Updated

Saturdays at 11 p.m. ET

This weekend:

Sen. Norm Coleman, R-Minn., says that as long as Secretary General Kofi Annan (search) is in charge at the United Nations, the world will never know the full extent of the bribes and kickbacks involved in the Oil-for-Food scandal (search).

Dore Gold, former Israeli ambassador to the United Nations, with his thoughts and predictions on the upcoming elections in Iraq and for the Palestinians.

Also, actor-turned-president Robert Townsend wants to use television as a tool to teach old-fashioned values to teenagers and families.

And this week's edition of Column One on why United States needs to resign from the United Nations.

About the Show:

If you prefer conversation to confrontation, something new and different to the same old same-old, After Hours with Cal Thomas is your kind of show.

Each week Cal will sit down with some of the most influential people in entertainment, government and politics — from both sides of the aisle.

A show as original as the host himself. Where ideas and interesting people meet and the unexpected is always welcome.

At the corner of news and opinion, you'll find After Hours with Cal Thomas.

Straight From the Source:

FNC Update: You are the most widely syndicated political columnist in the country. What makes you want to do a television show talking to newsmakers who are not necessarily politicians?

Cal: My life is diverse. I originally wanted to be in show business and am a frequent patron of Broadway. There's a certain synergy between New York, Hollywood and Washington — politicians, actors, and actresses. I thought it would be fun to have both on every week — a politician and an actor, liberal, conservative, Republican, Democrat. We're going to have conversation instead of confrontation. Not that confrontation's bad, but this is late-night from New York, off the clock, no coat and tie (for me anyway), laid-back conversation that people might expect to see in their homes.

FNC Update: This is a different approach from most of the shows on FNC — It's going to be a little softer?

Cal: Yes, a little softer, but entertaining as well. I'll ask Vice President Cheney (our first guest) some obvious news-of-the-day questions, because those are important. But I am also going to ask him some other more personal questions. The same with some of the celebrities. We'll ask them show business questions, but we'll also ask them — many of whom will be political — for some political answers. I think it's going to be, as we say at FOX, fair and balanced.