#brandon kyle goodman
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Katya on Tell Me Something Messy with Brandon Kyle Goodman!
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Brandon Kyle Goodman, photographed by Ryan Pfluger
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Andrew Scott, Olivia Cooke and Brandon Kyle Goodman in Modern Love: “Hers Was A World Of One”
The relationship between Tobin (Scott) and Karla (Cooke) especially, or rather the one they built, was just too precious for words. Like, he knew they were so different and that she’d piss him off (and likewise) but he still loved her so much. And that panic he had after they argued and she left… 🥺😢
Love this sweet little story of which the subject matter is particularly close to my heart 🤰👶 (with a surprising yet welcome cameo from Ed Sheeran playing a British homeless dude thrown in 🤣)
#modern love: hers was a world of one#olivia cooke#andrew scott#brandon kyle goodman#surrogate karla
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Plus one, 2019
#comedy#drama#romance#plus one#jeff chan#andrew rhymer#jack quaid#maya erskine#max jenkins#brandon kyle goodman#dubious
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'...'Blackout'
Christopher Eccleston headlines Blackout, a three-part gritty northern drama that aired on BBC One in 2012. Eccleston stars as corrupt councilman Daniel Demoys, whose destructive behavior leads to blackouts from heavy drinking. His family, including his daughter Meg (Cooke), suffers from his alcoholism. When Daniel goes on a bender one night, it results in a torrid affair with a woman he meets in a bar and the killing of a local businessman to whom he's awarded expensive contracts, neither of which he remembers the next morning.
While the local detective (Andrew Scott) is investigating him, and Daniel himself is trying to piece together what happened while also sleeping with the detective's wife, his attempts at redemption actually get him elected mayor. The series was not particularly well-liked (I wonder why), but it did get nominated for several BAFTAs, and it's interesting to see Cooke in her first role, playing an innocent whose life is falling apart...
'Modern Love'
Modern Love was the sort of half-baked anthology series that got carelessly greenlit during the height of the streaming wars by services with too much money, too many people saying yes, and not enough long-term strategy. Inspired by the New York Times column of the same name, it supposedly explored relationships, love, and human connections, but in reality, it was just a bunch of short one-two-episode films loosely structured together that would never have been made separately. It lasted two seasons; the second hit the buzzsaw of the pandemic, was released with zero fanfare, and disappeared into the unmarketed ether.
This episode, "Hers Was a World of One," explores the experiences of a couple, Tobin (Andrew Scott) and Andy (Brandon Kyle Goodman), who yearn for a family. Although warned that using a surrogate mother may complicate the adoption process, they are matched with Karla (Cooke), a stranger who is both nomadic and homeless. She moves into their apartment, and there's some friction as they discover how vastly different their lives are...'
#Modern Love#Tobin#Andy#“Hers Was a World of One”#Olivia Cooke#Blackout#Christopher Eccleston#Andrew Scott#Brandon Kyle Goodman#Meg#Karla#New York Times
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There aren’t many things that I hate. My grandmother would always remind me that “hate” was a strong word and to be careful how I use it. But I can safely say that I hate the ways in which people and society get to tell us who we are before we get to know ourselves. Most of us are working off blueprints of our lives that have been provided for us—well, really, forced on us—instead of drafting our own. What’s said and what’s not said, what we see and don’t see… these things govern us, reinforced through the media, our communities, and our loved ones. As a result, many of us shapeshift so that we can achieve the ultimate trophies, the ABVs: Acceptance. Belonging. Validation. And in the name of the ABVs, I’ve often denied the most beautiful parts of myself that I’m now on a hunt to find.
You Gotta Be You: How to Embrace This Messy Life and Step Into Who You Really Are by Brandon Kyle Goodman
#book quote#you gotta be you#brandon kyle goodman#nonfiction#memoir#queer#quote#quotes#booklr#bookblr
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Logging in all of the books I’m reading on GoodReads
Yes, I am reading too many but this is the most addicted I’ve been in awhile.
