Tag Archives: seth rogen

Seth Rogen and the Stars He Has (and Has NOT) Smoked Pot With

Seth Rogen loves weed. That’s no secret. But the identities of those celebs who’ve smoked pot with Seth Rogen  were secret until he spilled the beans on  Watch What Happens Live . Oops? Just days after Lindsay Lohan’s sex list hit the Internet, Seth Rogen decided to make a list of his own. His is better? Less bizarre? It’s something. Take a look at the stars who’ve smoked weed with Seth Rogen now: Stars Seth Rogen Has Smoked Pot With Open Slideshow 1. Paul Rudd Paul Rudd, according to Seth Rogen, has been his smoke buddy “lots of times.” The two starred in Knocked Up together. View As List 1. Paul Rudd Paul Rudd, according to Seth Rogen, has been his smoke buddy “lots of times.” The two starred in Knocked Up together. 2. Snoop Dogg Who HASN’T smoked weed with Snoop Dogg? 3. NOT James Franco While they played a couple of stoners in Pineapple Express, James Franco doesn’t smoke pot. Now we have no idea how he was able to film their Bound 2 parody. 4. Sarah Silverman Sarah Silverman and Seth Rogen have shared a toke or two. Can you imagine how funny that room must have been? 5. Jonah Hill Jonah Hill and Seth Rogen filmed This Is the End together and also smoked weed a time or two. 6. NOT Barbra Streisand Seth Rogen couldn’t convince his Guilt Trip co-star Barbra Streisand to take a hit, but she did admit to smoking weed with Peter Sellers. 7. Seth Rogen Just days after LiLo’s sex-list, Seth Rogen released a list of his own. All the stars he’s smoked pot with. There’s one omission in particular that stood out. Think you can guess who that is? During his interview with Bravo’s Andy Cohen, Seth Rogen said: “This is really depressing for me to say… I’ve never smoked weed with…” JAMES FRANCO! “He doesn’t smoke weed. That’s why he’s such a good actor! It’s really sad, actually.” The two starred as stoners in the 2008 film  Pineapple Express and now we know James Franco was NOT under the influence of any mood-altering substances when he and Seth Rogen filmed their Bound 2 parody of Kim Kardashian and Kanye West’s motorcycle-sex video. The two filmed  The Interview together, a comedy about the potential assassination of Korean dictator Kim Jong-Un, due out in October 2014. So if not James Franco, then who DID smoke pot with Seth Rogen? Snoop Dogg. But really, that’s no surprise. At all. Who hasn’t smoked pot with Snoop Dogg? Sarah Silverman and Paul Rudd are also on the list. Scroll through it above to see who else is a member of this exclusive club!

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Seth Rogen and the Stars He Has (and Has NOT) Smoked Pot With

Gain It Back: 10 Slimmed Down Stars Who Might Actually Look Better Fat [Photo Gallery]

Meeting a weight loss goal is a beautiful thing, especially when you’re a famous chubby lumpkins in a weight-obsessed industry. But, uhhh, there’s a thin line between healthy-looking and looking sickly with a saggy turkey neck and awkward body shape. Here’s a photo gallery of slimmed down celebs who look better fat (or chubby). Take a look. Continue reading

Kris and Bruce Jenner: The $200 Million Divorce?

The tabloids aren’t just after the Kardashians this week. They are after their relationships! First, Star quotes Leyla Ghobadi as saying she totally banged Kanye West when he was with Kim Kardashian. Now, In Touch Weekly is once again re-igniting the Kris Jenner divorce story, claiming she and Bruce are on the outs – and it’ll be one EXPENSIVE breakup. “There’s a lot of money at stake in this split,” says a family friend to the tabloid, adding that Kris ought to have concerns outside of her fortune: “Kris has done some pretty horrible things over the years – including cheating on Bruce. He can drop bombshell after bombshell and ruin her. So Kris should be afraid. Very afraid.” The magazine goes on to detail how Bruce has moved out and bought a place in Malibu, but this is hardly news. Khloe Kardashian actually told Jay Leno last week that Kris and Bruce live apart . But the tabloid insider says it’s not just for a breather, it’s for a reason far more serious: “It’s gotten to a point where he’s accepted this marriage is not working for him.”

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Kris and Bruce Jenner: The $200 Million Divorce?

