Space Jam: Juego de Campeones


08:15 am - 09:45 am, Sunday, November 16 on TNT Latin America (Mexico) ()

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About this Broadcast
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Michael Jordan se retira de la NBA para dedicarse de manera profesional al Baseball. Mientras tanto, unos malignos extraterrestres quieren secuestrar a los Looney Tunes (Bugs Bunny, El pato Lucas, Elmer, etc...) para llevarlos esclavizados a un parque de

1996 Spanish, Castilian HD Level Unknown
Otro Fantasía Acción/aventura Baloncesto Niños Ciencia Ficción Dibujos Animados Comedia Animado Familia

Cast & Crew
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Michael Jordan (Actor) .. Himself
Charles Barkley (Actor) .. Himself
Patrick Ewing (Actor) .. Himself
Wayne Knight (Actor) .. Stan Podolak
Theresa Randle (Actor) .. Juanita
Bill Murray (Actor) .. Himself
Larry Bird (Actor)
Thom Barry (Actor)
Brandon Hammond (Actor) .. Michael à 10 ans
Shawn Bradley (Actor) .. Shawn Bradley
Del Harris (Actor) .. Del Harris
Vlade Divac (Actor) .. Vlade Divac
Cedric Ceballos (Actor) .. Cedric Ceballos
Jim Rome (Actor) .. Jim Rome
Paul Westphal (Actor) .. Paul Westphal
Danny Ainge (Actor) .. Danny Ainge
Bebe Drake (Actor) .. Jordan Housekeeper
Patricia Heaton (Actor) .. Le fan
Dan Castellaneta (Actor) .. Le fan
Nicky McCrimmon (Actor) .. La fille qui joue au basket-ball
William G. Schilling (Actor) .. Le golfeur
Manner Washington (Actor) .. Jeffery Jordan
Eric Gordon (Actor) .. Marcus Jordan
Penny Bae Bridges (Actor) .. Jasmine Jordan
Larry Johnson (Actor) .. Larry Johnson

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Michael Jordan (Actor) .. Himself
Born: February 17, 1963
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: To say that acting is not what Michael Jordan is primarily known for is a very large understatement. Jordan was not only the driving force behind a Chicago Bulls basketball team that won six NBA championships throughout the 1990s, but for a whole new generation of professional athletes. Jordan became an institution, with commercial endorsements running from Nike shoes, to Gatorade sports drinks, to Hanes underwear. By the time he retired (for the second time) in 1998 from professional basketball, Jordan was worth millions not only because of his wizardry on the basketball court, but also because of his shrewd business savvy. Well before his retirement(s), however, he had dabbled with acting. He made a guest appearance on Saturday Night Live at the height of the Bulls' dominance, and shortly after ending his first self-imposed retirement, he made the movie Space Jam. Space Jam was very loosely based on his experiences at the end of his minor league baseball playing career, but, of course, with the added twist of being kidnapped, so to speak, by a bunch of unruly Warner Bros. cartoons. In 2002 Jordan once again found himself the center of attention as the previous owner of a pair of "magical" sneakers that turn a 14-year-old orphan into a professional basketball wiz in Like Mike.
Charles Barkley (Actor) .. Himself
Born: February 20, 1963
Birthplace: Leeds, Alabama, United States
Trivia: Was a reserve on his high-school varsity team during his junior year, and became a starter as a senior after a sudden growth spurt. Played for Auburn University for three years and led the Southeastern Conference all three years in rebounding; was named the 1980s SEC Player of the Decade. Was famously cut from the 1984 Olympic basketball team by coach Bobby Knight for gaining weight; later won gold medals in 1992 and 1996. Was the fifth overall pick in the 1984 NBA draft by the Philadelphia 76ers. Named NBA MVP in 1993; played in 11 NBA All-Star games. Is the shortest player in NBA history to lead the league in rebounding. His No. 34 jersey was retired by Auburn, Philadelphia and Phoenix. Selected as one of the 50 Greatest Players in NBA history as part of a celebration for the league's 50th anniversary. Upon his retirement in 2000, was one of only four NBA players to amass 20,000 points, 10,000 rebounds and 4000 assists. First player from Alabama to be elected to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame (2006). Became an NBA TV commentator upon retirement. Nicknames include Sir Charles and the Round Mound of Rebound.
