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Jon Favreau, on THE TONIGHT SHOW WITH JAY LENO, NBC

Jon Favreau, on THE TONIGHT SHOW WITH JAY LENO, NBC

Jon Favreau, on THE TONIGHT SHOW WITH JAY LENO, NBC

Mo 5/3: Julia Louis-Dreyfus, Jon Favreau, Godsmack on THE TONIGHT SHOW WITH JAY LENO, NBC. Jon Favreau, an actor whose solid everyman quality has endeared him to audiences and critics alike, Jon Favreau first made his name with 1996′s Swingers. The story of a group of rat pack-obsessed, out-of-work actors slumming amiably through life in L.A., the indie-comedy was one of the year’s biggest sleeper hits and made a star out of Favreau, who also wrote the script. A native of Queens, NY, where he was born on October 19, 1966, Favreau was raised as the only child of two educators. After attending the Bronx High School of Science, he did an abbreviated stint at Queens College before heading to Chicago to pursue a comedy career. In Chicago, he studied improvisational comedy with Del_Close and was a member of the ImrovOlympic troupe. Favreau’s time in Chicago ended when he decided to head to L.A. to try and break into film; his experiences as a lovelorn, out-of-work actor would later provide the inspiration for Swingers. After years of false hopes and false starts that took the form of supporting roles in such disappointing films as Rudy and P.C.U., Favreau began channeling his experiences and those of his friends (who included fellow Swingers star Vince Vaughn) into a rudimentary script for Swingers. Encouraged to make his script into a film, the actor despaired of securing enough funding for the project until he met fledgling director Doug_Liman, who convinced him that the film could be made for 250,000 dollars. Costs were cut by filming largely without permits and making use of inexpensive shooting locations such as Favreau’s own apartment. The film’s low-budget charm was sufficient enough to sway the powers-that-be at Miramax who picked it up for distribution. When Swingers was eventually released in 1996, it was hailed by critics as a funny and painfully accurate account of the L.A. scene and its various faux-hipster denizens, as well as the dynamics at work amongst a group of guys (Favreau, Vaughn, and company) and the women they try so desperately to impress. In the wake of the film’s success, Favreau, who was being hailed as the latest in the long line of Hollywood “Next Big Things,” chose to star in Very Bad Things (1998), a black comedy directed by actor-turned-director Peter Berg. The film, in which Favreau played a soon-to-be married man whose Las Vegas bachelor party goes disastrously wrong, received very mixed reviews, although most critics praised the actor’s performance as a “suburban Joe” caught up in circumstances that rapidly spiral beyond his control. After playing the eponymous boxing legend in the made-for-TV Rocky Marciano in 1999, Favreau returned to the screen in 2000 to star as a football player in The_Replacements, a sports comedy directed by Howard_Deutch. That same year, he returned to the indie scene with Love & Sex, a take on urban romance.  In 2001, Favreau re-teamed with Vaughn for Made, a crime comedy that cast the two actors as aspiring mobsters and marked Favreau’s feature directorial debut. Also in 2001, Favreau made the jump to the small screen, producing and hosting IFC’s Dinner for Five, a candid roundtable program featuring fellow actors and filmmakers. In 2003, not only did Favreau show up in supporting roles in the hits Daredevil and Something’s_Gotta Give, his sophomore directorial effort, the Will Ferrell holiday comedy Elf proved to be one of the season’s biggest crowd-pleasers, grossing over 100 million dollars at the box office. He followed up that success by bringing Chris Van Allsburg’s Zathura to the big screen, although it did not match Elf’s box office success. After making a few cameos on TV shows like My Name Is Earl and Monk, Favreau re-teamed with Vince Vaughn once again for a supporting role in the 2006 comedy The Break-Up. He also lent his vocal talents to the animated film Open Season. That same year he announced he would be taking on directorial duties for the big screen adaptation of the comic book Iron Man.  Jon Favreau, on THE TONIGHT SHOW WITH JAY LENO, NBC tonight Mo 5/3: Julia Louis-Dreyfus, and Godsmack

Horatio Sanz, Chris Parnell Join Jon Heder In New Comedy Central Sitcom

Chris Parnell

Chris Parnell

Horatio Sanz, Chris Parnell Join Jon Heder In New Comedy Central Sitcom.  Former “Saturday Night Live” members Chris Parnell and Horatio Sanz are set to join “Napoleon Dynamite” star Jon Heder in a new Comedy Central untitled sitcom. The trio are starring in the multi-camera comedy produced by Gary Sanchez Productions, which is led by Will Ferrell, Adam McKay and Chris Henchy. The show will focus on Heder as a young man who does everything just to reach his dreams, even if it means losing his job and sleeping on his parents’ couch. He enlists the help of his friends – an ex-convict played by Sanz and a burned-out high school teacher played by Parnell – in planning schemes to save their hometown.  Though well-intentioned, these schemes don’t always come to fruition, forcing them to plan some more. The series will kick off production on March 31 in New York with a pilot scheduled to be aired in the third quarter of this year.  McKay said, “Anyone in the comedy world knows that Horatio Sanz and Chris Parnell are two of the funniest guys around. So we’re absolutely giddy that we got them for this show.”

Conan O’Brien Officially Signs ridiculous high amount $45 Million Exit Contract With NBC

 

What's Conan O Brien donating to haiti?

What's Conan O Brien donating to haiti?

This  can only happen in the US.

Now it’s official. Conan O’Brien has signed aridiculous high  amount  $45 million deal with NBC to leave the “Tonight Show.” Jay Leno will be taking over the show again as O’Brien and his staff exit the peacock network.  The new deal sees Coco getting hold of a cool $33 million for himself and an additional $12 million for his crew. It’s a lot more than the first reported $32.5 million for the redhead funnyman and only $7.5 million for the nearly 200 employees, who relocated from New York to California for “Tonight.”  Our source  added that unlike the previous draft, O’Brien would get the severance pay in whole regardless of whether he gets another hosting gig or not.  The catch: the contract includes a non-disparagement clause, meaning he may not bash NBC anymore. He will also not be able to host another show with a competing network until this fall.  His last “Tonight” gig will be on Friday, with Robin Williams and Barry Manilow scheduled for guesting on Thursday and Tom Hanks and Will Ferrell slated for Friday’s appearance.  Leno will be taking over “Tonight” again starting March 1 after the peacock network wraps up its Winter Olympics coverage.