Gayle King and Nate Burleson were again no-shows on the recent CBS Mornings episodes.
When Thursday’s episode opened, viewers saw hosts Vladimir Duthiers, Tony Dokoupil, and Jericka Duncan.
Gayle and Nate were also missing from other episodes this past week, leaving many fans concerned about their absences.
During Thursday’s episode, Duthiers mentioned his colleague, Gayle, as she was named one of the 49th annual Gracie Awards winners. These awards recognize outstanding achievements by women in media.
Duthiers revealed that Gayle King won Best On-Air Talent for News in The National TV category.
While Duthiers and his co-hosts congratulated and cheered on their colleague, they did not mention Gayle’s whereabouts.
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by CBS Mornings (@cbsmornings)
Viewers expressed concerns about missing hosts
With Gayle and Nate inexplicably missing from the recent episodes of CBS Mornings, many viewers seemed worried over their absences.
When Thursday’s episode opened, viewers saw hosts Vladimir Duthiers, Tony Dokoupil, and Jericka Duncan.
Gayle and Nate were also missing from other episodes this past week, leaving many fans concerned about their absences.
During Thursday’s episode, Duthiers mentioned his colleague, Gayle, as she was named one of the 49th annual Gracie Awards winners. These awards recognize outstanding achievements by women in media.
Duthiers revealed that Gayle King won Best On-Air Talent for News in The National TV category.
While Duthiers and his co-hosts congratulated and cheered on their colleague, they did not mention Gayle’s whereabouts.
View this post on Instagram
A post shared by CBS Mornings (@cbsmornings)
Viewers expressed concerns about missing hosts
With Gayle and Nate inexplicably missing from the recent episodes of CBS Mornings, many viewers seemed worried over their absences.
- 3/30/2024
- by Matt Couden
- Monsters and Critics
Btig, LLC has announced the list of celebrity guest traders for its 16th Btig Commissions for Charity Day on Tuesday, May 8, 2018.
The firm’s annual event is celebrated across Btig’s 17 global locations, including eleven offices throughout the U.S., and six affiliate offices in Europe, Asia and Australia. The following celebrities are expected to join this year.
Aaron Boone, Allan Houston, Allie Laforce, Amy Gutierrez, Barry Bonds, Beth Ostrosky Stern, President Bill Clinton, Bobby Valentine, Bode Miller, Boomer Esiason, Brian Cashman, Bruce Beck, Cc Sabathia, Charles Oakley, Chris Johnson, Chris Long, Chris Snee, Chris Wragge, Chuck Scarborough, Curtis Martin, D’Brickashaw Ferguson, Damon Bruce, Dave Dravecky, David Cone, David Costabile, David Muir, David Robertson, David Tyree, Dellin Betances, Denis Leary, Didi Gregorius, Dominic West, Dominique Wilkins, Dwight Gooden, Eli Manning, Elisa Donovan, Emmanuel Mudiay, Eric LeGrand, Gary Cohn, Grant Hill, Hannah Storm, Henrik Lundqvist, Jalen Rose, Janice Huff, Jay Wright,...
The firm’s annual event is celebrated across Btig’s 17 global locations, including eleven offices throughout the U.S., and six affiliate offices in Europe, Asia and Australia. The following celebrities are expected to join this year.
Aaron Boone, Allan Houston, Allie Laforce, Amy Gutierrez, Barry Bonds, Beth Ostrosky Stern, President Bill Clinton, Bobby Valentine, Bode Miller, Boomer Esiason, Brian Cashman, Bruce Beck, Cc Sabathia, Charles Oakley, Chris Johnson, Chris Long, Chris Snee, Chris Wragge, Chuck Scarborough, Curtis Martin, D’Brickashaw Ferguson, Damon Bruce, Dave Dravecky, David Cone, David Costabile, David Muir, David Robertson, David Tyree, Dellin Betances, Denis Leary, Didi Gregorius, Dominic West, Dominique Wilkins, Dwight Gooden, Eli Manning, Elisa Donovan, Emmanuel Mudiay, Eric LeGrand, Gary Cohn, Grant Hill, Hannah Storm, Henrik Lundqvist, Jalen Rose, Janice Huff, Jay Wright,...
