US lifts sanctions on Venezuela acting president, opening door for assets control

WASHINGTON, April 1 (Reuters) - The U.S. on Wednesday removed sanctions against Venezuelan interim President Delcy Rodriguez, according to the Treasury Department website, less than three months after U.S. forces ‌seized the country's then-President Nicolas Maduro in a raid on the capital.

Reuters

The Trump administration ‌has closely engaged with the interim government led by former Vice President and Maduro ally Rodriguez, sending U.S. energy and interior ​secretaries on visits to Caracas with potential investors, making an agreement for the U.S. to sell Venezuelan oil, praising changes to the oil and mining sectors that are meant to attract foreign capital and issuing sanctions waivers.

Washington in March formally recognized Rodriguez as Venezuela's leader, opening the door for her government to reopen ‌embassies and consulates in the U.S. ⁠and regain control of Venezuela-owned companies abroad.

Rodriguez hailed the decision, saying in a post on X that it was "a step in the direction of normalizing and ⁠strengthening relations between our countries."

"We trust that this progress will allow for the lifting of the sanctions currently in place on our country, enabling the building and guaranteeing of an effective bilateral cooperation agenda for the ​benefit of ​our peoples," she said.

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The announcement of the sanctions ​removal came after Reuters reported earlier on ‌Wednesday that Rodriguez's administration is getting ready to take over the boards of state oil firm PDVSA's U.S. subsidiaries, including Citgo Petroleum, citing four sources close to the preparations.

Citgo, the crown jewel of Venezuela's foreign assets, has been run since 2019 by supervising boards appointed by an opposition-led congress that is no longer active.

It has repeatedly been rumored that Rodriguez was making preparations to travel to the U.S. ‌to meet with Trump. Though she has met with high-level ​delegations from other countries, she has not yet met in ​person with a head of state in ​her current role.

Many of the top ranking officials in Maduro's former government are ‌sanctioned and several, including Interior Minister Diosdado ​Cabello and recent Defense Minister ​Vladimir Padrino, face drug trafficking and other charges, which they deny.

Though neither Rodriguez nor her brother Jorge, who heads the National Assembly legislature, has been indicted for any alleged crimes ​in the U.S., Reuters reporting has ‌shown the Trump administration has been quietly building a legal case against her to ​strengthen its leverage with Caracas.

(Reporting by Jasper Ward, Daphne Psaledakis and Julia Symmes Cobb; ​Editing by Michelle Nichols, Christian Martinez and Daniel Wallis)

US lifts sanctions on Venezuela acting president, opening door for assets control

WASHINGTON, April 1 (Reuters) - The U.S. on Wednesday removed sanctions against Venezuelan interim President Delcy Rodri...
Stephen Colbert says Trump's speech was 'concise, intelligent, and brought the nation together'

Stephen Colbertwas thrilled about PresidentDonald Trump's speech Wednesday from the White House. Really, no notes.

Entertainment Weekly Stephen Colbert; Donald TrumpCredit: Jamie McCarthy/Getty; Scott Olson/Getty

"It was concise, intelligent, and brought the nation together with shared purpose," the comedian said in his monologue onThe Late Show.

But then he couldn't hold back the laughter, and the audience couldn't keep quiet either. They knew what was coming.

"April Fools'!" Colbert said, then sounding more like himself.

He noted that the speech fell on the first night of Passover, "So, whether you're Jewish or not, I recommend having had four glasses of wine."

Colbert hadn't seen the address, both because he was filming before the live event took place and, he joked, because he "put lamb's blood on my TV, so the speech would pass me by."

Trump delivered his first national speech since the beginning of the conflict with Iran live in primetime. He spoke for about 19 minutes, insisting that "core strategic objectives are nearing completion."

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The president also said that the U.S. planned to "hit them extremely hard over the next two to three weeks," adding, "We are going to bring them back to the Stone Ages, where they belong."

Trump also reiterated his projection that troops could finish their work within three weeks.

President Donald Trump speaks from the White House on April 1Credit: Alex Brandon-Pool/Getty

Anyone watchingThe Late Showwould have known that Colbert is no fan of Trump, and vice versa.

