Archive for Ed Helms

Jan
24

Six Degrees: Daily Show Edition

Posted by: Tiger | Comments (1)

thumb_6degrees From comedy shows to music, the Daily Show correspondents are all over these days!

John Oliver (Correspondent, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart)

  • I know I have been making time to watch John Oliver’s New York Stand-up Show at 11 PM EST, Fridays on Comedy Central, but apparently Rob Riggle isn’t particularly interested. For two weeks in a row, he has found ways to avoid supporting John’s new show:

    Jokes.com
    John Oliver and Rob Riggle Talk About the Show
    comedians.comedycentral.com
    Joke of the Day Stand-Up Comedy Free Online Games
    Jokes.com
    John Oliver and Rob Riggle – More Reasons to Watch the Show
    comedians.comedycentral.com
    Joke of the Day Stand-Up Comedy Free Online Games

    As Rob is so eager to mention, it seems he will be on Comedy Central Presents in a couple of months, and we’ll be sure to let you know more about that.
    (h/t: MsInterpreted)

  • Here is an interesting opportunity to see John Oliver from before he was on The Daily Show. The last acting credit John has in IMDb before The Love Guru was as a car salesman on a British medical sitcom called Green Wing. So far as I can tell, he only appeared in a few clips only one minute into the first episode of the first season called “Caroline’s First Day.” You can see it all of yourself (if you’re in the US), as the entire series is now on Hulu. I have not watched the entire episode myself, but it looks like it could be a good show.
  • John recently appeared on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon.

Demetri Martin (Former Contributor, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart)

  • Important Things with Demetri Martin is coming back for a second season, which is good new for many of you, I’m sure. While I didn’t watch the every show, all the clips I was able to catch were excellent! Although the shows won’t be airing for a while, there may still be tickets available for tapings in San Francisco in mid-February. Follow the link and if you do reserve tickets, let others know it’s possible in the comments.

John Hodgman (Contributor, The Daily Show with John Stewart)

  • If you’re in the Bay Area and you can’t see Demetri Martin’s show, you also have John Hodgman coming to you soon! He will be at the SF Sketchfest 2010 at 2 PM on January 30th at Cobb’s, where he will be conversing with Dave Eggers. To find out more about John’s appearance and the rest of the festival, which will have a long of other great comedians, check out this article.

Wyatt Cenac (Correspondent, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart)

  • Although it’s too late to see the show, there was a great interview with him in preparation for that gig. There’s talk of the movie Wyatt starred in, Medicine for Melancholy and the way The Daily Show approaches cable news. He also mentions the field producers, of whom I’m far more aware since I started following Miles Kahn on Twitter. (h/t: MsInterpreted)

Aasif Mandvi (Correspondent, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart)

  • The National, an English-language paper from Abu Dhabi, UAE, has a great article about Aasif. It discusses the film Today’s Special, which is based on his one-man show Sakina’s Restaurant. Given the setting of the film, there is much discussion of food in culture, particularly Indian culture. Aasif also talks about being involved with The Daily Show while also acting in films.

Ed Helms (Former Correspondent, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart)

  • Comedy Central Insider has some great YouTube videos of this great former correspondent showing off in way we’re not used to: on musical instruments. You can watch him playing the banjo while singing along, or playing the piano while chatting along. These are far more authentic uses of instrumental props than when Colbert and Dinello sang with the bassoons. (h/t: MsInterpreted.)


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Apr
06

Guest alert: Tom Brokaw

Posted by: Ms Interpreted | Comments (2)

In honor of Tom Brokaw, one of Stephen’s guests tonight, I thought I’d round up a few Brokaw memories from Stephen and the gang over the years. Enjoy!

Stephen shares a memory of Christmas with Tom Brokaw:

Jon interviews Tom Brokaw:

Click through to see Tom Brokaw videos from Ed Helms and Stephen Colbert

Read More→


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I know, I know, we’re late to the party with this one. Blame me and my unbelievably un-fun work schedule of late; Jennie, Sadie07 and others did try to send the tip about this long ago. (But better late than never, right?) Here’s the skinny:

The web series “Children’s Hospital” is set to debut on the TheWB.com, and its cast includes Rob Corddry, Nate Corddry, Ed Helms and the voice of Stephen Colbert! Check out the, er, colorful trailer here:

That’s one heck of a list of funny people in that trailer, Stephen, the Brothers Corddry, Ed and all those folks from SNL, etc.? Indeed, “The internet’s sexiest drama just got sexiest-er.”


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Thanks to YouTubers Sklarryeyes and shwahaha for posting videos of The Daily Show/Colbert Report Improv Jam. The first video is a roll call of some of the participants. And for you attention to detail types (looks at MsInterpreted), hopefully we can get the names of some of the participants in the second video – I recognize Rob Riggle, Ed Helms, Wyatt Cenac, Peter Gwinn, with John Oliver and Barry Julien in the background. Who did I miss? Go to shwahaha’s YouTube profile for lots more vids!


