Entertainment
Nate Bargatze talks about his comedy style as he prepares to host Emmys: “Just do you”
Comedian Nate Bargatze sold more than 1.2 million tickets to his “The Be Funny Tour” last year, making him the highest-grossing comedian in the country. Now, he’s taking on a new challenge: Hosting the 77th Emmy Awards on CBS.
“This is the first I’m thinking about it, was this week,” the 46-year-old jokingly said about his preparation for Sunday’s show.
He described his comedy style, saying while there will be jokes about the shows, it will be done “in a way that is not mean.”
“I was like trying to think of like how, which way you want to go and it’s like … even we’ve had stuff written that I think was a little more roast stuff and then it’s like after you think about it a couple of days, I’m like ‘nah let’s go back another way.’ We have some fun stuff though that’s planned,” Bargatze told “CBS Mornings.”
The stand-up comedian has also previously hosted Saturday Night Live.
“I’m used to performing in front of live people, not an audience like this of all the people that you know. So, it will be fun to get in there, get on stage, get that first joke, hear that first laugh and then just get running and just really make your own of it.”
Bargatze said he’s honored and excited to host the awards show, saying, “you kind of dream of like hosting some kind of award show … it’s very flattering to even get asked to do it.”
As for who he’s relied on to help him prepare, Bargatze named several top comedians who gave him some tips.
“I talked to Conan about it. Everybody is just kind of like you just have to do you. It’s hard to take exact advice – but like Colbert, Fallon, I talked to Lorne Michaels a little bit about it. You just kind of take it all in … but it all comes back to like just do you. Do what you know to do,” he said.
The 77th Emmy Awards air Sunday Sept. 14 at 8 p.m. ET on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.
Entertainment
Drace Montgomery explains excitement over ‘Stranger Things’ finale
Drace Montgomery revealed why he is thrilled about Stranger Things season finale.
Montgomery starred as Billy Hargrove, step brother of Max Mayfield (Sadie Sink) in season two and three and only in Max’s nightmares in season four.
In a conversation with the People magazine at the special screening of Dead Man’s Wire, in New York City, he shared what the hit series fans means to him and what he is most excited for as the series approaches its finale.
“Huge amount,” Montgomery explained of how much those fans still impact his life and career. “It’s been everything to me in my career and has made me who I am, and it is such an amazing experience.”
“The thing I’m most excited for is now that [co-creators Russ and Matt Duffer] are done with the show, they have so many other amazing ideas that I’m excited about — like, if people love Stranger Things, imagine what else they can do,” he said. “So I love that.”
Following Stranger Things conclusion, Duffer Brothers next project is The Boroughs, starring Geena Davis, will be a supernatural mystery set in a retirement community and Something Very Bad Is Going to Happen, starring Camila Morrone and Adam DiMarco, is centered on a doomed wedding.
Both the series are soon to air on Netflix.
Meanwhile, Montgomery’s film Dead Man’s Wire follows true story of a 1977 kidnapping of a prominent banker.
Dead Man’s Wire, also stars Bill Skarsgård, Colman Domingo, Cary Elwes, Myha’la and Al Pacino. It is slated for release on January 9, 2026.
Entertainment
Indie records which cannot be ignored
We have listened to the chart-topping albums released in 2025 and given them their due recognition, but it’s important not to move on from the year without listening to the ones that stayed underrated.
The debut album of the band, Finneas and Ashe formed after collaborating in their solo musical careers. The musicians shared in their interviews that they had been working on the album for years, all while keeping it a secret, and it sure sounded like years’ worth of work.
- Ego Death at a Bachelorette Party by Hayley Williams
Paramore’s lead musician, Hayley Williams, released her solo album by surprise and blew fans away with the evocative lyricism and the classic Paramore vocals.
- From the Pyre by The Last Dinner Party
The British rock band released their second studio album this year, which offered the same powerful vocals as their debut, as well as the all-girl band’s imaginative lyrics.
- Forever is a Feeling by Lucy Dacus
Boygenius’ Lucy Dacus released her fourth studio album this year, which was much-awaited by fans after the release of her singles. The album featured a duet with Hozier, Bullseye, which became a special favourite among listeners.
- Kansas Anymore (The Longest Goodbye) by Role Model
Role Model, aka Tucker Pillsbury, released the deluxe version of his 2024 album Kansas Anymore, with four bonus tracks, including Sally, When the Wine Runs Out, which became a cultural moment this year as he invited many celebrities as “Sally” during the tour set.
- Who’s The Clown by Audrey Hobbert
Audrey Hobbert, who has famously worked as Gracie Abrams’ lyricist, released her debut album this year and caused a stir in the industry, going on to perform several live performances and building an organic fandom within a span of a few months.
Addison Rae released her debut self-titled album this year, which became an instant hit among fans and earned her a Grammy nomination for the best new artist award.