Patrick Ewing (Actor) .. Himself
Born: August 05, 1962
Birthplace: Kingston, Jamaica
Trivia: Played cricket and soccer while growing up in Jamaica. Moved to Cambridge, Massachusetts in 1975. While attending Georgetown University, took the Hoyas to the championship game of the NCAA Tournament in three of the four years he was there. Became a U.S. citizen while at Georgetown. Drafted first overall by New York Knicks in 1985. Played for the U.S. Olympic team that won gold medals in 1984 and 1992. Was the NBA Rookie of the Year and an 11-time All-Star. Was selected for the Hall of Fame as an individual and as a member of the 1992 U.S. Olympic team. Also a member of the U.S. Olympic Hall of Fame. His number 33 was retired by the Knicks in 2003. Co-authored a children's book about painting, called In the Paint. With agent David Falk, donated $3.3 million to help build athletic center at Georgetown University. Started Ewing Athletics, a company that now specializes in retro-style sneakers. Son Patrick Ewing Jr., played basketball for Georgetown and for the New York Knicks.
Wayne Knight (Actor) .. Stan Podolak
Born: August 07, 1955
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: Versatile American character actor Wayne Knight has been frequently on stage, screen and television since the late 1970s. In the early '80s, he temporarily left acting (after appearing over 1,000 times in the play Gemini) to become a private detective. In 1986, Knight returned to film in The Sex O'Clock News. He has worked with a number of distinguished directors including Oliver Stone, Kenneth Branagh and Steven Spielberg playing roles ranging from comics to villains. On television, he is best known for playing the oily, self-serving postman Newman on the long-running sitcom Seinfeld, and Officer Don on the outworldly comedy Third Rock From the Sun.
Theresa Randle (Actor) .. Juanita
Born: December 27, 1964
Trivia: Though American actress Theresa Randle has only been in films since 1990, she has already worked with some of the biggest names in Hollywood. She made her debut with a small role in Maid to Order (1987) and appeared sporadically in films such as Easy Wheels (1989), but first gained national notice when director Spike Lee cast her as an aspiring actress who works for a phone sex service in Girl 6 (1996). Prior to that, Randle had played small roles in two other Lee films, Jungle Fever (1991) and Malcolm X (1992). Other notable directors with whom she has worked include Robert Townsend and John Landis. In 1996, she starred opposite basketball superstar Michael Jordan and the stars of the old Warner Bros.' cartoons in the b-ball fantasy Space Jam. In 1997, Randle played a major role in the film adaptation of Todd McFarlane's popular comic Spawn (1997).
Bill Murray (Actor) .. Himself
Born: September 21, 1950
Birthplace: Wilmette, Illinois, United States
Trivia: Of the many performers to leap into films from the springboard of the television sketch comedy series Saturday Night Live, Bill Murray has been among the most successful and unpredictable, forging an idiosyncratic career allowing him to stretch from low-brow slapstick farce to intelligent adult drama. Born in Wilmette, IL, on September 21, 1950, Murray was an incorrigible child, kicked out of both the Boy Scouts and Little League. At the age of 20, he was also arrested for attempting to smuggle close to nine pounds of marijuana through nearby O'Hare Airport. In an attempt to find direction in his life, he joined his older brother, Brian Doyle-Murray, in the cast of Chicago's Second City improvisational comedy troupe. He later relocated to New York City, joining radio's National Lampoon Hour. Both Murray siblings were also in a 1975 off-Broadway spin-off, also dubbed The National Lampoon Hour; there Murray was spotted by sportscaster Howard Cosell, who recruited him for the cast of his ABC variety program, titled Saturday Night Live With Howard Cosell. On the NBC network, a program also named Saturday Night Live was creating a much bigger sensation; when, after one season, the show's breakout star Chevy Chase exited to pursue a film career, producer Lorne Michaels tapped Murray as his replacement. Murray too became a celebrity, developing a fabulously insincere and sleazy comic persona which was put to good use in his first major film, the 1979 hit Meatballs. He next starred as the famed gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson in the film biography Where the Buffalo Roam, a major disaster. However, 1980's Caddyshack was a masterpiece of slob comedy, with Murray memorable as a maniacal rangeboy hunting the gopher that is slowly destroying his golf course. The film launched him to the ranks of major stardom; the follow-up, the armed services farce Stripes, was an even bigger