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Tag: paul rudd

  • Box Office: ‘Avatar 3’ Rings Out Very Merry Year for Disney, Studio Hits $6 Billion in Global Revenue in a Post-Pandemic First

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    While overall box office revenue won’t make any gains in 2025, the same can’t be said of Disney.

    The studios sprawling film empire on Wednesday will cross the $6 billion mark in global box office revenue for the year, having earned $5.967 billion globally through Tuesday, including $2.310 billion domestically and $3.656 billion internationally.  

    This marks the first time Disney has hit $6 billion since 2019, just before the pandemic struck and decimated moviegoing. Even before COVID, clearing $6 billion was no easy feat. No other studio has done so since 2015, while Disney is a now a five-time multiple offender (2016-2019, 2025).

    Disney’s success this year has been fueled by 16 wide releases, led by the only two titles that have crossed $1 billion at the worldwide box office: Zootopia 2, which has earned $1.311 billion to date, and Lilo & Stitch, which topped out at $1.038 billion earlier this year. Thanks to some nifty math, Disney is also reporting that three Marvel Studios’ titles have collectively grossed more than $1.3 billion worldwide, even if not one title did so on its own; The Fantastic Four: First Steps, Thunderbolts* and Captain America: Brave New World.

    Other titles helping to propel Disney past $6 billion were Predator: Badlands, Freakier Friday and Elio, albeit at much smaller numbers.

    James Cameron‘s Avatar: Fire and Ash is the icing on the cake, grossing $450.1 million at the global box office after only seven days in release, including worldwide earnings of $51 million on Tuesday. In North America, it topped Tuesday’s chart with $16.5 million for a domestic tally of $119 million. Overseas, it finished the day with a foreign tally of $331.1 million.

    Avatar 3 is easily expected to dominate the long Christmas weekend (Thursday-Sunday) with a four-day gross of $70 million to $75 million, if not more. Sony’s comedic adventure Anaconda, teaming Jack Black and Paul Rudd, opens nationwide on Dec. 25 alongside Timothée Chalamet‘s Marty Supreme and Focus Features’ music-infused Song Sing Blue, starring Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson. They join a crop of films opening last weekend that wanted to a jump on the holiday. In addition to Avatar, these include Lionsgate’s femme-skewing The Housemaid, starring Sydney Sweeney and Amanda Seyfried; Angel Studios’ faith-based David; and Paramount’s The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants, which still hopes to hunt down families after a soft debut.

    Anaconda, Song Sing Blue, and Marty Supreme — which is expanding nationwide after opening in New York and L.A. last weekend to supremely impressive numbers after a massive marketing blitz by its leading man — will all hold Wednesday previews before opening everywhere on Christmas Day, which can be a busy day for moviegoing once presents are unwrapped.

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    Pamela McClintock

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  • Reviews For The Easily Distracted: Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

    Reviews For The Easily Distracted: Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

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    Title: Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire

    Describe This Movie In One Fake Watchmen Quote:

    DR. MANHATTAN: The year is 1989, I am watching Road House and the new Ghostbusters. The year is 2024, I am watching Road House and the new Ghostbusters.

    Brief Plot Synopsis: Ghooooooooost ice.

    Rating Using Random Objects Relevant To The Film: 2.5 Honk If You’re Horny marquees out of 5.

    Tagline: N/A

    Better Tagline: “There are *non-evil* Spin Doctors CDs?”

    Not So Brief Plot Synopsis: When last we left the Grooberson/Spenglers (Paul Rudd, Carrie Coon, Finn Wolfhard — if that’s his real name —, McKenna Grace), they were in Oklahoma. So how they came to occupy Ghostbusters HQ in New York City is an exercise best left to those unconcerned with the appearance of an ancient freeze god. Or that same god’s connection to an antiquarian adventurers’ society. And if none of that interests you, just hang around and maybe Venkman will show up.“Critical” Analysis: Most film franchises operate on a principle of diminishing returns. The original entries are (usually rightfully) fondly remembered, and followed by the inevitable cash grab. Subsequent movies fail to capture that initial magic (though may be perfectly okay in their own regard), while the series limps along until the nostalgia is no longer profitable.

    Is Ghostbusters at this stage yet? Probably not, but you can see the end from here. Frozen Empire doesn’t wallow in nostalgia the way Afterlife did, and follows a (mostly) more coherent story, while many of the movie’s good feelings come from the return of the original Busters.

    The weight of the film is largely carried by Grace’s Phoebe, who chafes at being excluded from the specter battling shenanigans because of New York’s strict paranormal child labor laws, or something. Her relationship with a young ghost (Emily Alyn Lind) looking to reunite with her family grounds the story, but is that a good thing? Haven’t all the GB films aside from the original and 2016 been too emotionally heavy?

    And what the hell is Podcast (Logan Kim) doing here? Getting past the fact his name is “Podcast,” why is he in NYC at all? For that matter, why is Trevor’s erstwhile girlfriend Lucky (Celeste O’Connor)? It’s understandable that Callie and the kids would want to return to her father Egon’s haunted home, but these two feel like child endangerment.

    Which is also the angle used by the NYC Mayor (hint: you know him, you loathe him, from such ’80s classics as Die Hard and Real Genius) to threaten to shut the Ghostbusters down for good. It’s slightly less egregious an offense than making Phoebe your main character and relegating her to fourth banana on the movie poster.

    click to enlarge

    A perfect time to say they’re “getting too old for this.”

    As a direct sequel to Afterlife, Frozen Empire’s an improvement. It doesn’t wallow in nostalgia as much, and when it does, it’s with a respectable amount of irreverence. Yes, the original (surviving) Ghostbusters all return, capably aided by Janine (Annie Potts), but with actual meat on the bones for the roles of Ray (Dan Aykroyd) and Winston (Ernie Hudson).

    Bill Murray returns, too. He’s introduced in one of the movie’s many callbacks (the ESP testing scene) but is otherwise used sparingly. It’s definitely the correct approach, as a little Venkman goes a long way.

