Ticket pre-sale begins tomorrow at 10AM EST. Pre-sale password is RANDY.
Dear Fox,
Please just put this show on TV immediately.
Thank you.
Jason Statham on a jetski.
You’re welcome!
UPDATE: Only 9 reblogs/likes? Are you kidding me? I’m quitting Tumblr if this is any indication of the type people on this thing.
Hannibal Burress on Jimmy Fallon
Hannibal is one of my favorite new comics. He lives in NYC right now. That apple juice joke is so good.
Very excited about this! Louis starts filming his episodes tomorrow.
Come to this foodie charity event! I’ll be helping out the tables for the Bazaar and XIV. I’m pretty excited.
Ladies and Gentlemen… I present to you, Bobby Bottleservice.
Funny People Opens Today!
I have a small role as Randy in the film and I’m very excited to be even a tiny part of it. Thanks to everyone for their support on Jason Woliner and I’s Randy documentary series. The series is done, but we’re editing together a longer version of the documentary for the Funny People DVD that will have a good chunk of unreleased stuff in it. Enjoy Funny People!
Atlas Sound and Panda Bear - Walkabout
Wow, these two dudes need to do a whole album. Incredible track.
Seinfeld Reunion on Curb
The seventh season of David’s improvised HBO comedy, which returns on Sept. 20, will be centered around the TV version of David finally agreeing to do a reunion of the defining ’90s sitcom. All four “Seinfeld” castmembers — Jerry Seinfeld, Jason Alexander, Julia Louis-Dreyfus and Michael Richards — will play themselves in multiple episodes, and the season finale will feature extensive snippets of the show-within-the-show.
“For years, I’ve been asked about a ‘Seinfeld’ reunion,” David told reporters at the Television Critics Association summer press tour in Pasadena. He always refused, but, “Then I thought it might be very funny to do that on ‘Curb.’ And I kept thinking about it.”
Seinfeld will appear in five episodes, sprinkled throughout the season, and the others will appear in as many as four or five episodes, albeit not always together.
“We’ll see writing, see aspects of the read-through, parts of rehearsal, see the show being filmed, and see it on TV,” David explained. “You won’t see the entire show. You’ll see parts of the show. You’ll get an idea of what happened (to the ‘Seinfeld’ characters) 11 years later. Within the show, it will be incorporated into regular ‘Curb’ episodes. “How was it writing for these characters so many years later, and in the context of a different show?
“It was surprisingly smooth. Coming up with the right ideas for what’s happened in 11 years, that took some thought. Three of the guys working on my show as executive producers also were producers on ‘Seinfeld,’ so I was working with them.”













