Showing posts with label Funny or Die. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Funny or Die. Show all posts
Friday, October 21, 2011
Sally Draper Takes a Stab at Therapy . . . From the Therapist's Chair
Missing Mad Men? Well I can’t give you any new clips from the fifth season yet (as they've not been released), but I can share this Funny or Die video starring Kiernan Shipka, otherwise known as Sally Draper, who’s playing the role of a “child star psychologist.”
As a therapist – who looks very mature (working on Mad Men will do that to you apparently) – Shipka sees “child star” patients including Nolan Gould, Luke Dunphy from Modern Family who is haunted by his desire to make funny asides to a camera that’s not really there.
Shipka also counsels a ridiculous pink peacock of a 6-year-old girl from the reality show Toddlers & Tiaras who says she has no idea what her “real” face looks like and fears her neck will snap from the combined weight of her hair and makeup.
Wednesday, July 14, 2010
What Happens When Jewel Dons a Disguise & Sings Her Songs in a Karaoke Bar?
Friday, October 2, 2009
Suburban Mom's Political Fix: Response to FunnyOrDie Pro-Health Care Reform Video
Remember the recent MoveOn.org-funded video favoring a public option in the health care insurance reform debate? The sarcastic one that featured Will Farrell, Mad Men's Jon Hamm and House's Olivia Wilde, among other celebs? The one that mocked "overpaid" health insurance executives who they said would have to give up some of their profits (which would cut into their funds for mini-zoos in their backyards) in order to pay for a government-financed health insurance option?
Well now FunnyOrDie is being politically even-handed in running a response video entitled, "Listen to Overpaid Celebrities" which spoofs the original video and sarcastically asserts reasons why a public option could be harmful to American taxpayers.
Between these two videos (see the original Farrell one below) do you think they're helping illuminate any points in this health care debate or just muddying the issue?
Well now FunnyOrDie is being politically even-handed in running a response video entitled, "Listen to Overpaid Celebrities" which spoofs the original video and sarcastically asserts reasons why a public option could be harmful to American taxpayers.
Between these two videos (see the original Farrell one below) do you think they're helping illuminate any points in this health care debate or just muddying the issue?
Wednesday, September 23, 2009
Suburban Mom's Political Fix: Actors Take on Health Care Reform, Backed by MoveOn.Org
Will Farrell, Jon Hamm (Mad Men), Masi Oka (Heroes), Olivia Wilde (House), Jordana Spiro (My Boys) and other celebs have made a razor-sharp, satirical public service announcement spoof where they pretend to be shilling for insurance company executives, saying that they need to be protected from any potential federal public health insurance option that the president is pitching.
They're rather pointed in their commentary, particularly when they say that the insurance company execs need to hold onto their billions of dollars of profits so they can afford mini-zoos for exotic animals in their backyards, multiple homes and private planes. In one quip, an actor says, "If my kid falls off his bike and breaks his leg, he should have to pay that money out of pocket, out of his allowance." Another adds, "How else is he going to learn not to fall off that bike?"
In skewering insurance companies which reject a health care claim because of something like a typo, Farrell said, "If you spell something wrong, do you really deserve surgery? I don't think so."
The ad, which is on the Funny or Die web site, is funded by the liberal group MoveOn.org.
Think this video is an effective contribution to the health care insurance reform debate or not?
They're rather pointed in their commentary, particularly when they say that the insurance company execs need to hold onto their billions of dollars of profits so they can afford mini-zoos for exotic animals in their backyards, multiple homes and private planes. In one quip, an actor says, "If my kid falls off his bike and breaks his leg, he should have to pay that money out of pocket, out of his allowance." Another adds, "How else is he going to learn not to fall off that bike?"
In skewering insurance companies which reject a health care claim because of something like a typo, Farrell said, "If you spell something wrong, do you really deserve surgery? I don't think so."
The ad, which is on the Funny or Die web site, is funded by the liberal group MoveOn.org.
Think this video is an effective contribution to the health care insurance reform debate or not?
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Jon Hamm: Comedian
Okay, I was wholly impressed when Jon Hamm (a.k.a. the dashingly smoldering Don Draper from Mad Men) rocked the house on Saturday Night Live earlier this year. He demonstrated some serious comedy chops, even with a bit as silly as Jon Hamm's John Ham.
Then I watched a new skit he did for Will Ferrell's web site Funny or Die, where he's a bald Lex Luthor asking the president for a federal bailout to help fund his continuing efforts to kill Superman. Wasn't that funny, but I think it was the material more than the delivery. I expected to laugh out loud, but perhaps my expectations were too high. I'd much rather see him as Superman.
What do you think?
Then I watched a new skit he did for Will Ferrell's web site Funny or Die, where he's a bald Lex Luthor asking the president for a federal bailout to help fund his continuing efforts to kill Superman. Wasn't that funny, but I think it was the material more than the delivery. I expected to laugh out loud, but perhaps my expectations were too high. I'd much rather see him as Superman.
What do you think?
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)