This Debate, We Could Hear Biden Speak. There His Troubles Began.
The CNN presidential debate kept the volume down, for a change. That didn’t make it more intelligible.
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![The first 2024 presidential debate was defined by former President Donald J. Trump’s bluster and President Biden’s halting delivery.](https://cdn.statically.io/img/static01.nyt.com/images/2024/06/28/multimedia/28debatetv-qjhg/28debatetv-qjhg-thumbLarge.jpg?auto=webp)
![The first 2024 presidential debate was defined by former President Donald J. Trump’s bluster and President Biden’s halting delivery.](https://cdn.statically.io/img/static01.nyt.com/images/2024/06/28/multimedia/28debatetv-qjhg/28debatetv-qjhg-threeByTwoMediumAt2X.jpg?auto=webp)
The CNN presidential debate kept the volume down, for a change. That didn’t make it more intelligible.
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Hosting a live “Daily Show” after the Biden-Trump spectacle, Stewart said he needed “to call a real estate agent in New Zealand.”
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Last season, the FX series featured a parade of Hollywood celebrities. In the new one, it’s showing off its food-world credibility with a series of cameos from star chefs.
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The hit FX series about an upstart Chicago restaurant loves the pressures of tight quarters and close shouting. The new season serves up plenty more.
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‘My Lady Jane’ Asks: ‘What if History Were Different?’
A fantastical series about the very short-term 16th century queen Lady Jane Grey takes historical liberties in the name of reclamation — and fun.
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In ‘The Bear,’ Abby Elliott Follows a New Recipe
The acclaimed kitchen hit has allowed Elliott, a comic actor from a famously funny family, to embrace her dramatic side.
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‘Babylon Berlin’ Review: Dancing While the World Begins to Burn
The long-awaited fourth season of the cult-favorite German thriller takes place in 1931, with the Nazis not quite in power.
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‘Babylon Berlin’ Is Back. Here’s What You Need to Know.
Season 4 of the epic crime drama has finally come to streaming in the United States, via MHz Choice. Here’s a refresher on where we left off.
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On ‘Couples Therapy,’ They Discuss Intimacy Like Nobody’s Watching
The Showtime series gives audiences an intimate look inside real relationships. Its couples are still navigating the aftermath.
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Producers of “The Boyfriend” on Netflix hope it will encourage broader acceptance of the L.G.B.T.Q. community in Japan, which still has not legalized same-sex unions.
By Motoko Rich and Kiuko Notoya
With Andy Cohen, Hillary Clinton will do shots and Oscar-winners gush about reality stars — all savvy promotion for Bravo’s outrageous TV universe.
By Shivani Gonzalez
Mr. Mull, who was also an artist and a musician, had a long list of credits that included the sitcoms “Roseanne” and “Veep.”
By Trip Gabriel and Orlando Mayorquín
The return of “Babylon Berlin” was the international TV news of the week, but here are five other recent series to check out.
By Mike Hale
The French filmmaker Catherine Breillat has been exploring relationships between girls and older men since the 1970s. Her latest, “Last Summer,” flips the script.
By Carlos Aguilar
A bunch of major titles are leaving for U.S. subscribers this month, including films by George Lucas and Ang Lee. See them while you can.
By Jason Bailey
Even as the technology advances, stubborn stereotypes about women are re-encoded again and again.
By Amanda Hess
With an emphasis on younger viewers, he established the networks as serious rivals to ABC, CBS and NBC, which had ruled television for nearly 40 years.
By Trip Gabriel
For Pride Month, we asked people ranging in age from 34 to 93 to share an indelible memory. Together, they offer a personal history of queer life as we know it today.
By Nicole Acheampong, Max Berlinger, Jason Chen, Kate Guadagnino, Colleen Hamilton, Mark Harris, Juan A. Ramírez, Coco Romack, Michael Snyder and John Wogan
He was not a Hollywood household name. But his face was one anyone who watched TV or movies over the past several decades could recognize.
By Alexandra E. Petri
Hailed as a pioneer of D.I.Y. programming, he oversaw groundbreaking how-to shows on public television in the days before HGTV and YouTube.
By Alex Williams
After two strokes, the stand-up has recovered enough to make a new special. If anything, his health crises have sharpened his humor.