    At least he’s having a good time. Frozen Empire suffers from the same problem of just about the rest of the GB sequels: it takes itself so seriously. It’s still a comedy, but there’s little of the anarchic whimsy that was a highlight of the 1984 original. In addition to Grace, Coon has the best arc, balancing her kids’ desire to follow in granddad’s footsteps with attempting to be a responsible mother.

    And yet it all feels weirdly abbreviated. The original Ghostbusters went out of its way to show the city-wide effects of a trans-dimensional cross-rip, but aside from one establishing shot, we don’t get any real feel for the effects of an extra-dimensional god releasing the spectral hounds. There’s no rallying the city behind the Ghostbusters (until the end), and no real connection between the rise of our unfriendly god with anyone beyond the movie’s inner circle.

    But writers Jason Reitman and Gil Kenan (who also directs) have their formula. The core of this group can stick around for multiple flicks, or until Wolfhard gets bored or Grace wises up.

    Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire is in theaters today.

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    Pete Vonder Haar

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  • We’re Half-Awake in Our Fake (Ghostbusters: Frozen) Empire

    We’re Half-Awake in Our Fake (Ghostbusters: Frozen) Empire

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    It would be impossible to look at the latest installment in the Ghostbusters “legacyquel” without ruminating on the franchise’s past. In fact, Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire seems to immediately want its audience to reflect not only on the story’s history, but also New York’s itself. Hence, director and co-writer Gil Kenan (writing alongside “Ivan’s boy” Jason Reitman) commences the tale in New York, 1904. Specifically, at the Ghostbusters firehouse, long before it ever became that. Instead, it’s but an ordinary firehouse, where we see firefighters being dispatched to a members only club for the colonialist-type rich fucks who liked to show one another their stolen/pillaged spoils after returning from far-flung, overpriced adventures.

    Among the spoils during this session is a metal sphere (made, more to the point, of copper). One that, unbeknownst to the richies, imprisons the ancient warrior known as Garraka. A supernatural being who gained the power to freeze empires like the one he was proverbially “iced out” of even after fighting for it. In this regard, part of the movie’s message seems to be that you should reward people for the work they do rather than punish them for it, otherwise they end up stealing your sex tape and selling it on a still-germinal internet. Or, in this case, freezing all of New York. 

    Which Garraka came close to doing in 1904, but only managed to freeze the entire room, at which point a mysterious ancient soldier-looking guy (or gal) in the corner appears to have regained control of the orb, startling the investigating firefighters when he opens his eyes abruptly. The “authorities,” of course, are useless in matters such as these (and most others), and end up getting partially frozen as well. 

    That general uselessness is also conveyed in the next scene, when the Spengler family, now consisting of Gary Grooberson (Paul Rudd), Callie Spengler (Carrie Coon), Trevor Spengler (Finn Wolfhard) and Phoebe Spengler (Mckenna Grace), speeds down a busy NYC street wreaking havoc in pursuit of a ghostly dragon. The police watch them whiz by, eager to let them handle it without interfering, lest any blame or responsibility be put on them. Indeed, one of the main distinctions between present-day New York and 80s-era New York is how much more concerned the former is with property damage. If one thought that concern was bad in the 80s, it certainly seems tenfold now. This speaking to both a lack of punk rockness in local government (long gone are the days of Ed Koch) and a general vibe of empty coffers everywhere despite constantly collecting from the public.

    Things in New York have gotten so “by the book,” in fact, that Walter Peck (William Atherton), reprising his role from Ghostbusters, even prevents Phoebe from continuing to work as a Ghostbuster by citing her involvement as child labor. Considering how much ghostbusting has become a major aspect of her identity, this little shutdown enrages her to no end. Because in the time since 2021’s Ghostbusters: Afterlife, Phoebe has come even more into her own on the ghostbusting front, while Trevor is clearly meant to be the beleaguered do-nothing of the operation. And, despite being certain to tell his mother he’s eighteen now and can’t be told what to do, it would seem he doesn’t know how to function otherwise. 

    In the midst of this dynamic, Gary is trying to find his footing on the shaky ground between “Mother’s boyfriend” and full-on “dad.” This cast of main characters is rounded out by a quartet of OGs from the original films: Ray Stantz (Dan Aykroyd), Winston Zeddemore (Ernie Hudson), Peter Venkman (Bill Murray, whose abuse allegations couldn’t shake him from this gig) and Janine Melnitz (Annie Potts). The latter clearly subbing out for the spot where Egon Spengler (Harold Ramis) used to be (and since his ghost was already used as a gimmick in Afterlife, Melnitz was up to bat). 

    As if that weren’t already enough main characters to “service,” so to speak, another important character, Nadeem Razmaadi (Kumail Nanjiani), is introduced as the “Firemaster”—an obvious nod to the Keymaster role that Louis Tully (Rick Moranis) took on in 1984’s Ghostbusters. Then there is Phoebe’s new ghost friend, Melody (Emily Alyn Lind, who also appears in another New York-related reboot, Gossip Girl). She makes Phoebe’s acquaintance after trying to scare her during a game of ghost chess in Washington Square Park (miraculously deserted at night, even though it never is in real life). And it doesn’t take long for things between them to quickly start leaning toward a sexual tension vibe, just one of many “modern updates” to the franchise. 

    Somewhere in between all these cast members is stuffed yet another character: New York. Because Ghostbusters is to NYC as Sex and the City is—it would be difficult to reconcile one without the other (though that’s what audiences did for Afterlife). And yet, perhaps the only truly standout scenes involving the city from Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire are, as we already saw in the trailer, the moment when the lion of the NYPL (who, what do you know, additionally cameos in the Sex and the City movie) comes to life and attacks and the moment when the Wonder Wheel is stopped, just before those frolicking in the dubious waters of Coney Island are sent running for the sand again as the “death chill” invoked from Garraka proceeds to freeze everything. Unfortunately, Bananarama’s “Cruel Summer” is only playing in the trailer and not the actual movie when this all goes down. 

