First, an admission: I've never been a huge fan of Jimmy Kimmel's Live In Front of a Studio Audience specials.
The late night host's idea – redoing classic Norman Lear sitcom episodes live with modern stars – is wonderful. But in practice, past outings featuring Woody Harrelson as All in the Family's Archie Bunker, Jamie Foxx as George Jefferson from The Jeffersons and Jay Pharoah as J.J. in Good Times never felt right to me.
$2M of Cocaine Discovered in Louisiana Home of 54-Year-Old Man Skip to content ncG1vNJzZmiolaS9rbGNnKamZ6SsvG65yKWjoqeeYrCwr8CipZ5llJ7ApLvVnqmenF2hvLa10qKYp5ldnbyusYxwcG9wZGqG
You know his voice, playing the title roles on the animated TV series Bob's Burgers and Archer, not to mention a can of vegetables in the movie Wet Hot American Summer.
But none of that is why the 20-year comedy veteran Jon Benjamin spoke with All Things Considered. Instead, it was for the most "public radio" of reasons: He has recorded an experimental jazz album.
Benjamin's album — his first jazz release — includes several tracks titled "
Chris HemsworthFor action sequel Extraction 2, the streamer has created a giant poster which allows people the opportunity to touch the A-lister’s sweaty face
For some time now, the movie industry has been desperate to locate the next big technological surge, the one leap forward that will bring in audiences like it was the good old days. For a while it looked like this would be 3D, but the resurgence soon fizzled out.
George Harrison and Jeff Lynne were made to write songs together. Although, George was initially skeptical about it. We can’t blame him for being hesitant to share the songwriting process with another songwriter. After being burned for years by his fellow Beatles, it’s understandable. There was a lot that George needed to do and come to terms with before he could take that step with Lynne. Firstly, he needed to forget that he’d ever shammed Lynne for copying The Beatles.