By Jason Zinoman
The beloved chef’s admirers have given him a distinctly modern kind of digital afterlife — at the center of fondly parodic jokes.
By Becca Schuh
Rather than bemoan pop culture’s most divisive genre, Emily Nussbaum spends time with the creators, the stars and the victims of the decades-long effort to generate buzz.
By Eric Deggans
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Jay Johnston, also known for his work on “Mr. Show with Bob and David,” was charged last year with participating in the riot at the Capitol. He is expected to plead guilty at a hearing on July 8.
By Orlando Mayorquín
Ncuti Gatwa shined as the 15th Doctor. But the long-running show feels at a crossroads as it concludes its latest season.
By Maya Phillips
President Biden’s toughest opponent may not be his predecessor. It is the cultural meaning, built up through centuries, that we assign to being old.
By Jason Farago
To make “Horizon,” he put his own money on the line and left “Yellowstone,” the series that revived his career — all with little Hollywood support.
By Nicole Sperling
The actor was playing a young Michael Jackson when Elton John spotted him. Three decades later, the new attention to his legacy is “gratifying.”
By Ashley Spencer
Episode 2 pit brother against brother, in more ways than one. The two actors, identical twins, talked about the intensity of that climactic fight scene.
By Sean T. Collins
The company’s latest internal memo about its corporate culture is more about how it expects employees to behave than what it wants to become.
By Nicole Sperling
President Joe Biden and former President Donald J. Trump debate for the first time this campaign cycle. Country artists perform their hit songs.
By Shivani Gonzalez
Aemond knows those assassins got the wrong prince. He says he feels flattered. He had also better watch his back.
By Sean T. Collins
Ms. Tuft, who retired from the W.W.E. more than a decade ago and came out as transgender in 2021, will return to the ring on Tuesday, she said on social media.
By Livia Albeck-Ripka
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“Maybe I can engineer it where I work with him, and then he makes me a drink and a bowl of pasta,” the “We Are Lady Parts” actress said.
By Kathryn Shattuck
Ncuti’s Gatwa’s first season as the Doctor closes with a typically ambitious episode.
By Isobel Lewis
He spent his early career as a professional sumo wrestler.
By Emmett Lindner
This week, the hosts riffed on the heat wave that pummeled the U.S. as well as Trump trying to argue that he’s more mentally fit to lead than President Biden. Here’s what they had to say.
By Trish Bendix
The new sequel to “Orphan Black” raises interesting questions about the nature of memory but misses the charm of that show’s star, Tatiana Maslany.
By Margaret Lyons
The actor and director is turning his attention to his ambitious film series about post-Civil War America.
By Maya Salam
*That’s his opinion. And yet he’s setting a new standard for what life after late-night can look like. (Hint: It’s a lot like what he did on talk shows.)
By Jason Zinoman
Kimmel doubted that Donald Trump would stick to his game plan of not interrupting President Biden, saying, “His discipline is unmatched!”
By Trish Bendix
This warped Adult Swim animated series, streaming on Max, is so fast and feral it feels like its own highlight reel.
By Margaret Lyons
“Then they got a text from Trump that said, ‘Throuple?’” Fallon joked on Wednesday.
By Trish Bendix
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For years he wowed ’em in the clubs with his drag-king lounge act. Now, against all odds, he’s breaking out.
By William Berlind
Paul Lynde, Charles Nelson Reilly and Rip Taylor get a cursory mention in a new documentary about queer stand-up, but they were groundbreaking.
By Erik Piepenburg
“The Boys” and other TV series imagine fascism coming to America, whether wrapped in the flag or in a superhero’s tights.
By James Poniewozik
“I’m starting to think Trump writes his name on buildings just so he can remember where he lives,” Jimmy Fallon said.
By Trish Bendix
“The sad thing is under MAGA law, his name is now Ronny Johnson,” Jon Stewart said after Trump referred to his former doctor, Ronny Jackson, by the wrong name.
By Trish Bendix
Fans of the George R.R. Martin books know there are two words for that tense and slightly ambiguous ending to the Season 2 premiere: “Blood and Cheese.”
By Jennifer Vineyard
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