    As for the buildup to Garraka’s inevitable unleashing from the sphere, which is sold to Ray by Nadeem, who mentions it was part of his now-dead grandma’s collection, it’s filled with ominous forewarnings. Including the fact that the Containment Unit is starting to act a bit, let’s say, fickle when additional ghosts are deposited. Phoebe, realizing that the chamber hasn’t been “cleansed” since it was first installed, asks the valid question of whether or not anyone considered what that might result in without a backup plan. Melnitz is the first to quip, “It was the 80s, people weren’t thinkin’ too much about the future.” Except, apparently, Robert Zemeckis and Bob Gale when they wrote Back to the Future. Faint allusions to the headier days of NYC life are also made by Melnitz when she says that a bunch of homeless people in the 90s ripped off any copper they might have had at the firehouse. Brass—another metal agent known for trapping demonic and supernatural forces—will have to do for outfitting the proton packs in a way that will have any kind of effect on Garraka. Specifically, the brass Phoebe siphons from the pole they usually slide down when there’s a specter-related emergency. 

    While there is some sense of “all hell breaking loose” (even though it’s ice we’re talking about), there’s also a generally blasé attitude about the bizarre goings-on. Even when the lion comes to life at the New York Public Library, there isn’t that much shock about it from any passersby. This portrayal being almost like a subconscious nod to how desensitized New Yorkers have become to all calamities. Half-awake in their increasingly fake empire, as it were (side note: never forget the on-the-nose absurdity of Barack Obama actually using an instrumental version of The National’s “Fake Empire” for an election campaign video—of which Aaron Dessner remarked, “When they first asked permission to use ‘Fake Empire’ we wondered, ‘Do they know it’s about how fucked up America is and wanting to leave?’”). 

    But perhaps the threat of The Day After Tomorrow-esque plot of Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire could be enough to shake them from their half-awake reverie (for, yes, one can’t help but feel a subliminal climate change message here). If not, perhaps there are worse fates than freezing to death. Like OD’ing on nostalgia because looking to the future seems to be a lost cause. To put it in The National lead vocalist Matt Berninger’s words, “…you can’t deal with the reality of what’s really going on, so let’s just pretend that the world’s full of bluebirds and ice skating.” Oh so much ice skating in this particular scenario.

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • Tim Robinson, Paul Rudd, Kate Mara Starring in Indie Comedy ‘Friendship’

    Tim Robinson, Paul Rudd, Kate Mara Starring in Indie Comedy ‘Friendship’

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    Tim Robinson, the comedian behind sketch series I Think You Should Leave, along with Paul Rudd and Kate Mara are starring in Friendship, an indie comedy that is marking the feature directorial debut of Andrew DeYoung, the helmer known for his work on such series as Our Flag Means Death and Pen15.

    J. D. Lifshitz and Raphael Margules, the producing duo behind horror hit Barbarian, are producing the comedy, which is now in production, with Fifth Season, the financier-distribution-production outfit behind recent movies Flora and Son and 80 for Brady. Fifth Season, formerly named Endeavor Content, is also financing.

    Written by DeYoung, Friendship centers on a mild-mannered man named Craig, whose life is perfectly balanced, with Subway sandwiches and Marvel movies, a job he enjoys and a happy homelife with a wife and son. That life is upended with the arrival into the neighborhood by a weatherman, played by Rudd. Mysterious yet friendly, macho but vulnerable, the weatherman transforms everything for Craig, but Craig’s obsessive and childlike nature threatens to ruin the friendship and possibly everything else in his life.

    Tracy Rosenblum is acting as executive producer. 

    WME Independent and UTA are co-repping domestic sales for the title with Fifth Season. 

    Andrew DeYoung

    Kevin Winter/Getty Images

    DeYoung made a name for himself in television, where he recently earned an Emmy for writing Would It Kill You to Laugh, the Peacock comedy special starring John Early and Kate Berlant, which he also directed and executive produced. And on top of directing episodes of Max’s Our Flag Means Death and Hulu’s four-Emmy-nominated PEN15, his credits include episodes of Hulu’s Shrill, FX’s Dave and Netflix’s upcoming The Decameron, among others. He is repped by WME and Rise. 

    Robinson is a former writer and player on Saturday Night Live who broke out with his Netflix sketch comedy series I Think You Should Leave, whose third season hit last year. The series won two Emmys last month, for shortform comedy or drama series and outstanding actor in a shortform comedy or drama series. Robinson also won in the second category at the 2022 Emmys.

    Rudd, last seen in Hulu’s Only Murders in the Building, next stars in Ghostbusters: Frozen Empire, which Sony opens March 22. He is repped by UTA, Lighthouse Management + Media and Jackoway Austen.

    Mara recently starred in the FX crime series Class of ’09, which streamed on Hulu. She is repped by CAA and Mosaic.

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    Borys Kit

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  • The Shrink Next Door Season 1 Streaming: Watch & Stream Online Via Apple TV Plus

    The Shrink Next Door Season 1 Streaming: Watch & Stream Online Via Apple TV Plus

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    The Shrink Next Door Season 1 is dubbed as a psychological black comedy-drama series, based on the 2019 Wondery and Bloomberg Media podcast of the same name. This miniseries takes inspiration from the real-life events that were narrated in the podcast as it tells the story of Martin “Marty” Markowitz, a nerdy, under-confident heir to a middling fabric business who winds up consulting a therapist recommended by his sister’s rabbi: psychiatrist Dr. Isaac Herschkopf.

    Here’s how you can watch and stream The Shrink Next Door Season 1 via streaming services such as Apple TV Plus.

    Is The Shrink Next Door Season 1 available to watch via streaming?

    Yes, The Shrink Next Door Season 1 is available to watch via streaming on Apple TV Plus.

    Season 1 follows an unusual equation between psychiatrist to the stars, Dr. Isaac “Ike” Herschkopf, and his longtime patient, Martin “Marty” Markowitz. It is also an introspection of mental health as it shows just how far patients will go to seek help and how those in a position to cure them can abuse their power.