The two have feuded in the past, particularly after CBSannounced in Julythat Colbert's show — actually the entireLate Showfranchise — would not return after the season ends in May.

Afterward, Trump, who regularly lashes out at late-night hosts, posted on social media, "I absolutely love that Colbert got fired."

To whichColbert responded, speaking into a camera labeled "eloquence cam," that Trump should "Go f--- yourself."

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

Stephen Colbert says Trump's speech was 'concise, intelligent, and brought the nation together'

Stephen Colbertwas thrilled about PresidentDonald Trump's speech Wednesday from the White House. Really, no notes. ...
Bruce Springsteen Takes a Stand of Resistance in Minneapolis

WhenBruce Springsteenwalked onstage, he didn't mince words. He didn't clear his throat, rhetorically or otherwise. He got straight to the point. He had come to Minneapolis with a mission.

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After the Trump administration deployed roughly 3,000federal officers to Minneapolisthis winter—thelargest immigration enforcement actionin the country, an operation that resulted in the killings of two Americans—Springsteen responded in the way he knew best: he went into the studio, writing and recording his fiercest protest song in years. Then came his next move: an impromptu 18-stop tour, beginning inMinneapolisand ending in Washington, D.C. The itinerary spoke for itself. The journey would take him from the scene of the carnage to the seat of power.

To that end, Springsteen opened his "Land of Hope and Dreams American Tour" at the Target Center on March 31 with a rousing monologue against the man in the Oval Office.  "The mightyE Street Bandis here tonight to call upon the righteous power of art, of music, or rock and roll, in dangerous times," he began. "We are here in celebration and defense of our American ideals, democracy, our constitution, and our sacred American promise."

Historians may remember the performance as among the most unflinching acts of musical and theatrical resistance mounted against Donald Trump—or any president, for that matter—in the nation's history. Springsteen channeled a lineage of dissent that runs through the country's cultural bloodstream, blending the moral clarity and populism of Pete Seeger and Woody Guthrie with the propulsive, confrontational energy of Rage Against the Machine, all carried forward by the full force of the E Street Band.

He was joined, in fact, by Rage's Tom Morello, the sonically innovative guitarist, for 11 numbers of the 27-song set that was his most politically charged in decades: from the howl of fury against the loss of blue-collar dignity in "Death to My Hometown," "Youngstown," and "The Ghost of Tom Joad"; to the sorrow of police brutality in "American Skin (41 Shots)"; to defiance against democratic backsliding in "House of a Thousand Guitars"; to the gospel-infused promise of inclusion and redemption in "Land of Hope and Dreams"; to closing with Bob Dylan's "Chimes of Freedom," a hymn of solidarity with the downtrodden and dispossessed.

Tom Morello, Bruce Springsteen & The E Street Band perform during Land of Hope & Dreams American Tour. —Kevin Mazur/Getty Images

Springsteen, 76, opened the show with a secular sermon that was an updated and intensified version of the one he delivered last summer on tour in Europe, calling upon the crowd to "join with us in choosing hope over fear, democracy over authoritarianism, the rule of law over lawlessness, ethics over unbridled corruption, resistance over complacency, unity over division, and peace over war." He then segued into his cover of the Edwin Starr classic "War," which had been part of theBorn in the U.S.A.tour setlist in the 1980s, when the country was still grappling with the aftershocks of Vietnam War. He moved from there to "Born in the U.S.A." itself—the thundering hit that tells the story of a disillusioned veteran returning home to a country that has little use for him.

The song, as he played it this night, was imbued with new meaning. At the time of its release, it was swiftly co-opted by President Ronald Reagan for his "Morning in America" reelection message. Springsteen's reaction was a mix of mortification and bemusement. But as the years passed—and the song was recast as a kind of flag-saluting anthem—his frustration only grew. The track was neither the uncomplicated patriotic ode its admirers heard nor the anti-American screed its critics alleged.

"'Born in the U.S.A.' was a critical piece of patriotism," hetold melast fall. "To understand that song, you've got to be able to hold two contradictory thoughts in your mind at the same time—that you can feel betrayed by your country and still love it." The tension is embedded in the song's architecture: the surging choruses carry the pride; the verses, the indictment. Because of its misinterpretation, he has rarely performed it on American stages in recent decades—part of what made its inclusion here so striking. In his own way, Springsteen opened his Minneapolis concert by asking the audience to sit with that same contradiction: insisting on it as a difficult but necessary civic exercise.