#andrewisdoing#books#books and reading#bookblr#bookworm#goodreads#good morning#gay bars#oscar wilde#fire island#rainbow boys#the four agreements#queer science#Brandon Kyle Goodman#dan savage#American savage#the men with the pink triangle#Anne Frank Remembered#Miep Gies#black queer studies#black liberation
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Official Teaser For Hulu's "History of the World, Part II"
Official Teaser For Hulu’s “History of the World, Part II”
Check out this new teaser for Hulu’s upcoming 8-episode comedy series “History of the World, Part II,” which premieres Monday, March 6 with two episodes. Two new episodes will drop daily, with our finale on Thursday, March 9. Additional cast announced today include: Pamela Adlon, Tim Baltz, Zazie Beetz, Jillian Bell, Quinta Brunson, Dove Cameron, D’Arcy Carden , Ronny Chieng, Rob Corddry, Danny…
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#Andrew Rannells#Brandon Kyle Goodman#Brock O’Hurn#Charles Melton#D&039;Arcy Carden#Danny DeVito#David Duchovny#David Wain#Dove Cameron#Emily Ratajkowski#Hannah Einbinder#History of the World Part II#Ike Barinholtz#J.B. Smoove#Jack McBrayer#Jake Johnson#Jason Mantzoukas#Jay Ellis#Jenifer Lewis#Jillian Bell#Joe Lo Truglio#Johnny Knoxville#Josh Gad#Ken Marino#Kimiko Glenn#Kumail Nanjiani#Lauren Lapkus#Mel Brooks#Nick Kroll#Nick Robinson
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mickey absolutely would request, nay, DEMAND to have the ass knuckles inserted directly into him.
#sorry i made you all look at the ass knuckles. happy sunday!#seen on brandon kyle goodman's instagram stories and they didn't credit where it came from#but anyway obviously my mind could only go in one direction with this#mickey#gallavich
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Hot Vintage TV Men's Bracket - Round 1 - Part 1/2 (Polls 1-99)
Round 1 (All Polls)
Ted Bessell Vs. Dick Van Dyke
Jonathan Frid Vs. William Hartnell
Claude Rains Vs. William Hopper
Eric Idle Vs. Peter Tork
Henry Winkler Vs. Tom Smothers
Martin Kove Vs. Tom Selleck
Jeff Conaway Vs. John de Lancie
Dave Foley Vs. Michael J. Fox
David Hyde Pierce Vs. Tony Shalhoub
Jason Bateman Vs. Rob Lowe
Ted Cassidy Vs. Boris Karloff
Eddie Albert Vs. Russell Johnson
Bobby Sherman Vs. Micky Dolenz
Robin Williams Vs. Fred Grandy
Kevin Smith Vs. Bruce Campbell
Brad Dourif Vs. LeVar Burton
Seth Green Vs. Brandon Quinn
Matthew Perry Vs. Tim Daly
Mike Farrell Vs. Judd Hirsch
Matt Bomer Vs. Timothy Olyphant
Larry Hagman Vs. Kent McCord
Fred Rogers Vs. Bobby Troup
David Cassidy Vs. Luke Halpin
George Takei Vs. Richard Hatch
Ricardo Montalban Vs. John Forsythe
Richard Dean Anderson Vs. Bruce Willis
Anthony Head Vs. Paul McGann
Thorsten Kaye Vs. Michael Horse
Darren E. Burrows Vs. Dana Ashbrook
Adam Brody Vs. Milo Ventimiglia
Adam West Vs. Richard Chamberlain
Randy Boone Vs. Dean Butler
Clint Walker Vs. George Maharis
Erik Estrada Vs. Paul Michael Glaser
Billy Dee Williams Vs. Rock Hudson
Ted Danson Vs. Jameson Parker
Sylvester McCoy Vs. Armin Shimerman
Joe Lando Vs. Spencer Rochfort
Ben Browder Vs. Keith Hamilton Cobb
Richard Ayoade Vs. Kevin McDonald
Patrick McGoohan Vs. Robert Vaughn
Chad Everett Vs. DeForest Kelley
Jon Pertwee Vs. Mark Lenard
Darren McGavin Vs. Peter Falk
Terry Jones Vs. Alan Alda
Michael Tylo Vs. Timothy Dalton
Sean Bean Vs. Valentine Pelka
Ioan Gruffudd Vs. Colin Firth
David Tennant Vs. Robert Carlyle
Jason Priestley Vs. Tom Welling
Martin Milner Vs. James Garner
David Soul Vs. Lee Majors
Derek Jacobi Vs. Andrew Robinson
David Hasselhoff Vs. Stephen Nichols
Jimmy Smits Vs. Hal Linden
Brent Spiner Vs. Ted Raimi
Patrick Troughton Vs. Andreas Katsulas
Miguel Ferrer Vs. Mitch Pileggi
David James Elliot Vs. Andre Braugher
Blair Underwood Vs. Mark-Paul Gosselaar
Don Adams Vs. Cesar Romero
Bob Crane Vs. John Astin