    The dark comedy series stars Paul Rudd and Will Ferrell as Dr. Isaac Herschkopf and Marty Markowitz, respectively. Some of the other cast members are Kathryn Hahn as Phyllis Shapiro, Casey Wilson as Bonnie Herschkopf, and Cornell Womack as Bruce.

    Watch The Shrink Next Door Season 1 streaming via Apple TV Plus

    The Shrink Next Door Season 1 is available to watch on Apple TV Plus. It is an American subscription streaming service that is owned and operated by Apple Inc. The platform was launched on November 1, 2019, and it provides subscribers with access to a curated selection of original films and television series, collectively known as Apple Originals.

    You can watch via Apple TV Plus by following these steps:

    1. Open the Apple TV app on your device.
    2. Select the Apple TV Plus Originals tab.
    3. Select ‘Sign In’ and then ‘Start Free Trial.’
    4. Sign in with your Apple ID and password, or Create New Apple ID if you don’t have one.
    5. Confirm your billing and payment information.

    Users may be eligible for discounts and promotions if the device they’re using is eligible. Users can also share Apple TV Plus with their family, as up to five family members can be added to their subscription.

    The Shrink Next Door Season 1 synopsis is as follows:

    “Inspired by the true story of Marty and the therapist who turned his life around…then took it over. When he first meets Dr. Ike, Marty just wants to get better at boundaries. Over 30 years, he’ll learn all about them—and what happens when they get crossed.

    NOTE: The streaming services listed above are subject to change. The information provided was correct at the time of writing.

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    Vivekkumar

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  • Paul Rudd on His “Very Restrictive” Diet When Preparing to Play Ant-Man

    Paul Rudd on His “Very Restrictive” Diet When Preparing to Play Ant-Man

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    Paul Rudd is sharing the “horrible” and “restrictive” diet he underwent to prepare for his role in the Ant-Man franchise.

    During a recent appearance on the Off Menu podcast, where guests talk about their “dream menu,” hosts Ed Gamble and James Acaster asked the actor what type of water he preferred.

    “When I was having to train for the Ant-Man movie, and I was on a very restrictive diet, my reward was sparkling water,” he responded, laughing. “That’s how horrible that diet was. I was like, ‘Alright, I’m gonna have some sparkling water now, I’ve earned it.’”

    Rudd explained that while he was training and working out a lot, he would have “a lot of sparkling water” as a reward. Acaster proceeded to ask him if actually felt like a treat.

    “Yeah, it was great,” he said. “It wasn’t flavored, I wasn’t gonna go crazy.”

    The Only Murders in the Building actor noted that he mostly stuck to the strict diet and training for all his Marvel movies. He said, “Once you’re in it, it’s actually not too hard,” adding that he didn’t mind having “really boring food, every time, over and over again,” especially since he would wake up with “tons of energy.”

    But Rudd isn’t the only actor to open up about undergoing intense training and diet for a role, as Scarlett Johansson, Jeremy Allen White, Robert Pattinson and Channing Tatum are among others who have previously shared their experiences in Hollywood.

    Rudd was later asked if other Marvel stars would “compare notes” on their training when working on ensemble films together, including Avengers: Infinity War and Endgame.

    “I mean, I think people kind of are,” he said. “But I also think I worked out harder than anyone, I would eat better than everyone, and I looked worse than all of them. I had to work out all the time, eat perfectly, just to look kind of bad. Not even like great.”

    The Living with Yourself actor continued, “I remember on Endgame, Chris Hemsworth would always have these Tupperware containers and he’s eating this gruel of just a mash of stuff. He’s working out, and then you stand next to a guy like that, and I just think, ‘Well, what’s the point of any of this?’ Why am I killing myself when that can exist, and then I look at myself and this exists. I can never achieve that. … That was the good thing that it was Ant-Man, it isn’t Thor. But I tried to work out, and it didn’t work.”

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    Carly Thomas

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  • I Don’t Like New York…Even In Small Doses: Flipping the Script on a Line From the Season 3 Finale of Only Murders in the Building

    I Don’t Like New York…Even In Small Doses: Flipping the Script on a Line From the Season 3 Finale of Only Murders in the Building

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    A twice-repeated “joke” in the formulaic (for the series) season finale of Only Murders in the Building, “Opening Night,” has two of its main characters telling their current significant others, “I like LA…in small doses.” The “I like LA” said in a manner in which a person might note that they don’t mind something, but of course it wouldn’t be their first choice. As it isn’t for Oliver Putnam (Martin Short) and Mabel Mora (Selena Gomez), the former being the one to utter this “quip” first while grossly kissing his leading lady, Loretta Durkin (Meryl Streep), at the after-party for Death Rattle Dazzle!’s opening night. 

    The subject comes up because Loretta is being approached with other offers after her performance in the musical is well-received. Offers that would inevitably take her to the place where successful actors go: Hollywood. This adding another cliffhanger-y effect (along with the predictable murder of yet another person who orbits the Oliver/Mabel/Charles-Haden trio) to the finale that will allow a dragging out of events for season four.

    In another scene from the party, Mabel then repeats that exact sentiment to her cameraman boyfriend, Tobert (Jesse Williams), who is about to go to said town to work on an “indie film.” Not sure why he couldn’t just say “movie”—oh wait, it’s because he’s become a faux pretentious New York asshole who needs to make LA sound more “legit” than someone like him thinks it is. Including Mabel, who declines the offer to accompany him to said city so that they might continue their budding romance. 

    Instead, she would prefer to float around in misery in New York solving crimes. Even though, as Tobert points out, “You’re always talking about feeling stuck and lost. This could be different.” What he doesn’t take into account is that most people who live in New York get off on that feeling. Wouldn’t honestly know what to do without it. Until some fed-up residents finally reach their threshold and actually do move to LA, often the “only” other option for Americans who see themselves as “creative” and “liberal” (a.k.a. they can fit right in working for ad agencies and support the LGBTQIA+ community, but don’t really want the capitalistic status quo to alter). This despite how climate change is literally eroding away both options.