Entertainment
Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson on the musical alchemy of “Song Sung Blue”
Last week, at a New York bar called Old Mates, Australian icon Hugh Jackman sang a few songs by an American icon, Neil Diamond. He’s been doing a lot of this lately.
His new film, “Song Sung Blue,” is based on the real-life story of Mike and Claire Sardina, celebrity impersonators who teamed up to form a Neil Diamond tribute act by the name of Lightning & Thunder. Jackman was cast early on as Mike, and director Craig Brewer was still looking for someone to play Claire, when Jackman got an idea from watching TV: “Yeah. It’s this little-known show, ‘CBS Sunday Morning,'” he said.
In April 2024, “Sunday Morning” aired a profile of Kate Hudson and her blossoming music career.
Jackman was contacted by a friend and assistant, Michelle: “She texts me: ‘Are you watching “CBS Sunday Morning”?’ I said, ‘I’m not.’ Normally I am, by the way – that sounded sucky, but it’s true! I normally am! And I wasn’t – I turned it on, and there was Kate promoting her debut solo album. I texted Craig Brewer, the writer-director, and I said, ‘Kate Hudson is Claire. Claire is Kate.’ And he said, ‘Oh my God, perfect.'”
“Perfect” might be the right word: Hudson’s turn as Claire Sardina has already earned her a Golden Globe nomination.
Jackman said, “As much as i could see it and feel it, nothing prepared me from day one of rehearsal through to the end, ’til I saw the movie, of Kate’s performance. Because it was like, I could feel – you know, you just know, like, ‘Ah, she’s gonna be perfect,’ ’cause she’s amazing, and I love her, and I love her as an actress. But when there’s somehow an alchemy of a part to an actress at that time, when that all comes together? Magic.”
Focus Features
The performances are magical, but what happened to the Sardinas off stage was anything but: between gigs, they endured poverty, addiction, and some incredibly bad luck.
“They go through so much,” Hudson said. “And if it wasn’t a true story, it would almost be – you wouldn’t believe it, you know?”
The film is at its heart a love story, and you could say the two lead actors have chemistry to burn. Yet, Jackman and Hudson did not know each other well before the project began. “It’s become a bit of a joke,” said Jackman. “Because I remember when we first met, but she has no recollection. That’s the impression I made!”
And now? “Oh, well, very well,” said Hudson. “Except consummating. Beyond that, pretty, pretty much everything!”
CBS News
Hudson was apprehensive when Goldie Hawn and Kurt Russell watched the film: “Everyone loved the movie. My big thing was thinking, I was watching my mom watching it. I was like, ‘God …’ because I’m so, I guess, not the glamorous version of myself – or even honestly my version. You know, I was a bit heavier and didn’t see my skin person for a while, you know. I was like, ‘God, it must be so interesting for my mom to see her middle-aged daughter on the screen.’ She must have been like, ‘Oh my God, she’s middle-aged!'”
Still, it seems middle age has been good to Kate Hudson, even in a year that would put the gray in anyone’s hair. Last January, a wind-driven firestorm incinerated the Pacific Palisades section of Los Angeles, where Hudson has lived for most of her life. Her home is one of the few still standing, but her neighborhood is full of vacant lots where her friends’ houses used to be – and some of the places she treasured the most went up in smoke.
She showed us around what was left of the neighborhood: “Every time I drive by here, taking the kids from, like, baseball or soccer, you know, I drive by and I go, ‘Oh, that’s where mommy had her first kiss.’ And now you’re like … it’s not there. And that’s what I mean by, like, nothing lasts.”
CBS News
But in the end, home is where you feel loved. For Hudson, it’s still her community in Los Angeles. And for Jackman, it’s his pub in Manhattan: “I come in here, I get a lot of, ‘Ah, Hughie, come over and have a beer, mate.’ I said, ‘Ah, I gotta go.’ ‘Ah, come on mate, don’t be a ****. Let’s go. Let’s have a beer. Buy me a beer. You can afford it!’ A lot of that.”
I asked, “Can you show up someplace and kind of be a regular dude?”
“Oh yeah,” he replied.
“You can show up here and be a regular dude?”
“Yeah, except I just have to be prepared for them to make fun of me!” Jackman said, “which is a sign of affection!”
CBS News
Jackman was prepping for a little Neil Diamond tribute at Old Mates later that night, and just like in the movie, Jackman and Hudson did what Neil Diamond himself would’ve done: raise the roof.
Watch Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson perform “Sweet Caroline” at Old Mates:
One final note: Neil Diamond himself is not in the film, but Jackman says he loved it – and gave him the ultimate stamp of approval: “He put his arm around me like that, and I sort of leant, and he just kissed me on the forehead. And he said, ‘You did good, kid!'”
To watch a trailer for “Song Sung Blue” click on the video player below:
For more info:
Story produced by John D’Amelio. Editor: Remington Korper.
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