blockbuster, earning over 40 million dollars at the box office. Murray next appeared, unbilled, in 1982's Tootsie before starring with Dan Aykroyd and Harold Ramis in 1984's Ghostbusters. The supernatural comedy was one of the decade's biggest hits, earning over 130 million dollars and spawning a cartoon series, action figures, and even a chart-topping theme song (performed by Ray Parker Jr.). Murray now ranked among the world's most popular actors, and he next fulfilled a long-standing dream by starring in and co-writing an adaptation of the W. Somerset Maugham novel The Razor's Edge. Few fans knew what to make of his abrupt turn from broad farce to literary drama, however, and as a result the film flopped. Murray spent the next several years in self-imposed exile, making only a cameo appearance in the 1986 musical comedy Little Shop of Horrors. After much deliberation, he finally selected his comeback vehicle -- 1988's Scrooged, a black comic retelling of Dickens' A Christmas Carol. While it performed moderately well, it was not the smash many predicted. Nor was 1989's Ghostbusters II, which grossed less than half of the first picture. The 1990 crime comedy Quick Change, which Murray co-directed with Howard Franklin, was also a disappointment, but 1991's What About Bob? was an unqualified hit. In 1993, Murray earned his strongest notices to date for Groundhog Day, a sublime comedy directed by longtime conspirator Ramis. Beginning with 1994's acclaimed Ed Wood, in which he appeared as a transsexual, Murray's career choices grew increasingly eccentric; in 1996 alone, he starred in the little-seen Larger Than Life as a motivational speaker, co-starred as a bowling champion in Kingpin, and appeared as himself in the family film Space Jam. In 1998, Murray took on a similarly eccentric role in Wes Anderson's Rushmore. Playing a business tycoon competing with an equally eccentric 15-year-old (Jason Schwartzman) for the affections of a first grade teacher (Olivia Williams), Murray did some of his best work in years and won the Best Supporting Actor award from the New York Film Critics Circle. The film's success helped to put the actor back in the forefront, and he drew further exposure that year from his appearance as a sleazy lawyer in the relentlessly trashy Wild Things. The following year, he could be seen in Cradle Will Rock, Tim Robbins' look at the often contentious relationship between art and politics in 1930s America.Though the mere thought of Murray as Polonius in a film adaptation of William Shakespeare's Hamlet may have elicited dumbounded looks and confused laughter early in his career, that was precisely how the versatile thespian ushered in the new millennium in director Micheal Almereyda's modern updating of the classic drama. Subsequently landing laughs as the superspy point person Bosley in the big screen adaptation of the classic 1970's television hit Charlie's Angels, Murray's interpretation of the character would be taken over by popular comic Bernie Mac in the film's 2003 sequel. After taking a brief voyage into gross-out territory with the Farrelly brother's Osmosis Jones in 2001, a re-teaming with Rushmore director Anderson resulted in a small but memorable supporting performance in the same year's The Royal Tenenbaums. In 2003 Murray essayed the role that would offer what was perhaps his most heartfelt combination of personal drama and touching comedy to date in director Sofia Coppola's acclaimed indie film Lost in Translation. Cast as a washed up American actor who strikes up a tentative friendship with the young wife of a superstar photographer while on a stay in Japan to endorse a popular brand of whiskey, Murray's low-key charm proved the perfect balance to co-star Scarlett Johansson's youthful malaise. Virtually across the board, critics were bowled over by the subtle depth of Murray's performance, leading to Best Actor honors from The New York Film Critics Circle, The Boston Society of Film Critics, The Los Angeles Film Critics Association, The San Francisco Film Critics Circle, The National Society of Film Critics, The Golden Globes, and The Independent Spirit Awards. But the one award that remained elusive to Murray was Oscar. Though nominated, the prize ultimately went to Sean Penn for Mystic River.In 2004, along with providing the voice for a CGI version of Garfield the cat, Murray once again teamed up with director Wes Anderson, starring as as a world-renowned oceanographer in The Life Aquatic with Steve Zissou. While The Life Aquatic was met with mixed reviews, Murray's performance in the 2005 Jim Jarmusch film Broken Flowers netted virtually unanimous acclaim. Over the next several years, Murray would maintain his selective film career, appearing in acclaimed films like Get Low, Passion Play, and Moonrise Kingdom.