Walter Koenig Vs. Davy Jones
Tom Baker Vs. Jamie Farr
Woody Harrelson Vs. John Schneider
John Goodman Vs. Joseph Marcell
Danny John-Jules Vs. Marc Alaimo
Michael Praed Vs. Kevin Sorbo
Mark McKinney Vs. Colm Meaney
Neil Patrick Harris Vs. David Schwimmer
James Arness Vs. Robert Fuller
Clint Eastwood Vs. Robert Conrad
Jonathan Frakes Vs. Michael Hurst
David Duchovny Vs. Michael T. Weiss
Luke Perry Vs. Jeremy Sisto
Matt LeBlanc Vs. John Stamos
Reece Shearsmith Vs. Alexander Siddig
Eric Close Vs. William Shockley
Daniel Dae Kim Vs. Robert Beltran
Scott Cohen Vs. Scott Patterson
Dick Gautier Vs. Michael Landon
Wayne Rogers Vs. Alejandro Rey
Gerald McRaney Vs. Robert Wagner
Simon Williams Vs. John Cleese
Brian Blessed Vs. James Earl Jones
Noah Wyle Vs. Kyle MacLachlan
James Marsters Vs. Paul Gross
Paolo Montalban Vs. Robert Duncan McNeill
Garrett Wang Vs. Nate Richert
Christian Kane Vs. Michael Vartan
David McCallum Vs. David Selby
Leonard Nimoy Vs. Colin Baker
Randolph Mantooth Vs. Michael Nesmith
Demond Wilson Vs. Tony Danza
Ron Perlman Vs. Mr. T
Ron Glass Vs. Dirk Benedict
John Shea Vs. Michael Ontkean
Jeffrey Combs Vs. Rowan Atkinson
Tim Russ Vs. Bruce Boxleitner
Round 1 Polls 100 - 128
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Who’s the A**hole? with Katya & Brandon Kyle Goodman!
#new episode let’s go#katya#katya zamo#katya zamolodchikova#Brandon Kyle Goodman#loved this one but I love all of them
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Brandon Kyle Goodman
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Since Andrew is taking some well deserved time away from the public at the moment, let's revisit (or visit for the first time, if you're new here) this stunning photoshoot from Mr. Porter, October 2019, when he was doing press for Modern Love and his Ripley casting had just been announced (yes, it's taken that long for it to come out).
Mr Andrew Scott’s big brown eyes are open wide in amused disbelief. “That was not an Irish accent,” he says in his musical Irish brogue. “That was a West Country accent.” How embarrassing for an interviewer who thought to connect with her subject by lightly mocking Mr Ed Sheeran’s – again – not-Irish accent in his cameo in Mr Scott’s episode of Amazon’s upcoming anthology series, Modern Love. Panic sets in. “It’s all right,” he says, soothingly. “It’s all right. Accents are such funny things.”
You know what else is a funny thing? Sitting with Fleabag’s “hot priest” – 2019’s most unexpected sex symbol – in a wine bar in Bermondsey, southeast London, talking about vulnerability, romcoms and love stories. Or, to take another angle: sitting across the table from the deranged Jim Moriarty and letting him pick out a rosé. That tickles, too. Having Hamlet express the need for a mini-break in, he doesn’t know, Copenhagen? Amsterdam, maybe? Surreal.
But actually, Mr Scott, who is wearing what can only be described as a modified sweatsuit (shorts and a zip-up sweatshirt, no shirt beneath) after our photoshoot isn’t funny funny. No, Mr Scott is serious: reserved and contemplative, but with the energy of a theatre nerd who, every once in a while, rests his head in his hands, cupping his fingers around his eyes to form blinkers while he thinks about a question you’ve just asked. In this quiet wine bar. He’s not an evil murderer, an agent of a shadowy organisation, or an overly excited (wink) cleric. He’s just a nice guy who sympathises about the difficulty of parsing the subtleties of the many accents in the British Commonwealth (and beyond).
Mr Scott is still hot off his run in Fleabag, even though the show ran from March to April of this year. A few weeks ago, he received a GQ Men of the Year Award, and just a few weeks after that, was in Los Angeles at the Emmy Awards where Fleabag cleaned up, winning three awards.