He was pushing on an open door. It was the communion the Boss had already forged with the Twin Cities crowd that gave the show its spiritual backbone. In recent months, Minneapolis had become the epicenter of Springsteen's political imagination. On Jan. 28, just weeks after the killings ofRenée GoodandAlex Pretti, he released "Streets of Minneapolis," a searing protest aimed at the Trump Administration and its deportation campaign. Written and recorded within days of Pretti's killing, the song functioned as both elegy and indictment, quickly becoming a rallying cry for a burgeoning resistance movement.

The response was immediate. The track surged online, climbing to the top of YouTube's trending chart and drawing millions of views within hours. Tuesday night was his first live performance of that song with the band which served as the night's emotional center. He began alone at center stage, voice low, the arrangement spare, before the E Street Band surged in behind him. The audience of nearly 18,000 lifted their phones in the air, a constellation of light shimmering across the arena. At Springsteen's cue, they shouted—"ICE out now!"—not once, not twice, not three times, but four, each repetition louder than the last, as if they were willing the words into reality. A quick glance around the venue revealed tearful eyes in every direction.

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Midway through the show, Springsteen outlined his view of the sweep of Trump's transgressions. He spoke of war in Iran with no constitutional authorization; of immigrants detained, deported, and sent to foreign gulags without due process; of a Justice Department that has abdicated its independence; of a takeover of cultural institutions to obscure uncomfortable historical truths; of an emerging oligarchy in which immense wealth has translated into political power and personal gain; of an erosion of sacred democratic norms.

"This White House is destroying the American idea and our reputation around the world," Springsteen preached. "We are no longer the land of the free and the home of the brave. We are now, to many, America the reckless, unpredictable, predatory rogue nation. That is this administration's and this president's legacy. This is happening now."

And yet, he ended his remarks with a message of guarded optimism: that the actions of those in power do not reflect the character of those they govern. "Honesty, honor, humility, compassion, thoughtfulness, morality, true strength, and decency—don't let anybody tell you that these things don't matter anymore," he said. "They do. They are at the heart of the kind of men and women we are, the kind of citizens we are, the kind of country we'll be leaving to our children."

Springsteen then moved into "My City in Ruins," a song whose resonance has evolved over time. Originally written as a meditation on the economic decline of Asbury Park, it became an anthem of resilience after the September 11 attacks. Now, it's sung as a lament for a nation sundered by its own infighting and tribal divides—and as a call for resurrection and rebirth.

Born in the U.S.A.and the Reagan era weren't Springsteen's only points of return. He also revisited "Long Walk Home," written about the country's moral drift during the George W. Bush years: calamitous wars, the sanctioning of torture, the expansion of the surveillance state, and the erosion of civil liberties. Like "Born in the U.S.A.," it centers on a man coming home to a place that no longer feels like his own. He recalls his father's words—an inheritance of belief as much as memory—about the nation's promise: a place bound together by shared ideals, by a sense that certain things were fixed and enduring. "Your flag flyin' over the courthouse means certain things are set in stone," the father tells him, "who we are, what we'll do, and what we won't."

In that vein, as Springsteen has come to occupy his role as not just a performer but a patriarch, a kind of moral elder to his audience, to his musical heirs, to the circle of artists willing to take public stands, he has revived and amplified one of his central tenets: that dissent is not a rejection of patriotism but its highest expression.

Toward the end of the show, Springsteen again invoked the names of Renée Good and Alex Pretti. In the final stretch of the performance, he sat down and spoke about what had compelled him to engineer a pop-up tour in the weeks after their deaths—events that had unfolded just miles from the Target Center a little more than two months earlier.

He lingered on Good's final words, captured on video as she spoke through her car window to the agent who shot her: "That's fine, dude, I'm not mad at you." Springsteen paused. "God bless her," he said. "Tonight, when you go home, hold your loved ones close. And tomorrow, do as Renée did: find a way to take aggressive, peaceful action to defend our country's ideals." He paused, then reached for the words of John Lewis: "Go out and get in some good trouble. Say something, do something. Hell, sing something!"

