Get a Job


06:34 am - 07:57 am, Today on HBO Comedy (East) ()

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About this Broadcast
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In this timely comedy about millennial malaise, a couple who recently graduated from college try to hack it in the real world. He learns that his writing internship will no longer lead to a job, while she is laid off from her first post-grad position.

2016 English Stereo
Comedy Entertainment

Cast & Crew
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Miles Teller (Actor) .. Will Davis
Anna Kendrick (Actor) .. Jillian Stewart
Bryan Cranston (Actor) .. Roger Davis
Nicholas Braun (Actor) .. Charlie
Brandon T. Jackson (Actor) .. Luke
Alison Brie (Actor) .. Tanya
Marcia Gay Harden (Actor) .. Katherine Dunn
Ravi Patel (Actor) .. Wick
Jorge Garcia (Actor) .. Fernando the Janitor
Jay Pharoah (Actor) .. Skeezy D
Mimi Gianopulos (Actor) .. Cammy
Ethan Dizon (Actor) .. Kwan
Greg Germann (Actor) .. Fernando the Accountant
John C. McGinley (Actor) .. Diller
Aaron Hill (Actor) .. Jason
Chester Tam (Actor) .. Hunter
Michael C. Mahon (Actor) .. Braddock
Seth Morris (Actor) .. Lon Zimmet
David Carey Foster (Actor) .. James Gentry
Marc Maron (Actor) .. Motel Manager
Jeryl Prescott Sales (Actor) .. Assistant Principal
Jackie Benoit (Actor) .. Old Woman at Motel
John Cho (Actor) .. Brian Bender
Cameron Richardson (Actor) .. Tara the Stripper
Murray Gershenz (Actor) .. Old Man at Motel
Jamie Denbo (Actor) .. Sam's Mom
Nik Tyler (Actor) .. Coffee Shop Customer
Michael Mantell (Actor) .. Tom Wilson
Sean O'Bryan (Actor) .. Alan Fredricks (Wilheimer Client Video)
Maximiliano Hernandez (Actor) .. Businessman (Wilheimer Client Video)
Tara Inden (Actor) .. Business Woman (Wilheimer Client Video)
Jack Knight (Actor) .. Man in Bathroom

More Information
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Did You Know..
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Miles Teller (Actor) .. Will Davis
Born: February 20, 1987
Birthplace: Downington, Pennsylvania, United States
Trivia: Moved around frequently as a child due to his father's career in nuclear power; lived in Delaware, Pennsylvania, New Jersey and Florida. Planned on being a sports broadcaster after high school. Made his big-screen debut in Rabbit Hole (2010), nabbing the role before he had graduated from college. Played the part of Willard Hewitt in his high-school production of Footloose; went on to portray the same character in the 2011 film remake.
Anna Kendrick (Actor) .. Jillian Stewart
Born: August 09, 1985
Birthplace: Portland, Maine, United States
Trivia: Tony-nominated, Drama Desk award-winning actress Anna Kendrick got her start on the stage before segueing into film with roles in the Todd Graff musical comedy Camp and Spellbound director Jeffrey Blitz's post-Napoleon Dynamite teen misfit comedy Rocket Science. Cast in the latter as the love interest of a stuttering high-school student seeking to steady his voice by joining the debate team, Kendrick charmed viewers with her effervescent radiance before taking the lead as a teen desperately searching for her missing best friend in cinematographer-turned-director Nathan Hope's 2007 thriller Elsewhere. Later that same year, Kendrick could be seen opposite Ben Stiller and Jason Schwartzman in director Todd Louiso's arrested-development comedy The Marc Pease Experience. In 2008 she landed a recurring part in the highly successful Twilight series, but her real breakthrough came in 2009 with her Oscar-nominated turn opposite George Clooney in Up in the Air. In 2010 she appeared in Scott Pilgrim vs. the World, and a year later she earned strong reviews playing a psychiatrist counseling a young cancer victim in 50/50. In 2012 she was in the ensemble pregnancy comedy What to Expect When You're Expecting, lent her voice to the animated film ParaNorman, and scored a huge hit with the a capella comedy Pitch Perfect.