- 5/4/2018
- Look to the Stars
Tennis champ Caroline Wozniacki didn't just run her first New York City Marathon over the weekend ... she finished it by shaming some world class male athletes too!Caroline was greeted at the finish line by her Bff Serena Williams -- and nearly Two Hours later ... former New York Giants star Tiki Barber crossed the finish line!Wozniacki's time was 3:26:33 -- an amazing time for anyone, much less someone running her first marathon. Besides...
- 11/3/2014
- by TMZ Staff
- TMZ
Former NBAer Allan Houston threw down the gauntlet -- betting that Harvey couldn't make One single 3-pointer. Boy was he ... completely right. Although, Harvey has a different view ... of course. Check out TMZ on TV -- click here to see your local listings! Read more...
- 1/26/2011
- by TMZ Staff
- TMZ
Huge controversy on TMZ Live today: Former NBA all-star Allan Houston challenged Harvey to a 3-point shooting competition -- for Knicks Tix -- and the results are up for debate! Plus, more questions about all the biggest stories from our viewers via Skype and Twitter ! And ... if you want to ask a question live during the show via Skype , email us your info (name, phone number, Skype ID) by clicking the pic below!!! Read more...
- 1/24/2011
- by TMZ Staff
- TMZ
The gauntlet has been dropped -- former NBA all-star Allan Houston challenged Harvey to a 3-point shooting competition ... for Knicks Tix -- and just a few minutes ago, H-Bomb hit the court!!! We've got the Controversial footage of Harvey's attempt to sink One bucket from wayyyy downtown. You're not gonna wanna miss this!!! Submit your questions in the comments section of this post ... we'll answer 'em on TMZ Live at 1:30 Pm Pt. Plus ... we'll...
- 1/24/2011
- by TMZ Staff
- TMZ
James Toback's "Black and White" is an interesting film without being a very good film. Diving into a range of complex topics including hip-hop culture, race, sex and celebrityhood from a semi-documentary point of view, it lays out a series of snapshots of certain aspects of American culture at the end of the millennium.
Indeed, "Black and White" might be viewed with more fascination 50 years hence than it is today. But the film is so all over the place with no real sense of where it wants to end up that its process is more intriguing than the film.
With a highly charged sexual energy and generous use of hip-hop and rap music, the film has a sure-fire audience among young people. The only trouble is that it has R rating, which will hamper its exposure to that target audience.
Toback is one of our most idiosyncratic directors, whose obsessions take in a range of addictive behavior including gambling, drugs, sex (including interracial sex) and music. Themes going back to his brilliant screenplay "The Gambler" and his first feature, the underrated "Fingers", find their way into this exploration of hip-hop. The feverishness of Toback's filmmaking style, coupled here with mostly improvisational work by a bunch of professional and nonprofessional actors, is highly mesmerizing.
The cast ranges from amusing turns by Robert Downey Jr. and Ben Stiller to Power and Raekwon of popular hip-hop group Wu-Tang Clan. It almost feels as if whoever showed up on the set won a role for a day or two, with people such as Marla Maples, Mike Tyson and "Rush Hour" director Brett Ratner popping up in odd situations. (The oddest comes when Tyson bitch-slaps Downey for making a pass at him.)
Several stories are told all at once, with the central focus being on a group of Upper East Side white kids whose fascination with black culture causes them to hang out with rappers and gangsters.
Several conventional plot lines take the viewer through the chaotic scenes. A seedy white gambler (Stiller) tries to bribe a college basketball star (Allan Houston) into throwing a game. A documentary filmmaker (Brooke Shields) and her gay husband (Downey) hang around the periphery while making a film about the white kids' fascination with black culture. And a rap producer-cum-gangster (Power) struggles to protect his turf while dealing with betrayal by his childhood buddy.
Like the professor he once was, Toback wants to deconstruct hip-hop while delivering pithy observations about this social and musical phenomenon. But no truly new observations emerge from any of this and, often, the film all-too-proudly states the obvious.
Toback has brought too many characters in front of his camera -- none of whom gets explored in any depth -- for the viewer to understand why these people behave as they do. The most puzzling of all is Claudia Schiffer's bitch goddess who messes with every man she meets.
But Toback seems content to let his actors take control and tell him what the movie he's making is about. Cinematographer David Ferrara deserves special praise for maintaining a stylistic unity and letting his fluid camera catch the hectic action.