Of course, this is not Mr Scott’s big break. He’s been in the business since moving from Dublin to London 20 years ago to pursue acting. His dad worked in employment, helping young people find the right careers and his mother was an art teacher. “They were definitely into following your passion and doing that for the rest of your life,” he says. “Rather than, ‘You should be a lawyer,’ or whatever the fuck.”
And this has been a year for Mr Scott’s passions. Aside from Fleabag, and an episode of Black Mirror that landed on Netflix this June, he’s making a poignant appearance in the aforementioned _Modern Love,_ which will drop all at once on 18 October. A series of discreet episodes, each one features its own starry cast (Mr Dev Patel, Mr John Slattery, Ms Tina Fey, Ms Anne Hathaway and, of course, Mr Ed Sheeran, among others), based on the much-loved New York Times column from which it takes its name. Mr Scott’s episode, which co-stars Ms Olivia Cooke and Mr Brandon Kyle Goodman, is loosely based on an early column written by the sex-and-relationships writer Mr Dan Savage about the unusual experience he and his partner had with adoption. “It’s just a really sweet little story. It’s not about a romantic relationship,” he says, (many Modern Love entries are not). “It’s simply about the relationships between people.”
He’s also currently filming in Cardiff for the BBC TV series of His Dark Materials. And maybe there’s a Marvel movie in his future? “Oh, fuck. Completely false,” he says. “Someone said, ‘Are you going to be in a thing?’ I said, ‘No,’ and I said, ‘There have been discussions.’ And it’s like ‘Andrew Scott has been in discussions.’”
That’s what happens when suddenly everyone wants you – to use Twitter parlance – to run them over with your car. The Priest, unlike his other characters, was a sex symbol, one that wears the hell (forgive me, Father) out of a cassock. But who could be surprised that Mr Scott turned a priest into the “Hot Priest” simply by saying “kneel”? (If you don’t know what that means, stop reading now, watch the show, come back.) In fact, he has been making words positively drip with meaning for nearly a decade.
Consider Moriarty, the insane criminal puppet master Mr Scott played for six years across four seasons of the BBC’s Sherlock, opposite Mr Benedict Cumberbatch in the titular role. This particular Moriarty – Holmes’ famous nemesis, who has also been played by Messrs Orson Welles, John Huston and Sir Laurence Olivier – is indelible and utterly idiosyncratic. “If you’re going to do it, I don’t see there’s any point in doing it without putting your own stamp on it. I never look at any previous incarnations,” says Mr Scott. The result of this thinking – in Sherlock, at least – was a Moriarty who is all sing-song eeriness, molten physicality, and questionable cutaway collars. “He was quite theatrical; he was grotesque, sort of the archetypal villain,” he says. Archetypal, indeed: the role propelled him into the world of maniacal superfandom. He might not have received a dedicated stan nomenclature like his co-star (ahem, “Cumberbitches”), but the role made Mr Scott a household name.
Of course, establishing yourself as adept at playing evil incarnate probably leads to people wanting to cast you in more Moriarty-like roles. “Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yep, yeah,” he says, six times. “Yeah, exactly right,” (one more). “I turned down a lot. The shadow of that character took over for a little while.” The craze got to be so tiresome that he asked the interviewer for a recent profile in The Guardian not to ask him about Moriarty at all (two years after he last appeared in the series). But now he sees a bigger picture, understands how being the object of abject obsession can be a good thing. “I think to answer your questions,” he says, tapping his fingers on the table, “it’s been really good fun.”
Mr Scott demurs when asked what it’s like to be the quencher of many thirsts on the internet. “People don’t say that to me. People don’t say, ‘Oh my God...” He shakes his head and trails off, perhaps in horror of what fans could be saying to him. It’s a little hard to believe that he wouldn’t be mobbed as he walks down the street. After all, one major British publication declared that Fleabag and the Priest were the only couple worth talking or tweeting about this year. (We guess Meghan and Harry, and Kim and Kanye can relax.)
“If I’m honest, it’s only really just starting to dawn on me, the global effect the show has had. People like a bit of transgression, they just do.” Any follower of his career, though, understands that it’s more than just good writing that makes him so very watchable (though good writing, is, politely, what he puts it down to). His chemistry is electric with Ms Phoebe Waller-Bridge, as it was electric with Mr Cumberbatch, and palpable even if you weren’t lucky enough to catch his rendition of Hamlet and – like this interviewer – had to watch a clip on YouTube.