Bryan Cranston (Actor) .. Roger Davis
Born: March 07, 1956
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: A familiar face to a nation of television viewers thanks to his role as the more-than-slightly demented father on the popular FOX sitcom Malcolm in the Middle, longtime stage and screen actor Bryan Cranston has had a rich and varied career, lending his talents to everything from anime voice work (Armitage III and Macross Plus) to daytime television (as an original cast member of Loving). His commanding but off-kilter presence and quirky charm have easily provided Cranston with the necessary range to essay such diverse roles, and the longtime actor can always be counted on to inject a healthy dose of personality into his performances, no matter how large or small the role may be. Though the San Fernando Valley native made his television debut as a commercial actor at the age of eight, it wasn't until college that Cranston truly realized his calling as an actor. Following college graduation, Cranston's passion eventually drew him to Daytona Beach, FL, where the burgeoning actor appeared in such community-theater productions as Barefoot in the Park and Death of a Salesman. In 1982, he joined the cast of the then-new soap opera Loving, and though he would only remain with the daytime drama for a short time, appearances in Airwolf and Hill Street Blues, among various other series, found the actor maintaining a notable presence on television. Following a series of supporting feature performances, Cranston moved back to the small screen with a regular role in the 1988 sitcom Raising Miranda. In the years that followed, he would frequently shift between film (Clean Slate) and television (The Louie Show) while supplementing his income with voice-over work for such popular anime series as Armitage III. Supporting performances in such high-profile features as That Thing You Do! and Saving Private Ryan helped to increase the busy actor's recognition factor, and in 1999, Cranston wrote, produced, directed, and starred in his first feature film, a low-key drama entitled Last Chance. Though the film failed to gain much attention, Cranston was soon receiving numerous positive notices for his Emmy-nominated role as the hapless father in the breakout television hit Malcolm in the Middle. His performance alternately eccentric and endearing, Cranston injected the role with the perfect balance of fatherly weirdness and down-to-earth charm, and the series embarked on a healthy run. In the years that followed, Cranston became an increasingly familiar face to television and film viewers, and in addition to offering vocal work for the short-lived animated television series Clerks, he would contribute to such family-friendly fare as 'Twas the Night and The Santa Claus Brothers. After taking the lead in the 2003 made-for-television feature Thanksgiving Family Reunion, Cranston could be spotted opposite screen legend Kirk Douglas in the 2004 drama The Illusion. He appeared in the 2006 miniseries Fallen, and had a bit part in the Oscar nominated Little Miss Sunshine.However, in 2008 his career entered a whole new phase when he began work on the AMC series Breaking Bad, playing a chemistry teacher who becomes a meth dealer. His work on the critically lauded program would earn him four Emmys for Best Actor in a Drama Series (plus another two as a producer on the series). It also made him an in-demand character actor for movies and he worked steadily appearing in projects as radically different as Drive, Larry Crowne, Red Tails, John Carter, and Rock of Ages among many others.In 2014, Cranston made his Broadway debut in the play All The Way, playing President Lyndon Baines Johnson. The role earned him a Tony Award, and he committed to reprising the role for a TV movie. The following year, he played blacklisted screenwriter Dalton Trumbo in the film Trumbo (2015), nabbing Cranston his first Academy Award nomination.
Nicholas Braun (Actor) .. Charlie
Born: May 01, 1988
Trivia: Actor Nicholas Braun got his start in the business while he was still a teenager, making small appearances on shows like Law & Order: SVU and Without a Trace in the early 2000s. His bright smile and impressive 6'4" stature made him a memorable presence onscreen, and he soon began appearing in Disney projects, like 2005's Sky High and 2008's Minutemen. Braun later starred in the 2009 Disney TV movie Princess Protection Program, and later that same year he was cast in the TV series adaptation of 10 Things I Hate About You.
Brandon T. Jackson (Actor) .. Luke
Born: March 07, 1984
Birthplace: Detroit, Michigan, United States
Trivia: A native of Detroit, MI, and the son of Bishop Wayne T. Jackson, Brandon T. Jackson developed an affinity and a knack for comedic antics early in life -- which reportedly helped him survive the monotony and boredom of school and ultimately convinced him to pursue a career as a standup comic-cum-actor. He parlayed his ambition into a series of behind-the-mike routines at local community and church events (including the Motor City Youth Festival), then accepted a role in the teen-oriented urban drama Nikita Blues (which, not coincidentally, was executive produced by his father), and in the early 2000s moved to Los Angeles, essaying a series of bit parts in A-list features including Ali (2001), 8 Mile (2002), and Roll Bounce (2005). Jackson subsequently rose to supporting billing with his turn in the filmmaking-themed farce Tropic Thunder (2008), starring Robert Downey Jr., Jack Black, and Ben Stiller, and directed by Stiller.