Larry Bird (Actor)
Born: December 07, 1956
Birthplace: West Baden, Indiana, United States
Trivia: Left Indiana University and the Hoosiers basketball team a month into his freshman year after being homesick in a big city. Nicknamed "The Hick from French Lick" and "Larry Legend." Won three NBA championships (in 1981, '84 and '86) and was named NBA Finals MVP twice (1984 and '86). Voted NBA MVP three seasons in a row, from 1984 to '86. Retired after helping the United States Olympic team, dubbed the "Dream Team," win a gold medal at the 1992 Olympics in Barcelona. Coached the Indiana Pacers from 1997 to 2000, leading the Pacers to the 2000 NBA Finals. Elected to Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1998. Named President of Basketball Operations for the Pacers in 2003. In 2012, became the first person to win NBA MVP, NBA Coach of the Year, and NBA Executive of the Year. Larry the Bird, Twitter's bird logo, is named after him.
Ahmad Rashad (Actor)
Born: November 19, 1949
Birthplace: Portland, Oregon, United States
Trivia: Was named an All-America running back and wide receiver at University of Oregon. Changed his name to Ahmad Rashad when he converted to Islam in 1972. Was the fourth overall draft pick by the St. Louis Cardinals in 1972. Also played for the Buffalo Bills before becoming a four-time Pro Bowl receiver for the Minnesota Vikings. After retiring from the NFL, worked as a broadcaster for NBC, ABC and ESPN, among others. Served as host and executive producer for NBC series NBA Inside Stuff, and as host for shows including Real TV, Celebrity Mole and Caesar's Challenge. Proposed to his third wife, Phylicia Rashad (then Phylicia Ayers-Allen), on an NBC football pregame show on Thanksgiving Day in 1985; O.J. Simpson was his best man at their wedding. Was chosen for the College Football Hall of Fame in 2007.
Thom Barry (Actor)
Born: December 06, 1950
Birthplace: Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Trivia: With his distinct appearance, the bald and imposing African-American player Thom Barry made a seemingly perfect character actor, and thus found himself frequently cast as guards, police detectives, and heavies in mainstream Hollywood features, from the early '90s on. He landed a bit part as a guard in Rob Reiner's The American President (1995), appeared as Samahani in Congo (1995), and played Sgt. Marcus in the Shaquille O'Neal-headlined superhero picture Steel (1997). Barry maintained a higher profile as Agent Bilkins in two Jerry Bruckheimer-produced action pictures, The Fast and the Furious (2001) and its sequel 2 Fast 2 Furious (2003). Additionally, after years of guest-acting work on the small screen, he signed for his first regular role -- that of homicide investigator Will Jeffries -- on the popular detective series Cold Case (2006).
Brandon Hammond (Actor) .. Michael à 10 ans
Born: February 06, 1984
Shawn Bradley (Actor) .. Shawn Bradley
Del Harris (Actor) .. Del Harris
Vlade Divac (Actor) .. Vlade Divac
Cedric Ceballos (Actor) .. Cedric Ceballos
Born: August 02, 1969
Jim Rome (Actor) .. Jim Rome
Born: October 14, 1964
Paul Westphal (Actor) .. Paul Westphal
Danny Ainge (Actor) .. Danny Ainge
Bebe Drake (Actor) .. Jordan Housekeeper
Patricia Heaton (Actor) .. Le fan
Born: March 04, 1958
Birthplace: Cleveland, Ohio, United States
Trivia: Born and raised in Ohio, actress Patricia Heaton got her start on the stage, performing with the off-Broadway company Stage Three. In 1989, she got her screen-acting big break when she was cast in a recurring role on ABC's thirtysomething. Over the next several years, she could be seen in a number of failed sitcoms, small TV guest roles, and bit film parts. But in 1996, Heaton landed the role that would make her career, that of long-suffering matriarch Debra Barone on the hit CBS sitcom Everybody Loves Raymond. Heaton starred on the show through its nine-year run, receiving seven consecutive Emmy nominations and two wins. Following the conclusion of Everybody Loves Raymond in 2005, Heaton appeared in a pair of made-for-TV movies (The Engagement Ring and The Path to 9/11) before making her way back to sitcom territory in 2007, when she began starring as a TV news anchor opposite Kelsey Grammer on Fox's Back to You, and again 2009 for The Middle, in which she plays the lead role of Frankie Heck, a working-class mother devoted to her family despite her struggles at work and as caretaker for her ailing mother.