    That aside, what is most bothersome about the dig at LA isn’t just that it’s a tired trope favored by the likes of “staunch” New Yorkers. No, what’s most bothersome is the continued commitment New Yorkers have to their delusions about the city being “everything.” This still extends to one such exemplar of rigid New Yorkerism: Woody Allen (and yes, other New Yorkers should take pause to think about how the disgraced writer-director remains one of the ultimate mascots of the city). A man who (as Alvy Singer in Annie Hall) once announced, “I don’t wanna live in a city where the only cultural advantage is that you can make a right turn on a red light.” This said after his friend, Rob (Tony Roberts)—though both call each other Max—insists, “California, Max. Get the hell out of this crazy city. Forget it. We move to sunny LA. All of show business is there.”

    Such “enticements” are no match for what Carrie Bradshaw would call “Manhattan Guy” (or, in the wake of the 90s and early 00s, “Brooklyn Guy”), the mutant strain of human who refuses to ever leave the city, not even for a vacation. Convinced that “everything you need is right here.” Rats, bed bugs, self-superior cunts, the normalization of alcoholism, trust fund babies who will always succeed at “art,” shitty apartments for the price of a limb and the constant promise that it’s all worth it for the “culture.” This increasingly consisting of nothing more than the same corporate outposts one finds in any part of America. But the delusion must persist for people like Oliver and Mabel (though it’s easier for Oliver to sustain because of his Broadway “career”) as they’ve put so many years into the endeavor. 

    The only one with blatant torn loyalties is Steve Martin. Whose character, Charles-Haden Savage, pronounces of the seeming exodus, “Los Angeles. A city so nice, they named it Los Angeles.” Because yes, Steve Martin is far more LA than he has ever been New York. Ergo his 1991 love letter to the city, L.A. Story. Which, funnily enough, also stars the New York icon that is Sarah Jessica Parker. With Martin himself being raised in Inglewood and Garden Grove, then attending college in the LA area, it was no wonder he brought into existence something like L.A. Story, or the far more serious Shopgirl in 2005 (an adaptation of his own 2000 novella of the same name). Both works see the good and bad in L.A., while eventually playing up the overriding positive aspects of living there.

    In contrast, New Yorkers are far more adept at side-stepping (read: blinding themselves to) the manifold drawbacks to their prom king city. But, like the prom king, it’s well-known he’s a douchebag who ought to be dethroned by someone more complex and multi-dimensional. Despite this, LA is ironically the place that remains, even now, viewed as lacking in complexity. A “pretty face,” so to speak, with nothing to offer but metal (the cars) and plasticity (the reconstructive surgeries). It’s the city that serves everyone’s purpose in being easy to take a pot-shot at. This even occurred in the most-seen movie of the summer, Barbie, when our narrator, Helen Mirren, says, “Barbie left behind the pastels and plastics of Barbie Land for the pastels and plastics of Los Angeles.” Cue the audience laughter. Because, ha ha, “LA sucks and is so vapid” is ostensibly evergreen comedy gold. 

    But, for those willing to look beyond the stereotype and deprogram from the far shittier lifestyle available in New York, turn to the revamping of a famous quote about England in Richard II. The one that Steve Martin as Harris K. Telemacher opens L.A. Story with: “I have a favorite quote about L.A. by Shakespeare: ‘This other Eden, demi-paradise, this precious stone set in the silver sea of this earth, this ground…this Los Angeles.’” A milieu that is far more than just “likable in small doses.”

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • How ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Crafted the Ultimate Season 3 Cliffhanger

    How ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Crafted the Ultimate Season 3 Cliffhanger

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    This post contains spoilers about the season finale of Only Murders in the Building.

    “There are three types of people: alive, dead, and dead to me,” says Jackie Hoffman’s meddling neighbor Uma in the latest season of Only Murders in the Building.

    Her words eerily echo in the final moments of season three’s finale, in which Sazz Pataki, Charles’s former acting stand-in played by Jane Lynch, is shot within the Arconia’s walls. Murder is nothing new in this Manhattan apartment building, but given that the bullet was fired from across the courtyard, this killer might be close to home. As for Mabel (Selena Gomez), Oliver (Martin Short), and Charles (Steve Martin), whose apartment Sazz was standing in at the time of the murder—their podcasting days have landed them directly in the line of fire.

    All of that will be uncovered in the show’s fourth season, which was officially announced on Tuesday. Cocreator John Hoffman confirms to Vanity Fair that the Only Murders writers room reconvenes this upcoming Monday following the Writers Guild of America deal. Until then, we have season three to unpack.

    In the finale, it’s revealed that the death of Paul Rudd’s Ben Glenroy was orchestrated by a mother-and-son duo. But contrary to early season clues, the culprits are not leading lady Loretta (Meryl Streep) and her long-lost son, Dickie (Jeremy Shamos), with whom she reunites during the production. After obtaining an advance copy of a scathing review for Oliver’s play, Broadway producer Donna DeMeo (Linda Emond) poisons the show’s leading man in order to buy herself some time to retool. It’s her son, Cliff (Wesley Taylor), eager to prove himself as a first-time producer, who then commits the murder. Mother and son are escorted from Death Rattle Dazzle’s opening night in handcuffs, allowing our main trio only minutes to process their findings before another death blow is dealt.

    Hoffman chats with VF about the personal tragedy that inspired this season’s big reveal, and Lynch’s surprising reaction to news of her character’s demise.

    Vanity Fair: I want to start with the big reveal that Cliff killed Ben. In the second season, you worked backwards from the murderer’s identity in crafting the season. Did you take a similar approach in season 3?

    John Hoffman: Yes, we knew early. I’m a wreck of insecurity as a writer in a lot of ways. So I need the confidence to understand how to build these stories both logistically and narratively. Then we have to ask ourselves 4,000 questions: what have we done before? What’s new about it? Do we buy it? Blah, blah, blah. You go through all of these processes to land at all this.