BLACK AND WHITE
Screen Gems
Palm Pictures
Producers: Michael Mailer, Daniel Bigel, Ron Rotholz
Writer-director: James Toback
Executive producers: Ed Pressman, Mark Burg, Oren Koules, Hooman Majd
Director of photography: David Ferrara
Production designer: Anne Ross
Music: Wu-Tang Clan
Costume designer: Jacki Roach
Editor: Myron Kerstein
Color/stereo
Cast:
Terry: Robert Downey Jr.
Casey: Jared Leto
Charlie: Bijou Phillips
Rich: Power
Cigar: Raekwon
Greta: Claudia Schiffer
Sam: Brooke Shields
Mark: Ben Stiller
Himself: Mike Tyson
Wren: Elijah Wood
Muffy: Marla Maples
Sheila: Stacy Edwards
Raven: Gaby Hoffmann
Scotty: Scott Caan
Dean: Allan Houston
Running time -- 100 minutes
MPAA rating: R...
Indeed, "Black and White" might be viewed with more fascination 50 years hence than it is today. But the film is so all over the place with no real sense of where it wants to end up that its process is more intriguing than the film.
With a highly charged sexual energy and generous use of hip-hop and rap music, the film has a sure-fire audience among young people. The only trouble is that it has R rating, which will hamper its exposure to that target audience.
Toback is one of our most idiosyncratic directors, whose obsessions take in a range of addictive behavior including gambling, drugs, sex (including interracial sex) and music. Themes going back to his brilliant screenplay "The Gambler" and his first feature, the underrated "Fingers", find their way into this exploration of hip-hop. The feverishness of Toback's filmmaking style, coupled here with mostly improvisational work by a bunch of professional and nonprofessional actors, is highly mesmerizing.
The cast ranges from amusing turns by Robert Downey Jr. and Ben Stiller to Power and Raekwon of popular hip-hop group Wu-Tang Clan. It almost feels as if whoever showed up on the set won a role for a day or two, with people such as Marla Maples, Mike Tyson and "Rush Hour" director Brett Ratner popping up in odd situations. (The oddest comes when Tyson bitch-slaps Downey for making a pass at him.)
Several stories are told all at once, with the central focus being on a group of Upper East Side white kids whose fascination with black culture causes them to hang out with rappers and gangsters.
Several conventional plot lines take the viewer through the chaotic scenes. A seedy white gambler (Stiller) tries to bribe a college basketball star (Allan Houston) into throwing a game. A documentary filmmaker (Brooke Shields) and her gay husband (Downey) hang around the periphery while making a film about the white kids' fascination with black culture. And a rap producer-cum-gangster (Power) struggles to protect his turf while dealing with betrayal by his childhood buddy.
Like the professor he once was, Toback wants to deconstruct hip-hop while delivering pithy observations about this social and musical phenomenon. But no truly new observations emerge from any of this and, often, the film all-too-proudly states the obvious.
Toback has brought too many characters in front of his camera -- none of whom gets explored in any depth -- for the viewer to understand why these people behave as they do. The most puzzling of all is Claudia Schiffer's bitch goddess who messes with every man she meets.
But Toback seems content to let his actors take control and tell him what the movie he's making is about. Cinematographer David Ferrara deserves special praise for maintaining a stylistic unity and letting his fluid camera catch the hectic action.
BLACK AND WHITE
Screen Gems
Palm Pictures
Producers: Michael Mailer, Daniel Bigel, Ron Rotholz
Writer-director: James Toback
Executive producers: Ed Pressman, Mark Burg, Oren Koules, Hooman Majd
Director of photography: David Ferrara
Production designer: Anne Ross
Music: Wu-Tang Clan
Costume designer: Jacki Roach
Editor: Myron Kerstein
Color/stereo
Cast:
Terry: Robert Downey Jr.
Casey: Jared Leto
Charlie: Bijou Phillips
Rich: Power
Cigar: Raekwon
Greta: Claudia Schiffer
Sam: Brooke Shields
Mark: Ben Stiller
Himself: Mike Tyson
Wren: Elijah Wood
Muffy: Marla Maples
Sheila: Stacy Edwards
Raven: Gaby Hoffmann
Scotty: Scott Caan
Dean: Allan Houston
Running time -- 100 minutes
MPAA rating: R...
- 9/22/1999
- The Hollywood Reporter - Movie News
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