Christopher Mintz-plasse (Actor) .. Ethan
Born: June 20, 1989
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: American actor Christopher Mintz-Plasse took his cinematic bow in 2007 in the Greg Mottola-directed comedy Superbad. In that picture, Mintz-Plasse played a nerdy but extremely resourceful young man who procures a lousy fake ID and gains the friendship of two wild cops. He followed up with parts in Role Models and Year One, and lent his distinctive voice to family films like Marmaduke and How To Train Your Dragon. He had a major part in the remake of Fright Night in 2011.
Alison Brie (Actor) .. Tanya
Born: December 29, 1982
Birthplace: Los Angeles, California, United States
Trivia: One of her first acting jobs was an episode of Hannah Montana. Worked as a clown at children's birthday parties before being cast as Trudy Campbell on Mad Men. In 2009, simultaneously appeared on Mad Men and on new comedy Community.
Marcia Gay Harden (Actor) .. Katherine Dunn
Born: August 14, 1959
Birthplace: La Jolla, California, United States
Trivia: Often noted for her striking feature debut as a gun-toting seductress in the Coen brothers' noirish gangster crime thriller Miller's Crossing (1990), Marcia Gay Harden has since bounced between disparaging disappointment and critical prosperity, and is commonly praised for her chameleon-like ability to immerse herself in characters that are often the polar opposite of the cheerfully optimistic actress.Born in La Jolla, CA, on August 14, 1959, as the third of five children in a military family, Harden's clan moved constantly. Her passion for drama sparked by a period that the family spent in Greece (when she attended Athenian plays), Harden studied drama in college, earning a B.A. in theater from the University of Texas, and an M.F.A. in theater from New York University. After graduation, Harden continued to hone her acting talents on stage in Washington, D.C. Immediately evincing an innate ability to portray a wide range of characterizations, Harden earned two Helen Hayes Award nominations - one for her role in Beth Henley's Crimes of the Heart and one for her role in The Miss Firecracker Contest. Angels in America brought Harden to Broadway, where she found further success in earning both Tony Award and Drama Desk nominations, as well as winning the Theater World Award for Best Actress. Though she had made an impressive screen debut in Miller's Crossing, disappointment soon followed with a slew of critically shunned successes mixed with a series of creative misfires. Though discouraged in the critics' failure to recognize what Harden considered to be some of her best work, Harden began to focus less on Hollywood validation for happiness, and instead shifted her attention to refining her acting abilities. Moving from quirky dramatic roles, such as her manipulative character in Crush (1992), to quiet dramas like 1996's The Spitfire Grill, and such mainstream efforts as The First Wives Club (also 1996) and Meet Joe Black (1998), Harden felt comfortable in a wide variety of roles. She also occasionally compromised on her choice of material during this period (perhaps out of necessity) - such as the dumb-dumb comedy Spy Hard, with Leslie Nielsen, and the 1997 Absent Minded Professor rehash Flubber (starring Robin Williams).But her fortunes began to turn with a supporting role in Ed Harris' long-anticipated Jackson Pollock biopic Pollock (2000) that finally brought the actress much-deserved, mainstream critical recognition for her work. Reunited with Harris from their pairing in an earlier stage production of Sam Shepard's Simpatico, Harden's role as Pollock's dysfunctional muse earned her the Best Supporting Actress Oscar at the 2000 Academy Awards. The dawning years of the new millennium were undeniably kind to the tireless actress, and after a trio of made-for-television movies in the year 2000 Harden essayed the role of a stylish but enigmatic catalyst to a mystery with decidedly comic undertones in Susan Seidelman's Gaudi Afternoon, and portrayed the NASA engineer love interest of Tommy Lee Jones's crop duster, Hawk, in Clint Eastwood's Space Cowboys; Harden and Eastwood forged a strong professional bond and would work together again, several years later.A brief foray into sitcom territory followed soon thereafter, when Harden co-starred with Richard Dreyfuss in shortlived television series The Education of Max Bickford (2001), and the following year, she stuck to the small screen for the mini-series Guilty Hearts and the made-for-television feature King of Texas (the latter earning her a a Golden Sattelite nomination for Best Actress in a Motion Picture Made for Television). An adaptation of Shakespeare's King Lear set in the Old West, King of Texas found Harden essaying the role of cattle-baron John Lear's (Patrick Stewart) eldest daughter. Equally busy in 2003, Harden abandoned the small screen to work with some of the