Before he left the stage, he turned back once more, offering a final refrain that hung in the air, as much as a question as a challenge: "Are you with us?"

Bruce Springsteen Takes a Stand of Resistance in Minneapolis

WhenBruce Springsteenwalked onstage, he didn't mince words. He didn't clear his throat, rhetorically or otherwis...
Megan Thee Stallion discharged from hospital after health scare during Broadway show

Megan Thee Stallion has been discharged from the hospital after falling "very ill" during a Broadway performance on Tuesday.

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The rapper and songwriter was hospitalized Tuesday night after "experiencing concerning symptoms" during a performance of "Moulin Rouge!", a spokesperson told ABC News in a statement Wednesday.

Megan is currently starring in the Broadway show as Zidler.

"Doctors ultimately identified extreme exhaustion, dehydration, vasoconstriction and low metabolic levels as the cause of her symptoms," the statement continued. "Megan has since been treated, discharged and is now resting."

The statement thanked the star's supporters and noted Megan would resume her role in "Moulin Rouge!" on Thursday.

The "Savage" artist took to social media on Wednesday to reflect on the incident, calling it a "wake-up call."

Theo Wargo/Getty Images - PHOTO: Megan Thee Stallion makes her Broadway debut in Moulin Rouge! The Musical at Al Hirschfeld Theatre on March 24, 2026 in New York City.

"I've been pushing myself past my limits lately, running on empty, and my body finally said enough. It honestly scared me," she wrote in the caption of anInstagram post. "I thought I was gonna faint on stage, I really tried to push through my performance but I just couldn't."

Megan wrote that she would take one day to "rest, reset, and take care of myself," adding that she would return to the show "stronger, clearer, and ready to give you 100% the way you deserve."

A previous statement shared with ABC News on behalf of Megan's spokesperson read, "During Tuesday night's production, Megan started feeling very ill and was promptly transported to a local hospital, where her symptoms are currently being evaluated."

Cast of 'Moulin Rouge! The Musical' performs on 'GMA'

The statement added, "We will share additional updates as more information becomes available."

A prompt that appears on the show's ticket purchase page states that Megan will not be performing in Wednesday night's show.

Breakfast Club morning show host Loren Lorosaposted on Xthat was in attendance at Tuesday night's show, where Megan fell ill.

"Announcement just came on in the theatre .. they have removed Meg Thee Stallion from the show as Zidler for the rest of the night," Lorosa wrote at the time.

She added that Megan was eventually replaced by "a black male actor," and that the show continued.

Megankicked off her eight-week run asZidlerin late March, with plans to conclude the role on May 17.

Last week, the "Savage" rappertook to social mediato share clips from her Broadway debut, writing, "So grateful for this incredible cast & crew & everyone who worked so hard to make opening night a success!!"

"HOTTIES IM ON BROADWAY!!" she added.

Megan Thee Stallion discharged from hospital after health scare during Broadway show

Megan Thee Stallion has been discharged from the hospital after falling "very ill" during a Broadway performan...
We're Getting a Royal Wedding This Summer!

"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links."

Harper's Bazaar cheltenham, england march 13 embargoed for publication in uk newspapers until 24 hours after create date and time harriet sperling and peter phillips attend day 4 'gold cup day' of the cheltenham festival at cheltenham racecourse on march 13, 2026 in cheltenham, england photo by max mumbyindigogetty images

Aroyal weddingis coming! Peter Phillips, the eldest grandson of the lateQueen Elizabeth IIandPrince Philip, is set to marry Harriet Sperling this summer, a spokesperson for the couple has confirmed.

Phillips is the son of Princess Anne and the Princess Royal's first husband, Captain Mark Phillips. Sperling, meanwhile, is a pediatric nurse and freelance writer.

The two began dating in 2024, making their public debut at the Badminton Horse Trials in Gloucestershire, U.K., in May of that year. In August 2025, they announced their engagement.

