Lorne Michaels appears to be riveted by Blake Lively and Justin Baldoni’s ongoing legal dispute, according to former “SNL” cast member Dana Carvey. On Thursday’s episode of his and fellow “Saturday Night Live” alum David Spade’s “Fly on the Wall podcast,
Belushi moved to New York in 1973, and by 1975, he had caught the attention of Lorne Michaels and was cast as one of the original stars of Saturday Night Live. While on the sketch show, he and Dan Aykroyd formed the iconic duo,
I don’t know of whom I’m more jealous, Lorne Michaels or Susan Morrison. The latter’s “Lorne” is one of the best biographies I’ve ever read. It’s as though she videotaped
The New Yorker editor, Susan Morrison shares the definitive biography of Lorne Michaels, the man behind America’s most beloved comedy show, SNL. It goes behind the scenes of Michaels’ relentless,
Susan Morrison's "Lorne" offers a history of a man and a show that changed the comedy landscape — and has been doing so for almost 50 years.
SNL is the longest-running, most Emmy-nominated, and highest-rated weekly late-night show in television history. How has Michaels done it?
Returning tonight to host SNL a second time, will comedian/actor Shane Gillis seize the opportunity to confirm Lorne Michaels' faith in him?
Lorne Michaels, the creator, executive producer and Grand Poobah of “SNL,” wasn’t pleased by its “mawkish righteousness,” writes Susan Morrison in her new book “Lorne: The Man Who Invented Saturday Night Live,” out now.