most acclaimed filmmakers in Hollywood. Following her second onscreen assignment for Clint Eastwood - in his deeply flawed but commendable ensemble piece Mystic River - Harden essayed the role of a mother attempting to adopt a South American girl in longtime indie filmmaker John Sayles' Casa de Los Babys and provided a key supporting performance in Mike Newell's Mona Lisa Smile. She contributed to the disappointing (and eminently forgettable) Gene Hackman/Ray Romano onscreen pairing Welcome to Mooseport (as president Hackman's campaign manager) but fared better by joining the cast of Richard Linklater's remake The Bad News Bears, starring Billy Bob Thornton (Harden plays the mom who brings Thornton's slovenly Morris Buttermaker in to coach the team). After relatively limited work throughout 2005 - including a small-scale voiceover assignment as Willa Cather in Joel Geyer's Willa Cather: the Road is All and Mrs. Merriman in the heartwarming family drama Felicity: An American Girl Adventure - Harden's activity crescendoed over the course of 2006, with appearances in no less than three A-list features. These entailed work in multiple genres, and suggested a broad array of fun and challenging characterizations. In Lasse Hallstrom's late 2006 docudrama The Hoax, Harden plays Edith Irving, the wife of scam artist Clifford Irving (portrayed by Richard Gere) during his notorious early-1970s scheme to forge an autobiography of the late Howard Hughes. In Paul Weitz's American Dreams, she plays yet another matron - this time the wife of American president Dennis Quaid, as the generally clueless fellow (!) is sent on a nationally-broadcast talent program. And Harden joins the celebrity-studded ensemble of the more conventional Dead Girl - a murder mystery directed by Karen Moncrieff, whose cast members include Harden, Giovanni Ribisi, Brittany Murphy, Piper Laurie, Josh Brolin, and Mary Steenburgen. The plot recalls Ray Lawrence's Lantana, in its investigation of several seemingly-unrelated lives that intersect in unforeseen ways as the mystery surrounding a woman's death is gradually disclosed to the characters and audience. In 2007 she acted in both The Hoax and Sean Penn's Into the Wild. She joined the cast of the hit show Damages in the second season. In 2009 she played a concerned mother in the roller derby comedy Whip It, and played a harried school administrator in Detachment for director Tony Kaye in 2011.Offscreen, Harden married property master and occasional location scout Thaddaeus Scheel (Boys on the Side, Houseguest, The Spitfire Grill) in 1996. The couple has three children.
Ravi Patel (Actor) .. Wick
Born: December 18, 1978
Birthplace: Freeport, Illinois, United States
Trivia: Worked as an investment banker before turning to acting and stand-up comedy in 2004. Founded the poker magazine All In. Trained with improv groups the Groundlings and Upright Citizens Brigade.
Jorge Garcia (Actor) .. Fernando the Janitor
Born: April 28, 1973
Birthplace: Omaha, Nebraska, United States
Trivia: Jorge Garcia's large stature and larger personality made him a star long before he was cast on the hit TV series Lost. Even while he was growing up in Southern California, the charismatic young man was well liked by both his peers and his elders, even taking home the "Triton of the Year" award at his high-school graduation, an honor bestowed by the faculty to the class' most outstanding senior. He then enrolled at UCLA, majoring in Communications, but a guest lecture by Dustin Hoffman changed his direction. Hoffman told a story about Sir Laurence Olivier describing the acting bug as a feeling of "Look at me, look at me, look at me!" Garcia couldn't help but relate to the idea, so he began to pursue a career in acting and standup comedy.Success didn't come easily, though, and Garcia spent six years working at a bookstore, scoring occasional parts in commercials. Slowly but surely, however, the more substantial roles started coming. Along with appearances on shows like Spin City and Columbo, Garcia nabbed a recurring role on the sitcom Becker, making several appearances over the next six years. Then in 2004, he played a drug dealer in an episode of Larry David's Curb Your Enthusiasm and caught the attention of ABC producers, who were in the initial stages of casting a new show called Lost. They brought Garcia in to read for the part of Sawyer, which would later go to Josh Holloway, but eventually decided to create the role of Hurley specifically for Garcia. The innovative show was a mystery thriller with a sci-fi twist, and the honest, funny, and totally unpretentious character of Hurley would become wildly popular with fans, making the 31-year-old actor an instant star.Garcia moved to Hawaii, where Lost was filmed, and stuck with the landmark show until it ended its run in 2010. The actor would go on to remain active on screen, appearing on such series as Mr. Sunshine and Alcatraz.
