By Mike Redmond | Pajiba Love | July 31, 2025
Following CBS’ bombshell decision to cancel Late Night, Jay Leno felt it was a good time to criticize Stephen Colbert and other hosts for “cozying too much to one side or the other.” Ironically, Jon Stewart wasn’t having any of that noise and tore into Leno for gunning for his boy. Turns out there’s a limit to Stewart’s “both sides” schtick, and it’s being lectured by Jay Leno. (The Daily Beast)
Why do the pictures from Isla Fisher’s Harper’s Bazaar Australia shoot look like LinkedIn profile photos? (Lainey Gossip)
Jeff Daniels hopes Trump voters lose tons of money. (Celebitchy)
Kristi Noem and the Horseback Adultery Death Camp Vacation. (Wonkette)
In the ’90s, one of the members of Wilson Phillips underwent a gastric bypass operation and live-streamed it online. Kayleigh wrote about Carnie Wilson, ’90s fatphobia, and the weight loss industrial complex for her newsletter. (Gossip Reading Club)
Would you believe Dunkin made a genetics ad, too? (Page Six)
This is a real creepy move by Justin Baldoni. (TMZ)
If Jesse Eisenberg isn’t Mark Zuckerberg again, what’s the point? (The Mary Sue)
From Jen: Whhhhuuut? “Nine people were sentenced last week after the group — including former mayors, the president of the local school board, and even a school bus driver — smuggled cocaine through the IT room of Progreso’s Dorothy Thompson Middle School.” (The Barbed Wire)
Peaky Blinders creator Steven Knight is writing Villeneuve’s Bond movie. (Variety)
Michelle Pfeiffer is sorry she got into the Bill Gates conspiracy sauce. (Yahoo)
A few years ago, a store owner dropped a copy of Kim Gordon’s memoir, Girl in a Band, into llp’s bag when she bought a bunch of vinyl. “The parts of the book I enjoyed most were the parts where she talked about the effort and labor that go into creating and maintaining a career, whether that be in music or art.” Whose professional life would you like to read about? (Cannonball Read 17)
From Andrew:
It's really weird to demand accountability from a NYC mayoral candidate for a deadly NYC shooting rather than the current NYC mayor, an ex-cop who campaigned on a "tough on crime" platform and promptly got indicted for crimes
— Adam Weinstein (@adamweinstein.bsky.social) July 31, 2025 at 12:53 PM
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