Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Weekly Poll Winner: Paul Rudd

As much as all the contestants on last week's poll are formidable actor/comedians, I'm glad Paul Rudd was picked as number one. And that's for one reason:

Paul Rudd can fit his whole fist in his mouth.

Actually, that's not the reason. The reason is because Paul Rudd is the only actor of the five (Will Ferrel, Steve Carell, Vince Vaughn and Ben Stiller) who is just now beginning to enjoy leading-man comedic success.

Rudd has actually been around longer than most people remember. He played Josh in 'Clueless' (almost 15 years ago now), was one of the few who to make it through 'Halloween 6: The Curse of Michael Myers' un-slashed, played in two Shakespeare adaptations--'Romeo and Juliet' and 'Twelfth Night'--and enjoyed a run on 'Friends'.

But it wasn't until Rudd latched onto the Judd Apatow crew in 'The 40 Year Old Virgin', that people really began to remember his name. And in the last year-or-so, with 'Role Models' and 'I Love You, Man', has enjoyed leading-man success in comedies that people actually saw.

Rudd's comedic style of acting is very dynamic, which enables him to play different types of roles, whereas many leading men (like the others on last week's poll), often continue playing themselves in different movies. Will Ferrel (almost) always plays Will Ferrel. Vince Vaughn (almost) always plays Vince Vaughn. And I'll skip out on saying that Ben Stiller (almost) always plays Ben Stiller, because it's not almost always...it's always. That's fine that they do, because that works for them.

But the fact that Paul Rudd can play several types of characters separates him from the rest of the group. He does a good job playing the apathetic husband in 'Knocked Up', and an equally good job playing the devoted fiance in 'I Love You, Man'. And his stoner/surfer dude role in 'Forgetting Sarah Marshall', despite it's brevity, is one of the more memorable parts of that movie.

He also does hilarious impressions, like his Robert Deniro in 'Knocked Up', or this one from 'Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story':



As a 40-year-old, Rudd still looks like he could play a 30-year-old, and at the time where he seems to be in his prime, doesn't show the signs of slowing down.

(I'm having a tough time finding more good clips...not because they don't exist, but they've all been taken off the web.)

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Weekly Poll Winner: Conan O'Brien

Thanks voters, I knew I could count on you. For what, I'm not sure, but thanks anyways.

Conan O'Brien, former host of NBC's Late Night With Conan O'Brien, which premiered in 1993, and as of June 1, 2009, he is now host of The Tonight Show.

Although he comes off as pretty goofy, Conan is actually real, real smart. According to The Boston Globe, he graduated valedictorian of his high school, and then attended Harvard University.

While there, he wrote for, and served as president of the university's humor magazine, the Harvard Lampoon.

His gig on the Late Show enjoyed moderate success for the first few years, before his recurring characters and shtick were slowly ingrained and cemented into pop culture.

Some of Conan's memorable contributions:

- his celebrity interviews, on the screen that drops down, with the cut-out mouths
- the horny manatee
- the masturbating bear
- the Walker, Texas Ranger lever (which may be partially responsible for the Chuck Norris phenomenon over the past five or so years)
- Triumph, the Insult Comic Dog

... and who could forget when he brought life to jar barf?



What I always found funny about Conan was how his jokes were usually pretty corny, but he told them in such a way that you knew that he knew they were.

He could stand there in his opening bit and tell a really stupid joke, that only got a few chuckles from the crowd, and he would acknowledge it. He is not your average stand-up comedian. With his sketches, props and characters, he was so much more.

His youth gave him the energy to come out every night and do that dance and jump that always got the crowd going. And, since he often didn't get the best guests (because what A-list celebrity wants to be a guest on a show that airs from 12:35 to 2 am?), his sketches were what drew people in, turned them into fans, and drew them back.

It was almost like a hybrid of a standard late-show, combined with a sketch comedy show. It wasn't conventional, but it worked.

(You can grab more Conan clips if you search for Conan on Hulu--NBC loves giving their stuff to Hulu)

Tuesday, August 4, 2009

Weekly Poll Winner: Butters

Despite early polling favoring Cartman by a large margin, the tallies rolled in with Leopold "Butters" Stotch in the lead in the weekly poll of your favorite South Park character.

Butters appeared in the first few seasons of South Park, but did not become a recurring character until the fourth season when his popularity among fans was discovered.

During the fifth season, he took on the role of being the kid Cartman uses to do stuff that he can't get the other kids to do with him. Because Butters is so naive, trusting and longing for acceptance, he usually takes part in Cartman's plots.

At the end of the fifth season Butters was given his own episode, "Butters' Very Own Episode," which led up to his inclusion in the main cast by the sixth season. He is chosen to take the place of Kenny, who is killed off in the fifth season to make room for Butters to be "the fourth."

As easily manipulated as Butters is, he often finds himself the butt of Cartman, Kyle and Stan's jokes. When he doesn't want to play along, they hit him with that deep, biting criticism: "Kenny woulda done it."

The sixth season is a big time for the development of Butters' character, who is ultimately revealed to be as confused and screwed up as a child might actually be in his situation.

His exclusion from the foursome after the first five episodes--after gaining weight and then being subsequently lyposucked; after the boys hang fake testicles from his chin and force him to go on the Maury Povich show--leads him to develop an alter-ego by the name of Professor Chaos. Professor Chaos' mission is to cause chaos to the world that has been so cruel to him.

Eventually, however, Butters continues to be reluctantly brought into Cartman, Kyle and Stan's games and misadventures. He is abducted by Paris Hilton, sent to "bi-curious" camp, locked in an underground bomb shelter and hit in the eye with a Ninja throwing star:




Despite all of his shortcomings, Butters is still about the nicest boy in the South Park Elementary 4th grade classroom. He has several tender moments, where you realize that he's just a confused and sweet little kid. Still, his friends abuse him and make him do things he doesn't want to do, and his parents are slightly abusive.

This persona from the boy named Leopold Stotch makes him one of the most complex characters on the show. As the seasons with Butters developed, so did the window into why he is how he is.

Professor Chaos is his one escape from reality, where he can actually attempt to get back at society for all the ways they've wrong him. His plots are usually senseless, but having a side-kick, "General Disarray"--or Dougie, a second grade boy--allows Butters to exercise some kind of control, of which he seldom has otherwise.




Butters' lovable personality, boyish voice and awkward manner have made him a staple of South Park in many of its 13 seasons--a tradition I hope will continue in the remaining years of the show.
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