We’re still joined by Jeff Kaufmann and Dave Heller with a look at this week’s vice-presidential debate. One more exchange Host Jim Niedelman brings up is the question of democracy, certifying the election and the invasion of the Capitol on January 6,
Maya Rudolph and the cast of the 2024 election cycle’s political impersonators returned to Studio 8H stage in New York on Saturday for the latest episode of “Saturday Night Live,” taking on last Tuesday’s vice presidential debate in the cold open.
VP nominees JD Vance and Tim Walz had their first, and perhaps only, debate Tuesday. So, who won? No one actually wins. Here's why.
With just weeks to the election, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are neck-and-neck among bettors.
Vice President Harris’s slim national lead over former President Trump narrowed after the vice presidential debate last week, a new survey on Monday found. Harris is leading Trump by two
Episode two of the 50th season of “Saturday Night Live” saw a return of the star-studded election cast that premiered last week, with the cold open hilariously showing vice presidential nominees JD Vance and Tim Walz “vibe” with each other in their debate.
An estimated 43.15 million viewers tuned in to the CBS News vice presidential debate this year, according to Nielsen, a media analytics company. The debate was held at the CBS Broadcast Center in New York City, and aired across more than a dozen stations.
Four years ago, 57 million tuned in to the only vice presidential debate of the 2020 election cycle between Harris and then-Vice President Mike Pence. In 2008, a record 69.9 million watched Joe Biden and Sarah Palin face off on television in the most-watched VP debate, according to Nielsen.
John Oliver likened the praise for the VP debate's 'civility' to 'a ransom note' with 'lovely' cursive on this week's episode of 'Last Week Tonight.'
Viewership will likely be lower than the 67 million who watched Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump debate on Sept. 10. Four years ago, [58 million people watched](htt