    My mother passed away a year ago, so in the midst of writing this season, suddenly these tracks of motherhood and protection and mothers and sons became threads for the season. That felt where it was guided. So my insecurities and the confidence around that felt on the emotional level, like, oh, that’s interesting terrain for me right now to sort of process. And then the writers took over and did amazing things.

    Donna and Cliff being introduced in a fairly ridiculous way felt fun for the Broadway nature of where we were going, and then to deepen that through the season and find touchstone points where you got a little more dimension. Donna wasn’t looking to kill him. She was looking to pause for the play, and everything that followed from that she didn’t control, but then was taken up by her son. That’s all being threaded through with the Dickie and Loretta story, and the ridiculous Death Rattle Dazzle story. So all three of those weave [together] by the end of a season.

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Arconia Assembled: How ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Found a Killer New Cast

    Arconia Assembled: How ‘Only Murders in the Building’ Found a Killer New Cast

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    Who murdered Paul Rudd’s Ben Glenroy? That’s the question at the center of Only Murders in the Building season three. The answer is a closely-guarded secret, withheld even from the people in charge of casting said killer—for awhile, anyway. As in seasons past, casting directors Tiffany Little Canfield and Destiny Lilly were tasked with assembling the Arconia around stars Steve Martin, Martin Short, and Selena Gomez before they’d seen all of this round’s scripts.

    So, how does one arrange the pieces of a puzzle before they’ve seen the full picture? “I’ll be honest, I think it’s really important for a casting director to know how many episodes a guest is going to recur in,” Canfield tells Vanity Fair. “Not only for the business side—you certainly don’t want to lose an actor because of availability—but also [because] when we know that a character is going to have time to unfold, you might want to do something slightly different with the casting.”

    Canfield and Lilly, who are Emmy-nominated for their work on the show’s second season, are sworn to secrecy about which actor is playing this season’s killer. But some clues can be gleaned from their casting approach. Those cast in early roles include Noma Dumezweni (a supporting presence in whodunnits like The Undoing and The Watcher) as Maxine, a theater critic reviewing Oliver’s play, and Adrian Martinez (known for comedic roles in American Hustle and Renfield) as Greg, an obsessed fan of Ben Glenroy who poses as a security guard. Both are performers who can make an immediate impact, says Canfield, which may be needed if, say, their characters won’t be factoring much into future episodes.

    Juxtapose those characters with the role of Dickie, Ben’s brother and right hand, who currently lingers in the periphery of ensemble scenes. “It is such a mysterious part,” says Canfield. “The other characters get such an intro. It’s like, ‘I’m the Broadway producer. I’m this character.’” Dickie is different. “We see how he’s put-upon, but we don’t really see much more than that. Luckily, Jeremy Shamos”—a Tony-nominated actor from Birdman and Ma Rainey’s Black Bottom—“came in and claimed that role, as he often does, because he’s absolutely brilliant.”

    With two critically-acclaimed seasons under their belt, Canfield and Lilly had no shortage of actors clamoring to be a part of the show’s current round. “People move mountains to become available,” Canfield tells me. “Everyone wants to play.” Recurring guest stars like Jane Lynch and Da’Vine Joy Randolph have full dance cards, but still managed to pop by for appearances.

    This year, the show has also welcomed two bonafide movie stars. The first is Rudd, who made his first surprise appearance in the show’s second season finale as an actor who collapses to his (presumed) death while performing in Oliver’s stage play. But that’s not the last we see of Rudd: when he took the cameo part, he also signed on for several episodes of a then-unwritten third season. “For an actor of his level to agree to be in an episode of television and commit to the following season is such an unusual ask,” says Canfield. “In fact, it’s such an ask that we thought this might be impossible.”

    Only Murders might be the only show that could have made it happen. “Steve, Marty, and Selena have created such a family, that once someone gets a taste, they want to come back,” she continues. “Paul really leaned in and was such an incredible, incredible partner in making this happen. I’m getting a little emotional, because Destiny and I got to speak to him at the wrap party. His authentic enthusiasm and excitement about working with Steve and Marty and Selena, it was palpable.”

    Then there’s the matter of Meryl Streep. Her character, Loretta—introduced onscreen by real-life casting director Lisa Kron—is cheekily introduced as a “vanilla, but capable” actor. In real life, the Oscar winner has a close relationship with her It’s Complicated co-star Steve Martin and an existing fandom for Only Murders. With the stars aligned, Streep signed on. “The way she commits is as if she’s Loretta and not Meryl Streep,” Canfield says, before words fail. “She is so…I don’t know, phenomenal in her work ethic, in her commitment, in her storytelling, in every aspect of what an actor does. She’s the pinnacle.”

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    Savannah Walsh

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  • Jeremy Renner Shares Hilariously Brutal Message From Paul Rudd After Accident

    Jeremy Renner Shares Hilariously Brutal Message From Paul Rudd After Accident

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    Jeremy Renner could count on his “Avengers” co-star Paul Rudd for some laughs as he was recovering from his near-death snowplow accident.

    On “Jimmy Kimmel Live” Monday, Renner said Rudd visited him in hospital a couple of times, and was always “making my day” because “he’s one of the funniest guys around.”

    Case in point: Renner shared a video that Rudd sent him. It was made to resemble a message from the Cameo app, which allows people to purchase personalized video messages from celebrities.

    “He made a fake one like I paid him money for a Cameo,” Renner recalled.

    “Hey Jerry,” Rudd begins the clip. “I hear you’re a little banged up. Got in a fight with a snowblower apparently? Anyway, I just wanted to send this video. It’s really from the heart and hope you’re feeling better. Sounds like you are ― apparently you’re a pretty tough guy. Maybe I’ll get to meet you someday.”

    Renner was severely injured on Jan. 1 while plowing snow near his property in Reno, Nevada. He was run over by the machine, which weighs more than 14,000 pounds. He broke more than 30 bones and punctured a lung.

