Lorne Michaels, the creator of the long-running sketch comedy television show “Saturday Night Live” donated the materials from the show that launched
The Harry Ransom Center at UT Austin received a collection donation from “Saturday Night Live” creator Lorne Michaels.
Lorne Michaels, creator of NBC's “Saturday Night Live", has donated his archive to UT Austin's Harry Ransom Center.
The archive offers a deep dive into the creative and production processes behind SNL, which has shaped American culture since its debut in 1975. MORE | #TBT: Robert De Niro iconic archives, including his two Oscars,
Lorne Michaels donates his "Saturday Night Live" archive to UT Austin's Harry Ransom Center, showcasing nearly 50 years of TV history.
As a Delaware Online/News Journal's audience director each day brings a new challenge at work and supporting my daughter.
A 2024 poll from YouGov showed that 57% of United States adults consume true-crime content and that 5% do so every day. Podcasts, documentaries and streaming series are wildly popular. The travel industry is responding with an influx of macabre tours: true-crime tourism,
Monday – Thursday, noon – 1 p.m. Rebroadcast 7 p.m. – 8 p.m.
Live” creator Lorne Michaels has donated his career archive to the Harry Ransom Center cultural archive at the University of Texas
Shelley Duvall, from left, Jane Curtin, Gilda Radner, Lorne Michaels and Laraine Newman pose backstage at "Saturday Night Live" in 1977. The image is among the items in the Lorne Michaels Collection, an archive the series creator has donated to the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin.
Peacock’s new docuseries has the massive task of defining a show that has defined culture for decades, as it peers into cast auditions, the writers room, the iconic cowbell sketch and the 1985-1986 season that almost canceled the show.