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Updates for you all, kiddies; hope there’s something in here that you all can laugh at.

Barry Julien and Scott Jacobson (writers, Colbert Report and Daily Show, respectively)

  • Sounds like Barry’s got a brief respite from his job at the Starbucks underneath Stephen’s desk. Where can you find him? In “Comedy Free Williamsburg” at Sound Fix Lodge this Wednesday night. Joining him will be Daily Show writer Scott Jacobson and several other comics. There’s more information here; drop by, if you can!

Aasif Mandvi (correspondent, The Daily Show)

  • We haven’t seen much of Aasif lately on The Daily Show, but you can still catch up with him by listening to the “Selected Shorts Podcast” this week on NPR. Aasif reads this week’s selection, Rishi Reddi’s short story “Justice Shiva Ram Murthy”, and he reads it very well. If you’ve got a spare hour, have a listen to this podcast (brought to you by the good folks at Public Radio International and Symphony Space).

Ed Helms (former correspondent, The Daily Show)

  • Congratulations to Ed Helms on scoring a leading role in the upcoming movie Hangover (with Bradley Cooper). According to the Hollywood Reporter: “[Helms and Cooper] are in final negotiations to star in director Todd Phillips bachelor-party comedy, about three friends who lose the groom at their Vegas fandango two days before the wedding. The third lead role has yet to be cast for the Warner Bros. film.” Good luck with this, Ed!

Samantha Bee (correspondent, The Daily Show)

  • Sam is featured in the “How To Wiki” of Wired magazine, and she has some advice on “How To Look Good on TV.” One of her tips caught my eye: “3. Don’t use words you don’t know — especially zeitgeist or orthogonal.”

    Why does this crack me up? Well, if you read the issue of Wired in which Stephen Colbert taught us how to “Be an Expert on Anything,” you may recall that he said this:

    USE THE WORD ZEITGEIST AS OFTEN AS POSSIBLE. Ideally, you want to find words that sound familiar but people don’t really know their definitions: zeitgeist, bildungsroman, doppelgänger – better yet, anything Latin. But avoid paradigm. It’s so 1994. If you say the word paradigm, everybody knows you’re a poser.”

    Conflicting tips, perhaps? Nah, Sam left a loophole for those people who know what those words mean. (But I’d still avoid using the word “paradigm”, if possible!)

Mitch Rouse and David Pasquesi (The Factory, Strangers with Candy)

  • We’ve mentioned here before that The Factory, the series showcasing Mitch Rouse and Dave Pasquesi, premiered on Spike TV last month. We hope you’ve been watching; the show is very funny. And I’m not sure whether you know it or not, but Spike has been featuring outtakes and deleted scenes from the show. There are several there, but this one might be my favorite (uncontrollable laughter is irresistible to me). Enjoy!


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I swear, every time I do one of these Six Degrees posts, I see a story, blurb, video or gig that I missed within five minutes of posting. It’s crazy! Most of the gigs in the last post are still coming up, but here are a few things I missed in that one.

Rob Riggle

  • You may have seen trailers already for the upcoming Will Ferrell flick, Step Brothers, but did you know that Rob Riggle has a role in the movie? He does, and you can see him in this clip (h/t Mel O, via Comedy Central Insider). Warning: This clip contains language that we’d spell with asterisks here on NFZ!

Lewis Black

  • Lots of little Lewis Black moments to mention this time around; here’s one (with *ahem* a charming and appropriate photo) from Modest Proposal. It makes me a little crazy that they’ve misspelled Jon Stewart’s name, but this part amused me:

    I’ve heard that there’s a comedic hierarchy where the jugglers and prop comedians are at the bottom and the political comedians look down on everybody else.

    Political comics look down on everybody else? They must have a self-image problem. We political comedians have always been treated as if we were bottom-feeders. We’re not even noticed. To me, it’s nice for a person to have a point of view and do their work. You don’t expect that by having a 20-minute set that will catapult you somewhere. I think it’s that simple: you have a point-of-view, you’re funny, you do your work. People do disparage against ventriloquists and mimes, well, mimes can blow me. But you know, never underestimate how well a dumb joke will go over. What are you going to do? I’ve got about 5 jokes in my act that I can’t believe I’m saying aloud.