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Over the last couple of years, Sperling has accompanied Phillips to various public events, including Royal Ascot and Wimbledon. She has also attended royal gatherings—her most high-profile one being on December 28, 2025, when she joined the royals at the morning service at St. Mary Magdalene Church on the Sandringham Estate after Christmas.

cheltenham, england march 13 embargoed for publication in uk newspapers until 24 hours after create date and time harriet sperling and peter phillips attend day 4 'gold cup day' of the cheltenham festival at cheltenham racecourse on march 13, 2026 in cheltenham, england photo by max mumbyindigogetty images

Phillips and Sperling will wed in an intimate ceremony at All Saints Church, in Cirencester, England, on Saturday, June 6. And Phillips's senior royal relatives—including Prince William andPrincess Catherine—will likely attend.

"Both families have been informed jointly of the wedding date by invitation," the engaged couple's spokesperson said in a statement obtained byPeople. "Their Majesties The King and Queen, The Prince and Princess of Wales have also been informed of the announcement. Further details will be announced in due course."

cheltenham, england march 13 embargoed for publication in uk newspapers until 24 hours after create date and time harriet sperling and peter phillips attend day 4 'gold cup day' of the cheltenham festival at cheltenham racecourse on march 13, 2026 in cheltenham, england photo by max mumbyindigogetty images

This will be Phillips's second wedding. He was previously married to Autumn Kelly from 2008 to 2021, and they share two daughters, Savannah and Isla. (He is the first of his generation of the royal family to divorce.) Sperling is also a parent; she has a daughter named Georgia from a previous relationship.

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We’re Getting a Royal Wedding This Summer!

"Hearst Magazines and Yahoo may earn commission or revenue on some items through these links." Aro...
What Jesse Solomon knew about 'Summer House' romance drama

Jesse Solomon is making his role in the ongoing drama between hisSummer Housecostars very clear.

Entertainment Weekly Jesse Solomon on 'Summer House'Credit: Kareem Black/Bravo

When fans began questioning how much Solomon knew before Amanda Batula and West Wilsonconfirmed their rumored romanceon social media Tuesday, he stepped into the conversation to say he knew as much as anyone else.

Commenting on an Instagram post that asked if Solomon was theTom Schwartz to Wilson's Tom Sandoval, he said "I heard the rumors but they were denied to me multiple times. The post referenced Schwartz's part in "Scandoval," the frenzy that erupted after his business partner andVanderpump Rulescostar Sandovalcheated on his then-girlfriend of nine years,Ariana Madix, with their friendRachel "Raquel" Leviss.

Jesse Solomon's Instagram commentCredit: Jesse Solomon/Instagram

Wilson and Batula confirmed their relationship in a joint statement on Tuesday, weeks aftergossip blog DeuxMoi reportedthat they were allegedly hooking up. The statement came a little over two months after Batulaannounced her splitfrom husband andSummer Housecostar Kyle Cooke.

While severalSummer Housecast members have weighed in on the situation on social media, Solomon has refrained from picking a side. But as another another Bravo star tells it, he'd been dropping hints that a big reveal was coming.

Stopping bySiriusXM'sSmiths Sisters Liveon Tuesday,The Valley's Zack Wickham said he heard Solomon's version of the story through the grapevine.

"I will say that one of our friends' cousins was on a vacation and met Jesse Solomon, and he just told her everything and then she told me," Wickham said. "So, I'm like, if what he told her is real, then brace yourselves, America."

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Wickham then apologized for stirring the pot, adding, "Sorry Jesse, I didn't mean to throw you under the bus. I'm not saying anything publicly, but oh my God."

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Cookerecently broke his silence about his ex's new relationship, saying that he was "more concerned" about his ex than his own feelings. The star claimed that Batula has been getting "cyber-bullied" by the show's viewers amid the drama of her and Wilson releasing their joint statement.

"I'm obviously frustrated, I mean we have a new show coming out and there's so much that gets unpacked there," Cooke told "street journalist" Adam Glyn. "I'm obviously disappointed in her... but just hearing her and hearing how unwell she is, and [her] dark thoughts, I just ask people to just, maybe, pull off the gas a little on the cyberbullying and hate."

