'Your papers, please' must never be heard in America

Michael Douglas, Bill Murray and Bruce Willis are just a few of stars to move from a life on television to a successful film career.

Bill Hader is leaving "Saturday Night Live" after an eight-year run.

Seth Meyers is moving from his "Weekend Update" desk to his own late night show on NBC.

NBC on Wednesday announced its long-rumored switch in late night, replacing incumbent Jay Leno at "The Tonight Show" with Jimmy Fallon and moving the iconic franchise back to New York.

Justin Timberlake's comeback album has sold nearly 1 million units its first week out.

Politicians know the game is up once "Saturday Night Live" mocks them and their policies. President Obama found himself in that unenviable position this weekend. He had mustered all his effort to dispatch Cabinet secretaries to stand before every available camera in sight to recite tales of the mayhem and horror that would follow in the wake of a minuscule across-the-board reduction in federal spending.

Two major retailers have apologized or removed their ads after receiving complaints about a "Saturday Night Live" skit about "Jesus" returning from the dead as a vengeful murderer, says a traditional-values group.
Like most people who get the chance to host "Saturday Night Live," Kevin Hart is excited to have the gig.
He ruffled feathers. He maybe even turned some viewers off.
Justin Bieber's mom wants to set the record straight: She's not interested in the political fray on abortion as she promotes "Crescendo," a new film she hopes will raise $10 million for centers that help pregnant girls.
Tina Fey had a million seller with a book of essays called "Bossypants." Amy Poehler? She has a deal for a book which appears to be a little bit of everything.
Stung by the overwhelmingly negative reaction to removing the name of original "Saturday Night Live" cast member Gilda Radner from a cancer support group's title, a Wisconsin chapter is borrowing one of the comedian's catch phrases for its next announcement: Never mind.
Jessica Chastain easily outmuscled Arnold Schwarzenegger and Mark Wahlberg over the weekend, topping the box office with both her supernatural horror film "Mama" and the Oscar-nominated Osama bin Laden hunt thriller "Zero Dark Thirty."
It was elegant, eloquent, genteel and classy.

Is Jamie Foxx a racist? The actor recently hosted "Saturday Night Live," delivering a rant that was supposed to be funny. It wasn't. In fact, had a white person delivered the same monologue but simply exchanged the word "white" for "black," his career would be over.