Jay Pharoah (Actor) .. Skeezy D
Born: October 14, 1987
Birthplace: Chesapeake, Virginia, United States
Trivia: Starting doing impressions at age 6. Worked comedy clubs in Virginia at 15. Made his debut on Saturday Night Live on September 25, 2010. An audition tape played a key role in bringing him his SNL gig. On an SNL episode in 2010, he paid tribute to a principal at his high school, using a slightly different name than that of the actual man, Jimmy Frye---who was aware of Pharoah's plan and was fine with it. Pharoah was "always serious about his comedy," Frye said. "It's just a nice gesture that he remembered me."
Mimi Gianopulos (Actor) .. Cammy
Ethan Dizon (Actor) .. Kwan
Greg Germann (Actor) .. Fernando the Accountant
Born: February 26, 1962
Birthplace: Houston, Texas, United States
Trivia: Actor Greg Germann is probably best known as attorney Richard Fish -- the tactless, neurotic litigator who went head-to-head with Ally McBeal in law school, but soon does an about face and hires her, on that character's eponymous Fox comedy drama. Actually, that role only represented the tail end of a long ascent to stardom for the gifted actor. Germann trained as a dramatist at an early age by performing in local stage productions in his childhood home of Golden, CO. In the early '80s, Germann moved to New York City and attended auditions before film producers tapped him for supporting roles in pictures ranging from the eminently forgettable (the 1986 Whoopee Boys) to the outstanding (the 1991 Once Around, the 1994 Imaginary Crimes). Germann found his greatest success, however, in television; after landing regular roles on two short-lived programs, the legal drama Sweet Justice and the sitcom Ned and Stacey (1995), the actor caught the eye of McBeal mastermind David E. Kelley. Kelley praised Germann as an actor so versatile that he could seemingly do anything; unsurprisingly, the role, like the series, lasted five seasons.Germann followed Ally McBeal up with supporting parts in a series of mostly forgettable films, including the direct-to-video Sandlot 2 (2005) and crazylove (2005), before returning to form with a prime role in the Will Ferrell racing comedy Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (2006). Germann then landed a regular role as a mentally disturbed diet guru in the decidedly quirky (and short-lived) comedy drama series In Case of Emergency (2007). He also delivered an extraordinary performance as a quiet, compassionate counselor in Monty Lapica's big-screen debut, Self-Medicated (2005). Germann appeared in Quarantine (2008) director John E. Dowdle revamp of [REC] Paco Plaza's Spanish-language horror film [REC], and starred in The Santa Incident, a family-friendly comedy film following a pair of siblings charged with helping Santa back to the North Pole, in 2010. In 2011 he co-starred in the drama Fly Away, and worked with Salma Hayek and Kevin James in the 2012 action comedy Here Comes the Boom.