Dan Castellaneta (Actor) .. Le fan
Born: October 29, 1957
Birthplace: Chicago, IL
Trivia: Forever associated with his ongoing voice work as Homer J. Simpson on Matt Groening and James L. Brooks' long, long-running Fox animated sitcom The Simpsons, Dan Castellaneta is well-reputed for his modest, unassuming presence in real life and his paradoxical ability to spin characters -- seemingly from out of nowhere -- that instantly take on lives of their own. Groening once famously remarked that "Dan can do everything, and he practically does....You might never notice him, but then he opens his mouth and he completely creates one character after another.'' Born in 1957, Castellaneta grew up in the small town of Oak Grove, IL, in the northwestern corner of the state, near the Iowa border. As a self-described introvert who developed and honed a facility for slipping into the guise of characters to entertain and make social situations easier (read: class clown), Castellaneta nevertheless diverged from this path in college and worked toward a career as a high-school art teacher via his studies at Northern Illinois University. Then, one of Castellaneta's professors (perhaps sensing some dissatisfaction) wisely admonished him to only work at a field, and in a job, that he loved. Castellaneta reasoned that acting fit the bill, and auditioned for the infamous sketch comedy troupe Second City shortly after graduation. The troupe hired him, and in time, the skills that the actor projected led to his involvement on the then-fledgling Fox network's sketch comedy series The Tracey Ullman Show, which premiered on Sunday, April 5, 1987. Castellaneta joined Ullman, Julie Kavner, Joe Malone, Sam McMurray, and for a time Anna Levine in live-action skits that parodied all aspects of Western culture.As a most unusual aspect of her program, Ullman opted to feature crudely animated, offbeat segments as Monty Python-style transitions between the individual sketches. The episodes in question were drawn by Gabor Csupo and Groening (at that time, comic-strip artist of growing infamy known for his Life Is Hell series starring a buck-toothed, bug-eyed rabbit named Bucky). Although the subjects of the shorts initially varied, within a few months they began to focus exclusively on a hyper-dysfunctional blue-collar family called the Simpsons; Kavner and Castellaneta voiced parents Homer and Marge Simpson, respectively. Those segments gained such massive popularity that they eventually outshone that of the Ullman show itself (which wrapped in September 1990), and executive producer James L. Brooks, following this cue, decided to spin off the Simpsons into their own weekly animated series. Kavner and Castellaneta, of course, followed Brooks to the new program, joined in time by longtime Brooks acquaintance Harry Shearer, as well as Nancy Cartwright, Yeardley Smith, Hank Azaria, and numerous others.The Simpsons premiered on Fox on December 17, 1989, and became not simply a hit but a phenomenon. It shot up to instantly become one of the highest-rated series on television, and attained iconic status. The program scored as a cause célèbre not simply with children (as expected) but with adult viewers as well, who appreciated the show's ability to skewer all aspects of society and culture. (It generated a billion-dollar marketing boom as well -- an onslaught of Bart Simpson-themed T-shirts, watches, dolls, beach towels, and everything else under the sun.) The program also drew an onslaught of celebrity guests -- everyone from Larry King to Tony Bennett to Beverly D'Angelo and Linda Ronstadt. Castellaneta himself will forever be tied to Homer Simpson -- the lunkheaded, potbellied, beer-swilling, donut-loving nuclear-plant worker with not a whole lot upstairs, and a thoroughly crass lifestyle, but also a big, soft heart (a quality which Castellaneta's co-workers insist that he alone brought to the character). But hardcore Simpsons cultists