Mr Scott’s character, Tobin, in Modern Love is the most subdued we might ever see him. There’s very little shouting, and none of the wide-eyed glaring that has defined his roles to date. Instead, he plays sweetly, quietly off a tiny baby, and tells goodnight stories to an adorable little girl. Perhaps this is a harbinger of softer roles to come. “I’d love to be in a romcom,” he says. “I love watching people fall in love, and how mad it is.” And yet: it was just announced that he will be playing Tom Ripley in a new adaptation of The Talented Mr Ripley. So much for avoiding the nutters.
“What always amazes me is how innocent we are as human beings,” he says, sidestepping yet another probing question about being so irresistible right now. “We are very easily manipulated by stories. If someone puts scary music behind someone and they’re told this person’s eyes are absolutely terrifying, you go: ‘Oh my God, that person is scary, and his eyes totally freak me out.’”
“But then,” he continues, “[you’re told] ‘the priest is hot, wait till you see him’. And then you look at his eyes in a very different way and it’s the manipulation of the storytelling. It literally changes your character.” Hmmm.
“The success is the writing,” he tries, again, to argue. But it’s hard to be convinced that an actor who’s hopped from one iconic character to another is simply lucky with writing. He sees he’s not getting anywhere and changes tack. “Acting is just a way of experimenting with different parts of myself. Vulnerability is something I’m really, really interested in. I think vulnerability is at the centre of every character I’ve ever played even if they don’t appear or present as vulnerable.”
Throughout this conversation, his eyes have flicked around the bar, and he pauses from time to time to comment on the other patrons. At one point, a woman is coughing so vehemently, he stops mid-sentence to remark, humorously, on whether she might be dying. Now, he spots something on the bar. “Oh my God, she’s reading Brené Brown.” We both turn to stare at the book.
“She writes a lot about vulnerability,” he explains, excited. “[Being vulnerable] is how you get ahead. I really, really strongly believe that. [Vulnerability is] strong, it’s really strong.”
Perhaps this is the secret we’ve been trying to distil about his appeal: Mr Scott uses vulnerability to bring us all into a space of fear or sadness or lust or anger with him so that every character he plays – whether it’s the hottest priest in London, a gay man in Brooklyn trying to become a father, or a murderous villain – thrums with the heartbreak that comes with being human.
“The more I work,” he continues, “the more I just think every story is in some way concerned with love – or the lack of it.” He smiles an earnest little smile and we both know this is the place to stop. “That’s the way life is,” he says. “It’s so fast and furious.”
https://www.mrporter.com/en-hk/journal/fashion/the-softer-side-of-mr-andrew-scott-1052122
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Gunnverse Batman fancast
Fancast for James Gunn’s DCU/Batman!
DCEU recast
Burtonverse Recast
90′s Justice League
Reevesverse Batman
Superman
Wonder Woman
The Flash
Green Lantern
Aquaman
Justice League
Green Arrow
Teen Titans
Suicide Squad
Justice League Dark
Batman Beyond
The Dark Knight Returns
Telltale’s Batman
Injustice
Legion Of Doom
Birds Of Prey
Jensen Ackles as Batman/Bruce Wayne
Peter Capaldi as Alfred Pennyworth
Jon Hamm as Thomas Wayne
Lena Headley as Martha Wayne
Courtney B. Vance as Lucius Fox
Laura Dern as Dr Leslie Thompkins
Bryan Cranston as James Gordon
David Harbour as Harvey Bullock
Stephanie Beatriz as Renee Montoya
Bill Hader as Jack Ryder/The Creeper
