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Tag: eric andre

  • The Prank Panel: Where and how to watch reality comedy series judged by Johnny Knoxville; Here’s what we know

    The Prank Panel: Where and how to watch reality comedy series judged by Johnny Knoxville; Here’s what we know

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    American reality comedy series The Prank Panel made its debut on July 9, 2023, and the new unscripted show has intrigued the audience with its unique concept and chaotic content. Keep reading to know more information about The Prank Panel including what the show is about, when the new episodes are released, as well as where and how to watch it.

    The Prank Panel: Where to watch and concept

    The Prank Panel premiered on July 9, 2023, with a special preview airing on May 24, 2023. A brand-new episode of the prank show will air every Sunday on ABC. In case you want to watch the reality series online, it is available to stream on Hulu. Other options where it can be streamed include Fubo TV and Direct TV Stream. The concept of the series, as the name suggests, revolves around pranking people after certain others pitch the prank.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVFl_BGbYrg'

    ALSO READ: The Chase 3: Where and how to watch reality trivia quiz show hosted by Sara Haines? Here’s everything we know

    The individuals can target their family members, friends, and co-workers. If the judges like the pitch, they can accept it and plan, execute, as well record the whole prank. The judging panel consists of pranxperts namely actor Johnny Knoxville, comedian Eric André, and actress Gabourey Sidibe. The judges take the viewers behind the scenes of the show and showcase the whole process of how the prank plans are put together and executed.

    More about The Prank Panel

    Knoxville explained, “Jimmy Kimmel [producer of the show] called me a couple years ago and said ‘Hey, we’re thinking about doing this show.’ We take people of the street, they’ll tell us an idea they have for a prank, and we just help them pull off their prank.” Sidibe added that they choose to do a prank based on how good it is and how wacky the person might be. André called his co-judges his brother and sister and said the three of them share “instant chemistry” that can’t be denied. The show promises chaos, fun, and hilarious reactions.

    The introduction video also featured a joke by Sidibe, “Is this an escape room? Because I wanna leave” hearing which her co-judges laughed out loud. While André told TV Insider that a good prankster should have a “distinct point of view,” Sidibe felt “commitment” is very important, and Knoxville added that “a good reaction” is key to the whole concept. André concluded that the pranks shouldn’t feel mean and should be done with love.

    ALSO READ: Claim to Fame 2: When did new season of reality series air? Here’s where to watch show hosted by Kevin Jonas

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  • How the most ‘incompetent talk show host of all time’ keeps getting guests

    How the most ‘incompetent talk show host of all time’ keeps getting guests

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    LOS ANGELES (AP) — “The Eric Andre Show” is ostensibly not a series that lends itself to longevity. Its titular star, who plays a version of himself and satirizes talk shows by putting unsuspecting celebrity guests through hellish interviews, has become considerably more famous since the series first aired over a decade ago.

    But through a combination of disguises and an artfully deceptive booking team, Andre is gearing up for the premiere of the sixth season this Sunday on Adult Swim, boasting a star-studded list of guests in the episodes to come, including Lil Nas X, Natasha Lyonne and Jon Hamm.

    “We used to worry about, like, ‘Oh, am I going to be more recognizable?’” Andre said of his increasing fame, eventually realizing it doesn’t take much to fool people. “I disguised myself a lot this season. I rocked the ponytail and the glasses, and I would wear COVID masks sometimes.”

    There is a kind of poetic, albeit sadistic, justice that comes from watching the cult show make the most envied in society the butt of its joke, including high-profile names over the years like Seth Rogen, Demi Lovato, Dennis Rodman and Judy Greer.

    A few — including Lauren Conrad and T.I. — have walked off in disgust or indignation. But that number is surprisingly low given that Andre often keeps guests in emotional and physical discomfort for an hour or more, only to edit interviews down to mere minutes.

    “I’m in character,” Andre explained. “I’m trying to just be the most absurd and incompetent talk show host of all time.”