    Watch below on “Jimmy Kimmel Live.”

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  • ‘Quantumania’: The Brain-Bending Designs of ‘Ant-Man and The Wasp’

    ‘Quantumania’: The Brain-Bending Designs of ‘Ant-Man and The Wasp’

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    How Marvel created the “dizzying” and “bonkers” Quantum Realm in the new sequel.

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    Anthony Breznican

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  • Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania FIRST REACTIONS out; Fans love Jonathan Majors’ Kang in new Marvel movie

    Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania FIRST REACTIONS out; Fans love Jonathan Majors’ Kang in new Marvel movie

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    The first reactions to Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania are out!

    The upcoming Marvel Cinematic Universe movie had its world premiere at the Regency Westwood Theatre in Los Angeles on Monday, February 6. Following this, a section of the audience was given the opportunity to watch the film ahead of its release on February 17.

    As per The Hollywood Reporter, the embargo for the official review will break on February 15, and the embargo for the social media reactions was lifted soon after the premiere. Read on to find out what fans had to say about Paul Rudd, Kathryn Newton, Evangeline Lilly, and Jonathan Majors’ movie.

    Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania first reactions

    Directed by Peyton Reed and produced by Kevin Feige and Stephen Broussard, the Ant-Man threequel is a hit among its first audience, who specially loved Jonathan Majors’ act as Kang.

    Erik Davis writes, “PHASE 5 HAS BEGUN! The new #AntMan movie is like a psychedelic rollercoaster full of frightening & hilarious oddities, plus one VERY menacing Kang. Big STAR WARS vibes meet the MCU at its freakiest & most inventive. MODOK is a riot, but Jonathan Majors conquers. Loved the ride!” Fico dubs Kang one of the villains in MCU. Daniel Howat opines that Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania is ‘Marvel’s weirdest movie yet’. He writes that although not everything lands, it is still an enjoyable watch.

    Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania plot and cast details  

    Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania is the 31st Marvel movie. It also marks the beginning of Phase 5 in the MCU. Paul Rudd and Evangeline Lilly will reprise their roles as Scott Lang aka Ant-Man and Hope Van Dyne aka The Wasp. Apart from them, Michelle Pfeiffer will appear as Janet Van Dyne and Michael Douglas will feature as Dr. Hank Pym. Kathryn Newton will play Scott’s daughter Cassie Lang and Jonathan Majors will star as the villain Kang: The Conqueror.

    Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania will see Scott Lang, Hope Van Dyne, Hank Pym, and Janet Van Dyne explore the Quantum Realm and interact with strange creatures and adventures. As they come across Kang: The Conqueror, it will pave the way for Avengers: The Kang Dynasty. Cassie Lang’s arc will also find a central place in the film.

    ALSO READ: Evangeline Lilly confirms Ant-Man and The Wasp: Quantumania will make ‘Dark and Difficult’ revelations

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  • Paul Rudd Admits It Was ‘So Much Harder’ Getting Into Shape For Latest ‘Ant-Man’ Movie

    Paul Rudd Admits It Was ‘So Much Harder’ Getting Into Shape For Latest ‘Ant-Man’ Movie

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    By Brent Furdyk.

    Paul Rudd is returning to the Marvel Cinematic Universe for “Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania”, and in a new interview the 52-year-old actor admits that getting into superhero shape wasn’t as easy this time around as it had been in the past.

    “I worked really hard to get back into shape for ‘Quantumania’, and I realized, ‘Oh my God, this is so much harder than it was [for the last Ant-Man project],” Rudd told Men’s Health.

    “I had fallen off more than I had in the past. All of a sudden my clothes fit tight. And I thought, ‘God, this sucks. I can’t even wear these pants,’” he recalled.


    READ MORE:
    Paul Rudd Reveals The Secret To His Youthful Appearance, Credits ‘Ant-Man’ For Making Fitness A Part Of His Lifestyle 

    “So I’d say to myself, ‘Well, I might as well just eat some of these cookies.’ I was irritable and self-conscious. I just wasn’t in a good mood. I really beat myself up,’” he added.

    However, Rudd rose to the occasion thanks to his tenacity.

    “I can be a hyper-focused person if I have a goal,” he explained. “If I’m doing one of these movies and I know that in four months I have to do a shirtless scene, I’m pretty dialled in.”


    READ MORE:
    Jennifer Aniston Celebrates Ageless Paul Rudd In Sweet 52nd Birthday Post

    In addition, Rudd is also realistic about his expectations.

    “I also try and find the happy medium,” he joked. “I could work out hard and eat perfectly and I’ll still look worse than most of the other Avengers.”

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZHn_PKXffms

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    Brent Furdyk

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  • Only Icons in the Building

    Only Icons in the Building

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    If you’re not already a devoted fan of Only Murders in the Building, run — don’t walk — to Hulu to start binging your new-favorite show now. The Emmy-nominated series stars Selena alongside comedy veterans Martin Short and Steve Martin. The result: a charming, addictive comedy that only strengthens Selena’s already-massive career.


    This Selena Gomez smash-hit is the best thing the singer/actress/beauty mogul has been in since Wizards of Waverly Place — neck-and-neck with that one photo of Selena and Hailey Bieber.

    Alongside Martin and Short, Gomez plays a true-crime addict who stumbles into a murder mystery of her own. It’s the addictive, soapy, silly whodunnit for the true crime set. And after the success of the second season, I wondered if they could top it in the third season. In a new, viral TikTok, Selena reveals that they definitely can.

    These days, all great announcements happen on TikTok. So it’s only right that Selena posted a TikTok (them, of course, the Reels version) video to reveal two of her latest superstar co-stars on the hit Hulu series: Paul Rudd and Meryl Streep.

    That’s right. These two timeless icons will be running around Manhattan with the comedic trio and I am inexplicably eager to see Season 3’s shenanigans.

