium enrichment moratorium lasting more than 10 years, comparing it to the Obama-era nuclear deal, which included restrictions lasting up to 15 years, that Trump repeatedly criticized during his first term.
“And now he’s going to top it by making an even worse worst deal in history,” Kimmel joked. “It’s called ‘The Art of the Deal.’ Folks, you should read the book.”
Kimmel also mocked the shifting language used to describe the conflict with Iran, joking that the administration has avoided calling it a war to sidestep congressional approval.
“One of the most ridiculous things about this war is that half the time they talk about it, they don’t call it a war because you’re supposed to get approval from Congress to go to war, which Trump did not do,” Kimmel said.
“He calls it a skirmish,” Kimmel responded to a clip of Trump talking about the state of the conflict. “First it was an excursion, then it was a mini war. And now it’s a skirmish. Next month it’ll be a tiff. It’ll be a $200 billion tiff.”
The late-night host also poked fun at Trump’s vocabulary during the same appearance, particularly his explanation of maritime drug trafficking.
“Drug traffic coming into our country’s way down. And by sea, by sea, by ocean, by the water. You know, a lot of people say, ‘What do you mean by sea? Is it sea like vision?’ No, it’s the sea,” Trump said in the clip.
Kimmel added: “Oh, I thought it was the sea like senile. I didn’t know. I know I was also confused by that.”
You can watch the full “Jimmy Kimmel Live!” segment in the video above.
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movies
‘9-1-1: Nashville’s LeAnn Rimes Shoots Down Rumors Of Joining ‘Real Housewives Of Beverly Hills’: “No Housewives For Me”
LeAnn Rimes will not be holding a diamond anytime soon, as she shoots down rumors she’s joining The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills.
The 9-1-1: Nashville star took to social media to debunk the reports and clarify that playing Dixie in the ABC drama is enough drama for her.
“No, no… no Housewives for me,” Rimes replied on Instagram, in a post shared by Ringer Reality TV.
She added, “Playing Dixie on 9-1-1: Nashville is drama enough for me.”
The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills Season 15 is wrapping up on Thursday, May 7, with the third part of the reunion airing on Bravo. With a new season expected to start filming in the next few months, Rimes’ name came up as a possible new cast member.
Rimes is part of the cast of 9-1-1: Nashville, playing the role of Dixie Bennings, a struggling musician and mother of Hunter McVey’s Blue. The series, produced by Ryan Murphy, has been renewed for a second season following a successful first season. The 9-1-1 spinoff ranks in the Top 10 dramas among Adults 18-49 in multi-platform viewing over seven days, with 9-1-1: Nashville standing as TV’s No. 1 new drama in the demo.
The current cast of The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills includes Kyle Richards, Sutton Stracke, Erika Jayne, Amanda Frances, Dorit Kemsley, Bozoma Saint John and Rachel Zoe. Jennifer Tilly and Kathy Hilton are featured as friends of the Housewives throughout the season.
Brandi Glanville, a former star of RHOBH, took to social media to sarcastically say she hoped the rumors of Rimes joining the reality series were true, adding on X, “She got everything else of mine.” The former Real Housewives star is referring to Rimes marrying Glanville’s ex Eddie Cibrian.
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Entertainment
The Daily Show Mocks Trump’s ‘One-Page Memo’ Plan to End Iran Conflict
“The Daily Show” took aim at the Trump administration’s ongoing conflict with Iran during Wednesday night’s episode, mocking reports that the White House is pursuing a “one-page memo” to end the war.
“We are now in week nine of our four-week war with Iran, and it hasn’t been going great,” host Desi Lydic joked before reacting to reports that “the U.S. and Iran are closing in on a one-page memo to end the war.”
“How can Trump end a war with less paperwork than it took me to end my Planet Fitness membership?” she quipped.
“Whoever wrote that memo, can you please organize all bachelorette trips?” the Comedy Central host added. “Can we actually– can we see a copy of this memo?”
The comedian also targeted Secretary of State Marco Rubio for invoking rap lyrics while discussing Iran during a recent interview. After Rubio described Iranian leadership as “insane in the brain,” Lydic responded: “A little inappropriate to be quoting old rap lyrics while you’re talking about war. I mean, can you imagine your doctor telling you, ‘If you’re looking for the tumor on this scan, whoomp, there it is?’”
She then launched into an extended riff featuring clips of Rubio using hip-hop references in increasingly absurd situations, joking that the secretary of state sounded like some “lame wedding DJ” before cutting to a video of him behind a DJ booth at a wedding last weekend.
“How is no one in this administration busy? Marco Rubio’s DJing. Kash Patel is partying in locker rooms,” she asked.
She also ridiculed reports surrounding Trump’s proposed White House ballroom project, including allegations that soil from the construction site tested positive for toxic chemicals before being dumped near a public golf course in Washington, D.C.
“Ugh, not the f–king ballroom again,” she said. “People didn’t even want the ballroom when he was building it for free. Now Trump’s like, ‘OK, I hear you, but what if it cost a billion dollars?’”
“And if this ballroom story is making you sick, don’t worry. It can also make you literally sick,” she added.
You can watch the full segment in the video above.
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