    Once celebrities are brought on the “talk show,” their egos are subjected to all kinds of abasements, both through Andre’s absurd line of questioning and through physical pranks — some unbeknownst to viewers and only revealed later by former guests.

    “It’s a break from the kind of fictitious propaganda of traditional press, I think,” he theorized, mocking actors and the stories they share on actual late-night talk shows. “They’re like, ‘Hey, you know, on set, George Clooney played a prank on me,’ or whatever. They have some anecdote from set. It feels — people can smell it’s a little inauthentic.”

    Part of what makes the pranks so impressive is Andre’s ability to pull them off, even when guests become visibly angry and sometimes threatening toward him.

    “I’m calculating every next step,” the comedian said of what goes through his mind during the interviews. “I don’t want to laugh. I’ve done so much work and so much prep has gone into bringing that prank into production that I don’t want to be the one that blows it.”

    Despite the fact that even he is not particularly comfortable with it, Andre’s antics often at some point involve nudity — either by him or the show’s infamous “naked PA” — a move that frequently pushes guests over the edge.

    “You gotta do what it takes,” Andre, ever the showman, explained. “There’s not a lot of things that are like completely jaw-dropping shocking. So, nudity is just kind of like a guaranteed reaction.”

    Although he denies outright lying to get people on the show, he concedes he and the bookers frequently “bend the truth,” and then come up with elaborate schemes to prevent publicists from seeing the torturous pranks they unknowingly walked their clients into.

    “We don’t let publicists into where the stage is and we’ll show them like fake monitor feeds and stuff,” he explained, adding they are sometimes sent on a “wild goose chase” when they get an inkling of what is going on.

    He recalled having actor Robin Givens on the show last season, saying her publicist at one point demanded the interview be stopped. In an effort to buy Andre more time, the show’s assistant director allegedly led the publicist down a series of wrong turns throughout the building.

    “Outside, back in, pretending he didn’t know where we were,” Andre said, bursting into laughter.

    His stunts might lead some to believe that Andre is a simple clown. But the comedian, who studied upright bass at the Berklee College of Music, will often give glimpses into the more learned corners of his brain, inexplicably dropping commentary on things like capitalism or militarism amid the chaos of his interviews.

    “What can I say, man? Patriotism is the conviction that your country is superior to all others because you were born in it,” he says abruptly in one interview with NBA player Blake Griffin last season.

    The fact that Andre keeps coming back for more has been of late a pleasant surprise for fans, given that he at times seems ready to move on from the show, as well as his recent involvement in other projects.

    He fittingly stars in a sort of spoof on reality competition shows called “The Prank Panel” alongside his “Jackass Forever” co-star Johnny Knoxville and Gabourey Sidibe.

    And in 2021, after years of delays and back and forth with different studios, Netflix finally released “Bad Trip,” a narrative film with pranks on real people that stars Andre, Tiffany Haddish and Lil Rel Howery.

    “I was going to end the show after five seasons and then I didn’t make any money on ‘Bad Trip,’” he laughed, though he acknowledged his motivations for coming back to “The Eric Andre Show” were not just financial.

    “Why permanently close the door on a show where I have full creative freedom?” he said, hinting that door is still open for more after this season.

    Despite Andre’s claim that “Bad Trip” didn’t make him any money, the film’s success once it hit Netflix seems to have engendered future opportunities for the comedian, though he is reluctant to say more about what those projects are.

    “It’s not even my corporate overlords. It’s superstition. So, I’ll tell you when the time is right,” he teased.

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  • 2 Black comedians file lawsuit over police jet bridge stops at Atlanta airport | CNN

    2 Black comedians file lawsuit over police jet bridge stops at Atlanta airport | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Police officers stopped Eric André as he boarded a flight from Atlanta to Los Angeles in April 2021 and, a few months earlier, the same thing happened to another Black comedian in the same place, a lawsuit alleges.

    André and fellow comedian Clayton English filed the lawsuit claiming the stops were the result of racial profiling.

    “Police officers came out of nowhere in like, almost like an ambush style and started, singled me out. I was the only person of color on the jet bridge at the time,” André said in a news conference Tuesday.