    “Hey guys, we’re on set. What are we shooting?” Gomez says to the camera, revealing Martin and Short. But then, the twist. “Could this honestly get any better?” she posits, knowing the answer is a resounding yes. Because next in the frame? Paul Rudd. And if that wasn’t enough? Meryl casually pops up behind them all!

    This direct, unofficial teaser got my heart rate up. So imagine what creator John Hoffman has in store for Charles, Oliver, and Mabel…and the rest of us!

    Tina Fey was one of the surprise stars of Season 2, so Rudd and Streep join a cast of icons to further this award-winning Hulu sitcom’s reign. I cannot wait for the season to wrap so I can sit at home and binge it in one long, delicious session.

    Three questions remain: who will be murdered next? Who will the murderer be? And will you be joining me on what’s sure to be an epic journey?

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    LKC

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  • Chris Evans named Sexiest Man Alive by People magazine

    Chris Evans named Sexiest Man Alive by People magazine

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    LOS ANGELES — Chris Evans may have put down Captain America’s shield but he’s got a new badge of honor: he’s been named People magazine’s Sexiest Man Alive.

    People’s selection was announced Monday night on Stephen Colbert’s late night show and on the magazine’s website. Evans, who for nearly a decade played Captain America in Marvel’s sprawling superhero films, takes the baton from another Avenger, Paul Rudd.

    “My mom will be so happy,” he told the magazine for its cover story, which hits newsstands on Friday. “She’s proud of everything I do but this is something she can really brag about.”

    He also knows that he’s likely to be teased by close friends. “Really this will just be a point of bullying,” he joked in an interview. “It’s ripe for harassment.”

    Among those likely to heckle him are co-stars and previous Sexiest Man Alive winners like Rudd, Ryan Reynolds and Chris Hemsworth. (Hemsworth, who plays Thor in the Marvel films, was the first Avenger to win People’s annual honor, which was first handed out to Mel Gibson in 1985.)

    Other past honorees include John Legend, Dwayne Johnson, Idris Elba, Adam Levine, Richard Gere, Channing Tatum and David Beckham.

    People interviewed Evans, 41, at a Georgia farmhouse, where the actor talked about finding a better work-life balance. “The most enjoyable aspect of my career right now is feeling secure enough to take my foot off the gas,” he said.

    Evans’ first film role came in 2000’s “The New Comers” and he played superhero Johnny Storm in two “Fantastic Four” films released in 2005 and 2007. But he gained widespread fame in 2011 with the release of “Captain America: The First Avenger.”

    Since then, he’s played the wholesome superhero in 10 Marvel films, laying down his shield after saving the universe in “Avengers: Endgame” in 2019.

    Evans has become a highly bankable star, voicing the Buzz Lightyear character in Pixar’s “Lightyear” film and playing a sadistic assassin trying to kill Reynolds in Nextflix’s “The Gray Man” — both released this year.

    The actor told People he’s thinking about marriage and having a family, saying, “That’s absolutely something I want.”

    He said he didn’t expect to talk publicly much about his private life though. “Some things you want just for you, or just for my family and my friends.”

    The Boston native also continues his involvement with the civic engagement site A Starting Point, which he co-founded in 2020.

    As Evans charts the next part of his life and career, he fully expects People’s honor will be a milestone.

    “It’s something that as I become old and saggy I can look back on and say ‘I remember then…’” Evans said. “I’m lucky to be in the discussion in any capacity.”

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  • The John Fetterman, Paul Rudd Bromance You Didn’t Know About Is Here

    The John Fetterman, Paul Rudd Bromance You Didn’t Know About Is Here

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    What do Snooki, Dave Matthews, and Representative Bill Pascrell have in common? Not much—save for John Fetterman. The Pennsylvania lieutenant governor, who is running to represent his state as the Democratic nominee for US Senate, has turned to a motley crew of personalities in television, music, politics, and beyond to supercharge his campaign against Republican Mehmet Oz. But not everyone knows about the Hollywood celebrity who boosted Fetterman long before it was mainstream: Paul Rudd.

    The Ant-Man and Clueless actor, who will appear alongside Fetterman at a Wednesday night fundraiser, initially reached out to the candidate last summer, according to his campaign, just after Fetterman inserted Rudd into a tweet mocking Republican state lawmaker Doug Mastriano for issuing an official letter requesting an audit of the 2020 presidential election. “In light of recent bizarre, unhinged requests on official letterhead from Pennsylvania electeds, my office formally requested Paul Rudd to re-enact scenes from ‘I Love You, Man’ with me,” wrote Fetterman, who used his own office’s letterhead to issue the request. (While his campaign operations have grown significantly this year, the post that prompted their relationship came at a time when Fetterman, a bona fide Rudd Head, was personally writing all of his tweets.)

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    The two then began regularly communicating, with Rudd and his wife, Julie Yaeger, becoming early supporters of Fetterman’s Senate ambitions. Last December, Rudd even attended a small primary fundraiser for the candidate in New York City.

    The unlikely friendship will come full circle this Wednesday at another fundraiser, where Fetterman and Rudd will potentially—and finally—reenact scenes from the 2009 comedy I Love You, Man. “When I wrote that tweet back in [July] 2021, I was just mocking Pennsylvania Republicans—never in a million years did I imagine that it would actually end up happening,” Fetterman told Vanity Fair. “I’m a big fan of Paul Rudd in general and I Love You, Man in particular, plus we’re up against a lot of money in this race, so I am just so grateful for his help. To show my appreciation, I won’t hold it against him that he’s from New Jersey.”

    Rudd isn’t the only big name to back Fetterman as of late. It’s been announced that Dave Matthews will be performing at a Fetterman rally in Pittsburgh next week. Meanwhile, the Fetterman campaign touted the endorsement of Kurt Vile, a Philadelphia singer-songwriter, in an email blast on Tuesday. But while all the celebrity brouhaha may be helping—FiveThirtyEight has Fetterman leading Oz by 5.2 points—the race does appear to be tightening in its final stretch, according to a new AARP poll, which found Oz at a two-point deficit.

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    Caleb Ecarma

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