John C. McGinley (Actor) .. Diller
Born: August 03, 1959
Birthplace: New York, New York, United States
Trivia: John McGinley, often credited as John C. McGinley, has become one of the most prolific character actors in Hollywood since he first got noticed in Oliver Stone's Platoon (1986). The intense, unblinking actor specializes in sarcasm, cynicism, and a used car dealer's unctuous insincerity, meaning he can play either wacky or sinister in both comedies and dramas. Although he has appeared in six Stone films, his breakout performance came in a very different format, as the acerbic and piercingly straightforward Dr. Perry Cox on the hit NBC sitcom Scrubs (2001).McGinley was born on August 3, 1959, in New York City. Growing up in Millburn, NJ, he was more involved in sports than theater. He began studying acting at Syracuse University, continuing at N.Y.U.'s Tisch School of the Arts. McGinley then toiled both on and off-Broadway, as well as two years on the soap opera Another World, scoring his first film role in the Alan Alda-directed Sweet Liberty (1986). It was while he was serving as John Turturro's understudy on the play Danny and the Deep Blue Sea that a casting scout in Stone's employ spotted him and got him an audition for Platoon. McGinley was cast as the sycophantic Sgt. Red O'Neill in the eventual Oscar winner.McGinley followed up Platoon with another one-two punch of Stone movies, Wall Street (1987) and Talk Radio (1988). In interviews, McGinley has described theirs as a "strong working relationship," not a friendship per se with the demanding director. He appeared in a handful of other films before his fourth Stone collaboration, Born on the Fourth of July (1989), which was quickly followed by his first screenwriting effort. McGinley co-scripted and co-starred in the 1990 film Suffering Bastards, alongside Talk Radio's Eric Bogosian.The 1990s were a period of intense work for the actor, who appeared in an average of three movies a year, sometimes as many as seven -- a necessary but no less tricky feat for a character actor earning modest paychecks. The most heralded of these were David Fincher's Seven and Stone's Nixon (both 1995); the most forgettable were Highlander II: The Quickening (1991) and the Steven Seagal starrer On Deadly Ground (1994). For most moviegoers, he remained under the radar.Two showy roles in 1999 ably demonstrated McGinley's facility for comedy. As a callous efficiency expert brought aboard to reorganize (i.e., downsize) the tech firm at the heart of Office Space, McGinley grinned and joked his way through a round of heartless layoffs. A similar oiliness informed his loud, obnoxious, kiss-ass portrayal of a Jim Rome-type sports interviewer in Stone's Any Given Sunday. It was soon after, in 2001, that McGinley was brought aboard for the role destined to identify him beyond any single film. As the default mentor on Scrubs, McGinley alternated hard-knocks frankness, biting wit, and a genuine desire to be left alone, in turn creating a hilarious persona and sealing his fate as an unwitting cult figure to the young surgeons. The sitcom work schedule has given him the necessary stability to spend time with his young son, Max, who has Down's syndrome.
Aaron Hill (Actor) .. Jason
Born: April 23, 1983
Chester Tam (Actor) .. Hunter
Michael C. Mahon (Actor) .. Braddock
Born: November 17, 1959
Seth Morris (Actor) .. Lon Zimmet
Born: May 21, 1970
David Carey Foster (Actor) .. James Gentry
Born: November 01, 1949
Marc Maron (Actor) .. Motel Manager
Born: September 27, 1963
Birthplace: Jersey City, New Jersey, United States
Trivia: Started his comedy career in Boston in the mid-1980s and soon after moved to New York City. In 2000, his first one-man show, Jerusalem Syndrome, had an extended off-Broadway run and was released as a book in 2001. A few of his comedy album titles include Not Sold Out, Tickets Still Available, and Final Engagement. Created, in 2009, the podcast WTF with Marc Maron, which featuring interviews with comedians, old friends, and acquaintances. He is often praised for creating a comfortable space on his podcast for comedians to open up about personal issues; notably in his interviews with Robin Williams and Carlos Mencia.