Lindsay Hubbard, Dara Levitan, KJ Dillard, West Wilson, Mia Calabrese, Kyle Cooke, Jesse Soloman, Levi Sebree, Ben Waddell, Amanda Batula, Ciara Miller, Carle Radke, and Bailey Taylor on 'Summer House'Credit: Kareem Black/Bravo

Cooke said that he found out about the relationship "over the weekend" and got a heads-up before Batula and Wilson posted their statement. Cooke also shared that he's spoken to costar Ciara Miller — Wilson's ex — and that Wilson himself reached out with a "half-assed text message." He added that he doesn't "understand the timeline just yet" of when the pair got together.

Miller has not spoken out since Batula and Wilson confirmed their relationship, butshe no longer follows either costar on Instagram.

Read the original article onEntertainment Weekly

What Jesse Solomon knew about 'Summer House' romance drama

Jesse Solomon is making his role in the ongoing drama between hisSummer Housecostars very clear. When fans b...
Howie Mandel Says He 'Didn't Mean to Embarrass Anybody' After Apologizing to Kelly Ripa for On-Air Moment

Howie Mandel is sharing more about his viral exchange with Kelly Ripa on Live with Kelly and Mark

People Howie Mandel; Kelly RipaCredit: Getty(2)

NEED TO KNOW

  • During a March 31 appearance on Hot Mics with Billy Bush, Mandel said he "didn't mean to embarrass anybody" after Ripa and Mark Consuelos commented on his appearance

  • "I hope it ends soon because I didn't mean to cause any disruption," he said of attention on the interaction

Howie Mandel"didn't mean to embarrass anybody" after apologizing toKelly Ripaover their awkward on-airexchange.

The comedian, 70, appeared on a Tuesday, March 31 segment ofHot Mics with Billy Bush, in which he reflected on the aftermath of his recent viralLive with Kelly and Markmoment and apology video.

During the March 23 episode of Ripa andMark Consuelos' daytime talk show, Mandel had an awkward exchange with the hosts, who complimented Mandel's appearance and told him he looked "great" after discussing his age. Mandel argued that the compliment didn't "mean anything" as it came with a "caveat." Days later, he posted a video apologizing to Ripa and explaining that the comment was "meant as a joke."

Now, Mandel said he has regrets about sharing the Instagram post, adding that he "didn't mean to cause any disruption."

"Obviously I told a joke that didn't land well," Mandel said, as he appeared onHot Micswearing a new hairstyle and T-shirt of himself as a child.

He added, "Comedians always say, 'If you can make one person laugh, you're doing the job.' But apparently that's not enough... I'm reading and there's no stopping it and I don't understand. I tried to stop it. I tried to apologize. I agreed with people. I do."

Howie Mandel attends the 2023 UCLA Neurosurgery Visionary Award presentation on Oct. 11, 2023Credit: Greg Doherty/Getty

Mandel then said he didn't "know" who got offended by the on-air moment, despite "reading the articles" online. "If somebody is offended, if somebody feels that I did wrong, then I apologize. I don't believe in apologizing but I said, as I said in that post — which, I kind of regret making the post," he said, before Bush asked him why.

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"Because I don't think you should apologize for a joke," Mandel said. "And I do agree. People are saying it wherever I go now, I do think I look good. I don't even think the caveat is for 70. I just think I look good."

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As Mandel put it, up until "a couple weeks ago," he didn't "really focus" on his appearance. "I feel bad," he said. "I don't know what's going on and I don't know when this will end. And I hope it ends soon because I didn't mean to cause any disruption. I didn't mean to embarrass anybody."

After Bush questioned the famously bald comedian about the "hair on your head" at the end of their discussion, Mandel jokingly sat in silence before storming out of the podcast studio and slamming the door on his way out.

In his apology video, uploaded on Saturday, March 28, the star said he doesn't think a comedian "needs to apologize for a joke" and that it's "hard" for him to do so publicly.

After apologizing to Ripa, Mandel called her "absolutely right." A few comedian friends sounded off about the ordeal in the comment section,as didLive with Kelly and Markexecutive producerMichael Gelman, who commented that Mandel indeed looks great "for your age."

Read the original article onPeople

Howie Mandel Says He 'Didn't Mean to Embarrass Anybody' After Apologizing to Kelly Ripa for On-Air Moment

Howie Mandel is sharing more about his viral exchange with Kelly Ripa on  Live with Kelly and Mark NEED TO KN...

 

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