Jodie Comer as Vicki Vale
Jesús Castro as Nightwing/Dick Grayson
Kiera Allen as Oracle/Barbara Gordon
Dacre Montgomery as Red Hood/Jason Todd
Lucas Jade Zumann as Red Robin/Tim Drake
Kristen Stewart as Batwoman/Kate Kane
Mary Elizabeth Winstead as Huntress/Helena Bertinelli
Riley Lai Nelet as Batgirl/Cassandra Cain
Mckenna Grace as Spoiler/Stephanie Brown
Izaac Wang as Robin/Damian Wayne
John Boyega as Batwing/Luke Fox
Caleb McLaughlin as Duke Thomas/The Signal
Alexander Ludwig as Azrael/Jean Paul Valley
Michael B Jordan as Azrael/Michael Lane
Ana De Armas as Catwoman/Selina Kyle
Brian Cox as Commissioner Gillian Loeb
Sam Witwer as Captain Howard Brandon
Michael Weatherly as Detective Arnold Flass
Robert De Niro as Carmine Falcone
Gina Mantegna as Sofia Falcone
David Dastmalchian as Alberto Falcone
James Carpinello as Mario Falcone
Al Pacino as Sal Maroni
John Goodman as Rupert Thorne
Michael Imperioli as Anthony Zucco
Willem Dafoe as The Joker
Margot Robbie as Harley Quinn
David Tennant as The Riddler/Edward Nygma
Alfred Molina as The Penguin/Oswald Chesterfield Cobblepot
Oscar Isaac as Two-Face/Harvey Dent
Giancarlo Esposito as Mr Freeze/Victor Fries
Viggo Mortensen as Black Mask/Roman Sionis
Jane Levy as Andrea Beaumont/The Phantasm
Adam Driver as Scarecrow/Jonathan Crane
Kevin Grevioux as Killer Croc
Laz Alonso as Bane
Doug Jones as Man-Bat/Kirk Langstrom
Peter Stormare as Clayface/Basil Karlo
Toby Jones as Mad Hatter/Jervis Tetch
John Lithgow as The Ventriloquist/Arnold Wesker
Natalie Dormer as The Ventriloquist II/Peyton Riley
Dohmnall Gleeson as Hush/Thomas Elliot
Raul Esparza as Hugo Strange
Anya Taylor-Joy as Poison Ivy
Pedro Pascal as Deadshot/Floyd Lawton
Frank Grillo as Deathstroke/Slade Wilson
Finn Wittrock as Talon/William Cobb
Karl Urban as Owlman/Thomas Wayne Jr
Stephen Fry as Professor Pyg
Stephen Lang as David Cain
Daniel Radcliffe as Anarky
Nikolaj Coster-Waldau as Cluemaster
Keanu Reeves as Prometheus
Ming-Na Wen as Lady Shiva
Ghassan Massoud as Ra’s Al Ghul
Nadine Njeim as Talia Al Ghul
Yasmine Al Massri as Nyssa Al Ghul
Michael Fassbender as Dr Simon Hurt
Kat Graham as Jezebel Jet/Black Glove
Christian Bale as The Batman Who Laughs
#DC#Fancasts#Batman#Batfamily#Batman Villains#Robin#Batgirl#Oracle#Nightwing#Spoiler#Dick Grayson#Tim Drake#Red Hood#Jason Todd#Barbara Gordon#Cassandra Cain#Stephanie Brown#Damian Wayne#The Joker#Harley Quinn#Two Face#The Penguin#Ra's Al Ghul#Talia AL Ghul#Catwoman#Poison Ivy#The Riddler#Mad Hatter#Lady Shiva#Deathstroke
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History of the World, Part II | Teaser
The mini-series sequel to Mel Brooks’ History of the World, Part I film will premiere on Hulu on March 6, 2023, followed by two new episodes daily through March 9, 2023.
Cast
Mel Brooks, Wanda Sykes, Nick Kroll, Ike Barinholtz, Pamela Adlon, Tim Baltz, Zazie Beetz, Jillian Bell, Quinta Brunson, Dove Cameron, D’Arcy Carden, Ronny Chieng, Rob Corddry, Danny DeVito, David Duchovny, Hannah Einbinder, Jay Ellis, Josh Gad, Kimiko Glenn, Brandon Kyle Goodman, Jake Johnson, Richard Kind, Johnny Knoxville, Lauren Lapkus, Jenifer Lewis, Poppy Liu, Joe Lo Truglio, Jason Mantzoukas, Ken Marino, Jack McBrayer, Zahn McClarnon, Charles Melton, Kumail Nanjiani and Brock O’Hurn, Andrew Rannells, Emily Ratajkowski, Sam Richardson, Nick Robinson, Seth Rogen, Sarah Silverman, Timothy Simons, J.B. Smoove, David Wain, Taika Waititi, Reggie Watts and Tyler James Williams.
#History of the World Part 2#History of the World Part II#History of the World Part I#History of the World#Mel Brooks#Wanda Sykes#Nick Kroll#Ike Barinholtz#Hulu#television#live action#live action television
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