and even its less attentive devotees will realize that Castellaneta voices not only Homer (as mentioned), but also the gravelly voiced, booze-swilling, womanizing clown Krusty; local drunk Barney Gumble; Scottish elementary-school groundskeeper Willie; the octogenarian family patriarch Grampa Simpson; and innumerable others. Certainly, it would be difficult to imagine a program that took fuller advantage of Castellaneta's versatility with characterizations.Alongside The Simpsons, Castellaneta has also pursued a career as a live-action film and television performer, and spent most of the late '80s, '90s, and 2000s vacillating between the two mediums. His career on the big screen began at least a year prior to his involvement with Ullman and co., when he debuted with a bit part as Brian in the now-forgotten Garry Marshall dramedy Nothing in Common (1986), starring Jackie Gleason, Tom Hanks, Eva Marie Saint, and Sela Ward. In 1989, Castellaneta landed bit parts in two wildly different films: one as a maître d' in the Jim Belushi cop comedy K-9, and another (as one of Danny DeVito's clients) in the James L. Brooks-produced jet-black marital farce The War of the Roses. Castellaneta temporarily withdrew from live-action cinematic work in the early '90s, before returning to audiences as the narrator in Super Mario Bros. (1993) and Phil in Warren Beatty's Love Affair (1994). As the Castellaneta's career continued, he then segued into cinematic animated voice-over work (doubtless encouraged by the ongoing success of The Simpsons), doing voices in such features as 2000's Rugrats in Paris (under the aegis of old colleague Gabor Csupo) and Hey Arnold! The Movie (2002). In 2007, Castellaneta extended his Homer characterization to the big screen with his work on The Simpsons Movie -- the first cinematic appearance of Groening's famous animated family.As for television, Castellaneta appeared as a supporting actor in numerous sitcoms during the 1990s. These included ALF (as Steve Michaels in the 1990 episode "Stayin' Alive"), Married...with Children (as Pete in the 1990 episode "The Dance Show"), Wings (as George Wexler in the 1994 episode "Moonlighting"), and Murphy Brown (as Tony Lucchesi in the 1995 episode "Specific Overtures.") He also voiced Genie (inheriting the role from Robin Williams) on the animated Aladdin TV series. Of the Simpsons cast, Castellaneta is one of the only actors to regularly do on-stage comedic improvisation alongside his series work. He is married to Simpsons writer Deb Lacusta, whom he wed in 1987.He continued to work steadily in animated films such as Rugrats in Paris: The Movie and Hey Arnold! The Movie, and landed traditional acting parts every once in a while in movies as diverse as the indie comedy I Want Someone to Eat Cheese With and the Will Smith drama The Pursuit of Happyness. In 2007 he voiced nearly 20 different parts in The Simpsons Movie. He also landed a part in JJ Abrams 2011 Spielberg-influenced family sci-fi film Super 8.
Nicky McCrimmon (Actor) .. La fille qui joue au basket-ball
William G. Schilling (Actor) .. Le golfeur
Born: August 30, 1939
Muggsy Bogues (Actor)
Randell Jordan (Actor)
Wyatt Knight (Actor)
Born: January 01, 1955
Trivia: Many know Wyatt Knight for his role as Tommy Turner in the 1982 sex comedy Porky's. The young actor was still a relative newcomer to the acting scene at the time, and he soon found more roles coming his way, reprising Tommy for two Porky's sequels and appearing projects like the TV movies Promised a Miracle and Those She Left Behind. In 1998, he appeared in the comedy Baby Geniuses, and in 2003 he played the title role in the made-for-cable kid's movie Maniac Magee.
Manner Washington (Actor) .. Jeffery Jordan
Eric Gordon (Actor) .. Marcus Jordan
Penny Bae Bridges (Actor) .. Jasmine Jordan
Born: July 29, 1990
Larry Johnson (Actor) .. Larry Johnson

Before / After
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06:34 am