  • You can also read a Q&A with Lewis in the Times-Union (Albany). I thought it was interesting that he doesn’t consider himself a “political comic” so much as a “social satirist”: “Political satire is more about them and what they’re doing than about us and what we’re doing … I try to personalize it because it makes it easier for me to survive talking about what I’m talking about. Partially that’s because I have so little respect for the political parties.”
  • Lewis will be coming to the Dallas-Fort Worth area next weekend, and the Star-Telegram has posted a Q&A in anticipation of the event. From the Star-Telegram, I just had to include this, in honor of our webmaster:

    You’ve played Dallas-Fort Worth several times. What surprises you most about Texas audiences?

    I have to say, the thing that really surprises me is I’d rather play Fort Worth. I performed in a place called Hyena’s . . . before I made it, and I just liked that area. And then we did one show in Dallas, and I said [expletive] it, get me to Fort Worth. And they did, and it was a conscious choice. And I’m glad, because the Bass is spectacular. Dallas is really a strange bird to me. Strange even for Texas. It may have to do with the Kennedy thing.

David Sedaris, on Amy Sedaris

  • This month’s GQ magazine contains a segment on “The Funniest Person I Know”, and David Sedaris weighs in on his sister Amy (h/t Gypsy Goddess).

    There are a good number of people who make me laugh until I ache, but the person who’s been doing it the longest is my sister Amy. A lot of people know her from Letterman, where she’s a regular guest, but it’s not there that she really excels. Talk shows are geared toward storytelling: Here is how I got the part of the pretty alcoholic. This is what happened on the way to the awards ceremony. Amy can do this as well as anyone, but she’s best when commenting on the world around her: a sign in a shop window, the scrap of wrapping paper lying in the gutter, the haircut of the person across the room. When my sister gets going, sparks shoot out her ears – that’s how fast her mind words. There’s a cruelty, not to her humor, but to the relentless force of it. When not laughing, you’re awed.

    “Was she always this funny?” people ask. And I have to think about it. She didn’t register as a real person until she was old enough to do me favors. At 16 she got her license and appeared fully formed, as sharp then as she is now. During the years that we both lived in Chicago, I’d go to Amy’s for dinner and find what would become a Who’s Who of American comedy. She’s not one to name-drop, so I won’t either. We’ll just say they were almost as funny as she was.

Ed Helms

  • Interestingly enough, Ed Helms also appears in the “FUNNIEST PERSON” section of this month’s GQ (h/t Sharon D. and Gypsy Goddess). His choice? Stephen Colbert.

    When I started on The Daily Show, I was so nervous that I asked him if he had any pointers. He said, “You’re gonna be great. Oh, and don’t forget to hang your soul up in the closet and come back for it later.”

    Whenever we were backstage before a taping, Steve would do this pantomime. He would pretend he was the trumpet player in the band, getting ready for his part in The Daily Show theme song. He’s miming that he’s warming up his trumpet, blowing in the spit valve, getting ready to go. And then he raises it to his mouth right when the guitar part kicks in. He would take down his fake trumpet and act surprised, like, “What the fuck? Where’s the trumpet part?” I must’ve seen him do that 300 times, and it always made me laugh.

    It probably goes without saying that I would love to see that.

  • One other bit of Ed Helms goodness to share (and those of you who read the comments to my last Six Degrees post will have to forgive me for mentioning it again): Ed showed up on Late Night with Conan O’Brien a little over a week ago for a truly side-splitting interview. You can watch it here (choose the July 11th episode and jump to Act 4), and I highly recommend that you do so. My favorite bit came right at the end when he did his Tom Brokaw and Elton John impressions. They’re ridiculously good!
  • Seriously, y’all … watch this clip!


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The best darned hour on TV
You’re not going to want to miss this one, New Yorkers! Writers and correspondents from The Daily Show and The Colbert Report will once again be teaming up to provide an evening of improv for the Del Close Marathon.

The Daily Show/Colbert Report Improv Jam

What:
Your favorite writers and correspondents from The Daily Show w/Jon Stewart and The Colbert Report join together for a one-time-only improv show.

Who:
Peter Gwinn, Ed Helms, Laura Krafft, Rob Riggle, more!!

Where and When:
Sat 8:30 pm at FIT Kate Murphy Ampitheatre (Buy tickets)

Very nice! I wonder who the “more” will be? John Oliver and Wyatt Cenac both have improv backgrounds, but I guess we’ll just have to wait and see (Peter Grosz does, too, but I think he’ll still be at the DC Comedyfest at that point). But hey, look at that list already, what’s not to like?

I hope at least a few people here get to go! (Why, oh why, did that have to be during the weekend I’m moving?)


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No particular reason I’ve chosen this one today; it’s the segment Stephen and Ed Helms did on the media firestorm that followed Janet Jackson’s infamous Super Bowl “flash”. I guess I just love it because it’s hard to come up with much that’s funnier than Stephen calling Janet Jackson “Bad boob girl. Bad boob girl!”

From TheDailyShow.com: Opinion/Opinion That Is Different From That Opinion – Janet Jackson


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