It's widely believed that Carrie Underwood is suing 'The View' over Joy Behar's comments about her performing at Trump's inauguration.
Joy Behar is promoting a new project that will feature an iconic soap opera veteran away from her normal job on The View.
Joy Behar is reflecting on how a near-death experience changed her life forever. The comedian, 82, opened up about suffering an ectopic pregnancy in 1979 on Friday’s episode of The View as part of a conversation about the new Hulu comedy series,
Elisabeth Hasselbeck is stepping in to defend Carrie Underwood after the singer's decision to perform at Donald Trump's inauguration sparked criticism from her former The View co-host, Joy Behar.
Elisabeth Hasselbeck slams Joy Behar for calling Carrie Underwood "un-American" for agreeing to perform at President-elect Trump's inauguration ceremony.
Comedian and "The View" host Joy Behar's latest endeavor is her play "My First Ex-Husband," which is holding its world premiere starting Jan. 29.
One would think singing at a presidential inauguration would be the ultimate show of patriotism. Not if you are Joy
"The View" co-host Joy Behar was already missing President Biden Thursday, despite him not officially leaving office until Monday, Inauguration Day.
Sunny Hostin supported her co-host’s hot take by calling out, “Say it, Joy!” but Griffin’s words proved to be Behar’s breaking point.
After the 47th U.S. president was sworn in for another term in office, he delivered a polarizing speech about his plans for the nation, including controversial comments on immigration policy, racial equity efforts, gender identity and several other high-stakes topics.
Joy Behar is opening up about a terrifying yet pivotal moment in her life. During the latest episode of ABC's The View, Behar and her co-hosts swapped stories about some of their "near-death experiences," prompting Behar, 82, to open up about an ectopic pregnancy she had in the late 70s.
Prospects for that appear slim, however, as both Hostin and panelist Sara Haines have had to take matters of Behar's phone into their own hands (literally) — such as grabbing Behar's noisy phone backstage after it went off live on the air and reaching over to silence it during the broadcast.