Jeryl Prescott Sales (Actor) .. Assistant Principal
Jackie Benoit (Actor) .. Old Woman at Motel
John Cho (Actor) .. Brian Bender
Born: June 16, 1972
Birthplace: Seoul, South Korea
Trivia: It's not every day that an unknown actor lands a role that will allow him to deliver a line that enters into the public lexicon and still manages to avoid the "Where's the beef?" syndrome of being forever linked with the resulting catch phrase, but with his role as the "MILF" guy in the breakout comedy American Pie, actor John Cho somehow managed to do just that. With stage skills that aren't limited to Shakespeare (Cho spends his off-time touring with his band Left of Zed) and a killer sense of comic timing onscreen, the fresh-faced Korean actor has transcended his status as Asian-American "It" boy to become one of the most promising stars of his generation. A move from Korea to Los Angeles found young Cho's interest in acting piqued when he began studying English literature at the University of California, Berkeley, and after taking to the boards in a Berkeley Repertory Theater production of The Woman Warrior (which would subsequently move to Boston's Huntington Theater and Los Angeles' James Doolittle Theater), the up-and-coming talent made his screen debut in director Justin Lin's decidedly bizarre 1997 feature Shopping for Fangs.Subsequent years found Cho essaying supporting roles in such high-profile features as Wag the Dog and Bowfinger, with his breakout role in American Pie preceding roles in such widely seen films as Bowfinger, American Beauty, Evolution, and the Chris Rock comedy Down to Earth. Though the films may not have offered Cho the most memorable parts, they kept him familiar with audiences until he reprised his most famous role to date in the hit sequel American Pie 2. In 2002, Cho truly got to show his talent in director Lin's critically acclaimed indie effort Better Luck Tomorrow. Following a crew of high-school-aged Asian-Americans who use their reputations as studious bookworms to mask their criminal activities, the movie proved without a doubt that Cho had what it took to make it in film. More supporting roles in Big Fat Liar and Solaris were quick to follow, and after rounding out the "American" trilogy in American Wedding, it was burger time for Cho as he played one of the titular characters (opposite Van Wilder's Kal Penn) in the 2004 comedy Harold and Kumar Go to White Castle. The next year, Cho went on to essay a supporting role on the short-lived chef sitcom Kitchen Confidential before returning to feature films. Over the coming years, Cho would continue to reimain an active force on screen over the coming years, appearing on shows like FlashForward and as Sulu in the J.J. Abrams Star Trek franchise.
Cameron Richardson (Actor) .. Tara the Stripper
Born: September 11, 1979
Trivia: Beginning in the early 2000s, Southern-born model-turned-actress Cameron Richardson landed a series of roles in glossy, high-budget Hollywood programmers. She was often cast as a sexy coed (2003's National Lampoon Presents: Dorm Daze), an alluring love interest (2005's Supercross: The Movie), or a scream queen (2006's Open Water 2: Adrift). In 2007, Richardson tried something a bit different from her prior experience by signing on to provide one of the voices for the CG-animated romp Alvin and the Chipmunks.
Murray Gershenz (Actor) .. Old Man at Motel
Born: May 12, 1922
Jamie Denbo (Actor) .. Sam's Mom
Born: July 24, 1973
Nik Tyler (Actor) .. Coffee Shop Customer
Michael Mantell (Actor) .. Tom Wilson
Sean O'Bryan (Actor) .. Alan Fredricks (Wilheimer Client Video)
Born: September 10, 1963
Birthplace: Louisville, Kentucky
Maximiliano Hernandez (Actor) .. Businessman (Wilheimer Client Video)
Born: September 12, 1973
Birthplace: Brooklyn, New York, United States
Trivia: Character actor Maximiliano Hernandez burst onto the scene in the mid- to late '90s and essayed a series of occasional roles, often ones of an ethnic nature. His resumé includes one- and two-time contributions to the series Law & Order and The Shield, and a bit part as a bartender in James Gray's organized crime drama The Yards (2000), starring James Caan and Mark Wahlberg.
Tara Inden (Actor) .. Business Woman (Wilheimer Client Video)
Jack Knight (Actor) .. Man in Bathroom
Born: February 26, 1938
Bruce Davison (Actor)
Born: June 28, 1946
Trivia: Bruce Davison studied acting at New York University's prestigious School of the Arts, then at age 21 made his stage debut on Broadway in Tiger At the Gate. He went on to a prosperous stage career, performing in works ranging from Shakespeare to American standards to provocative modern dramas. He won the Dramalogue Award three times, first for his portrayal of the deformed John Merrick in the title role of Broadway's The Elephant Man; he won it the third time for his work in Streamers, for which he also won a Los Angeles Critics Award. He debuted onscreen in Last Summer (1969), portraying the "bad boy" among four teenagers coming of age in a sinister way. Although he has remained fairly busy as a screen actor, he has generally appeared in forgettable films and has yet to establish himself as a well-known screen presence; the highlight of his film career came when he received a "Best Supporting Actor" Oscar nomination for his work in Longtime Companion (1990), the first major feature film to deal with the subject of AIDS. Since 1978 he has also worked frequently on TV, appearing in TV movies as well as co-starring in the sitcom Harry and the Hendersons. For his portrayal of an escaped POW in the TV movie Summer of My German Soldier (1978), he received an Emmy nomination. He is most skilled at portraying caring, sharing, sensitive types and victims of circumstance.
Megan Gallagher (Actor)
Born: February 06, 1960

Before / After
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The Sitter
07:57 am