Lorne Michaels, the creator of the long-running sketch comedy television show “Saturday Night Live” donated the materials from the show that launched
Live” creator Lorne Michaels has donated his career archive to the Harry Ransom Center cultural archive at the University of Texas
Lorne Michaels, the legendary creator and executive producer of Saturday Night Live (SNL), has donated his extensive archive to the Harry Ransom Center at The University of Texas at Austin.This remarkable collection documents Michaels's nearly 50-year career in television,
Beyonce’s album sparked national discussion about the exclusion of Black country music artists and was the backdrop to a unique UH course.
Gov. Greg Abbott swore in UT alumnus Jimmy Blacklock as chief justice of the Texas Supreme Court on Jan. 7. The Supreme Court of Texas is the state’s highest authority on civil and constitutional matters.
A coordinated collaboration with Texas Robotics, UT’s Machine Learning Lab and the Amazon Science Hub in the last days of the festival will bring together industry stakeholders, academics and community members to learn about the rapid changes happening in AI and robotics.
DEI terms are being removed from some public colleges. According to a landing page from The University of Texas at Austin (UT Austin), Texas Governor Greg Abbott signed Senate Bill 17, titled “Responsibility of Governing Boards Regarding Diversity,
University of Texas President Jay Hartzell's resignation was sudden, but an analysis shows it was just the latest in a string of departures.
The comic-actor, 56, spoke about his experience while speaking on the new Peacock docuseries SNL50: Beyond Saturday Night.
Lorne Michaels donates his "Saturday Night Live" archive to UT Austin's Harry Ransom Center, showcasing nearly 50 years of TV history.
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.
Art Markman, a professor of psychology at the University of Texas at Austin, says that humans have an inherent interest in true crime because stories like these enable us to be transported into situations that we wouldn’t find ourselves in normally ...