    “They singled me out. They asked me if I was selling drugs, transporting drugs, what kind of drugs I have on me,” he said.

    A lawsuit filed Tuesday by André and English alleges that this stop was part of an anti-drug trafficking program carried out by the Clayton County Police Department in Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport that unfairly targets Black fliers.

    “It was clearly racial profiling. The experience was humiliating and dehumanizing, degrading, I had all the other passengers squeezing by me on this claustrophobic jet bridge gawking at me like I was a perpetrator,” André said.

    Police stopped English on a flight, also to Los Angeles, in October 2020.

    CNN has reached out to both the police department and the Atlanta Department of Aviation for comment.

    “I was almost on the plane when, in the jet bridge two officers popped out, showed their badges and started asking questions whether I had illegal drugs like cocaine, and I feel cornered in a jet bridge and I felt the need to comply,” English said in the news conference.

    After the incident involving André, Clayton County police denied any wrongdoing, CNN affiliate WSB-TV reported.

    The station published this statement released then by the police:

    “On April 21, 2021, the Clayton County Police Department made a consensual encounter with a male traveler, later identified as Eric Andre, as he was preparing to fly to California from the Atlanta Airport. Mr. Andre chose to speak with investigators during the initial encounter. During the encounter, Mr. Andre voluntarily provided the investigators information as to his travel plans.

    “Mr. Andre also voluntarily consented to a search of his luggage but the investigators chose not to do so. Investigators identified that there was no reason to continue a conversation and therefore terminated the encounter. Mr. Andre boarded the plane without being detained and continued on his travels. The Drug Enforcement Administration and the Atlanta Police Department did not assist in this consensual encounter.”

    The lawsuit claims that the Clayton County Police Department describes the “jet bridge interdiction program” as “consensual encounters” carried out at “random,” but argues that in a post-9/11 flying atmosphere, encounters with law enforcement in airports are unlikely to be seen as anything but required.

    The two name multiple members of the Clayton County Police Department in their lawsuit and allege that the department carries out these stops and searches in a way that targets Black passengers. The filing cites Clayton County Police Department records showing 56% of passengers (or 378 individuals whose races are listed) stopped in this manner are Black.

    “The Clayton County Police Department, along, sometimes, with the county district attorney’s office has been conducting interdiction of passengers on jet bridges as they’re getting on their airplanes to ask them about whether they have drugs on them,” Barry Friedman, an attorney for the plaintiffs, said in the news conference.

    “It’s not a very successful interdiction program,” Friedman said. Clayton County Police Department records show that out of 402 jet bridge stops from August 2020 to April 2021, only three seizures were made, according to the lawsuit,.

    “They’ve come up with very little drugs, but they’ve taken a lot of cash off of passengers,” Friedman said. The lawsuit filing calls the jet bridge program “financially lucrative.”

    “Over the 8-month period in question, the program seized $1,036,890.35 in cash and money orders via 25 civil asset forfeitures,” the filing reads.

    Civil asset forfeiture allows law enforcement to seize property they allege is connected to a crime. Organizations like the ACLU have criticized it as a legal way for police to steal from civilians, as obtaining one’s property after it’s been seized is notoriously difficult.

    “Yet, of the 25 passengers who had cash seized, 24 were allowed to continue on their travels, often on the same flight, and only two were ever charged with any related crime.”

    “The Clayton County Police Department has described this program as a drug interdiction program. For what we’re able to see by simply looking at the open records information that we’ve received, it seems to be a distinctly unsuccessful drug interdiction program, if that’s what it is,” Richard Deane, another member of the plaintiff’s legal team, said in the news conference.

    “What appears to be happening is that this is organized largely in order to seize money from people, on the hope that they’re not going to thereafter make the claim for those funds,” he said.

    André called the experience “traumatizing.”

    “When two cops stop you, you don’t feel like you have the right to leave, especially when they start interrogating you about drugs. The whole experience was traumatizing. I felt belittled,” he said. “I want to use my resources and my platform to bring national attention to this incident so that it stops.”

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