Andy Cohen and Anderson Cooper turned a New Year’s Eve hosting staple into a pop-culture running gag on CNN’s “New Year’s Eve Live,” repeatedly name-checking the buzzy hockey romance series Heated Rivalry while broadcasting from Times Square and counting down to 2026. The bits landed like inside jokes between old friends, then kept resurfacing as the night’s pace loosened and the conversation drifted from logistics to punch lines.
The Heated Rivalry talk kicked off after Cooper made an offhand comment about the comfort of “sleeping in your bed,” prompting Cohen to pounce with a teasing, “Oooh, Heated Rivalry!” Cohen then tried to cast the duo as the show’s central couple—declaring Cooper “Ilya” and himself “Shane”—before Cooper rejected the premise and fired back: “I’m Kip.” It was pure Cohen: taking a headline-grabbing series and using it as shorthand for flirtatious comedy, with Cooper playing the baffled straight man for half a beat before joining the bit.
Off camera, the joke sits inside a longer-running dynamic that has defined their telecast since 2017: Cooper loosens up, Cohen drives the timing. Cohen recently described a familiar turning point late in the night—saying that around 10:45 p.m. he starts “driving the ship” once he hears “the slur” in Cooper’s voice, a moment he treats like a cue to hit breaks and resets. The 2025-26 edition again featured hourly shots, plus a guest list that leaned into the variety-show feel.
That tone has carried scrutiny for years because it airs on a news network. In late 2022, CNN leadership moved to curb on-air drinking, with then-chief Chris Licht arguing internally that it chipped away at credibility and “respectability.” Rival host Ryan Seacrest publicly applauded that shift at the time, saying he did not “advocate drinking” on air. The network later loosened the approach again, and the Cohen-Cooper telecast has kept leaning into comedy—an entertainment-first lane that draws fans and side-eye in equal measure.















