This is the End Review: Rapture, Sweet Rapture

If you have either eyeballs or earballs, you know that Apocalyptic, End of the World, Doomsday Raptureporn is all the rage in Hollywood these days. You’ve got your World War Z s, your Oblivion s, your Seeking a Friend For the End of the World s. As such, you want to make your Apocalypse movie stand out. You want some kind of new take. Especially in a comedy. This is the End does not really offer a new take. So as a rapture film, it’s kind of dull. As a “bunch of dudes hanging out” movie, though, it’s expectedly hilarious. The movie opens with Seth Rogen, who co-wrote the film with his partner Evan Goldberg, picking up his best friend Jay Baruchel from the airport. Jay hates Los Angeles and doesn’t like Seth’s new Hollywood friends, but Seth drags him to a party at James Franco’s house. There, Jay continues to feel isolated and bitter, until, well, the rapture hits. Lots of people die, leaving Seth, Jay and James holed up in the house with Craig Robinson and Jonah Hill, and later, Danny McBride. At that point, it’s your basic survival film intercut with some comedic Real World-esque “getting along” moments. Comedy definitely ensues. This is the End has some big issues, though. Most glaringly, it’s a tad odd that two Jewish stoner dudes wrote a movie about the Christian Judgment day. Religion is only vaguely addressed (in a “Who knew this would really happen?” type of line), but if you’re not a Christian who believes in the rapture, then the plot feels a little old hat. Then, there’s the issue of character. With all the actors playing themselves, the choice to make the cast members exaggerated versions of themselves was probably a wise one. But those exaggerations are so one note that it gets tough to watch after a while. How many times can we see Jay, the butthurt guy, get placated by Jonah, the obnoxiously compassionate guy. Or James, the self-obsessed egomaniac confront Danny, the sociopathic slimeball. Ultimately, it may have been more fun to just see a documentary about these guys, (save maybe Jay, who I’m sorry, has absolutely no energy or dynamism to speak of) really being themselves, hanging out in the trailer before they’re called to set. The myriad cameos are fun, including an against-type Michael Cera and Emma Watson , but the plot is very thin. After the initial apocalyptic incident traps the guys in the house, there’s about an hour of petty bickering with very little forward progression. And it’s tough to keep yourself from thinking about the ending the entire movie. This can’t end in very many ways, given the very clear End of Days setup. Without spoiling the ending, exactly what you probably think will happen thirty minutes in happens. That said, some genuine laugh lines are borne from the rather static, predictable story, and the final scene after the climax is pretty darn fun. Ultimately, very little effort was made to make This is the End anything more than a comedic take on your standard Doomsday flick. And when the majority of the film takes place in a living room, it really leaves you wanting something revelatory to happen. But it just doesn’t. Take away the rapture part, this is a 3.5-star comedy. Take away the comedy, this is a 2-star Apocalypse movie. Put them together, here’s what you get: RATING: 3/5

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This is the End Review: Rapture, Sweet Rapture

Lauren Conrad Home: Beautiful! Not Cheap!

Lauren Conrad is amassing quite the portfolio. The former star of MTV’s Laguna Beach and The Hills just purchased a new Los Angeles home, renovated by Jeff Lewis, of Bravo’s Flipping Out fame. It cost her $3.745 million. Check it out: The private, 4,300-square-foot, 2-story, New England-style home is located in the posh, West L.A. enclave of Brentwood, home to many celebrities. The 6-bedroom, 5-bedroom estate sits on a quarter acre and features hardwood floors; marble in the kitchen and bathrooms; and stainless steel appliances. While the backyard doesn’t come with that quintessential celebrity staple – a swimming pool – the listing notes that there’s definitely room to build one. Lauren Conrad, 27, also owns a Beverly Hills condo and a four-bedroom pad in that Orange County seaside town where it all began … Laguna Beach. She’s also an author and fashion designer, among her other pursuits. Seems like she’s doing pretty well overall as a businesswoman these days …

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Lauren Conrad Home: Beautiful! Not Cheap!

This is the End 4/20 Promo … Watch it, Man

It’s 4/20, man! And to celebrate,  This is the End has released a new promo. The promo promises that if you buy your advanced tickets today, then the studio will take care of your “munchies.” Interesting. This is the End Promo: 4/20! This is the End stars  Pineapple Express  collaborators Seth Rogen and James Franco as themselves. When the apocalypse hits Los Angeles during a party at Franco’s house, a group of comedy friends holes up and fights to survive. Jonah Hill, Jay Baruschel, Danny McBride, Craig Robinson, Emma Watson, Michael Cera, Jason Segel, David Krumholtz, Paul Rudd, Aziz Ansari, Mindy Kaling, Martin Starr, Kevin Hart, Rihanna, and Christopher Mintz-Plasse also star. This is the End arrives June 12.

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This is the End 4/20 Promo … Watch it, Man

‘This Is The End’ Red Band Trailer: Ranking The 20 Funniest Moments

With three laugh-out-loud trailers in circulation, This Is The End is looking like the comedy of the summer. At the very least, it’s going to make the phrase “titty fucking” extremely popular. And if it doesn’t live up to the hype? We’ll always have this latest red band clip, which is such a laugh riot that I’ve taken the opportunity to list the 20 funniest moments, in ascending order.  Disagree? Leave your ranking in the comments section. And memo to Mr. Rogen:  please find a cameo for Will Ferrell before the movie is released. He and Craig Robinson should have a bat fight . ‘This Is The End’ Red Band Trailer The 20 Funniest Moments: 20.  Paul Rudd  getting third billing on IMDb without even even appearing in the trailer. 19. The Beavis & Butthead way James Franco  says “Machinima” in the introduction. 18.  Emma Watson in extreme looting mode. 17. Craig Robinson expressing a little James Franco envy — “Fuck your house, Franco!” — after a runaway helicopter rotor leaves him with a boo-boo. 16.  Mindy Kaling  overstating her desire to hook up with the “fucking pale, 110 pounds, hairless” Michael Cera . 15. The freaked-out lady getting crushed by a gigantic vintage air conditioner. 14. Cera shotgunning a massive cloud of cocaine into Christopher Mintz-Plasse’s face and finishing with a Karate Kid move. 13. Jason Segel  falling into a sinkhole with his belly hanging out. 12. Rihanna falling into the same sinkhole. 11. Robinson declaring Aziz Ansari unfit to rescue because “you’re already in the [sink]hole.” 10. Jay Baruchel  managing to look sleepy even when he’s terrified. 9. Robinson screaming like a little girl (in the last scene). 8. Michael Cera asking “Is it bad?” After being impaled by a lamp post. 7. The debate over who gets to a piece of James Franco’s “special” Milky Way . 6. Rihanna smacking Cera—really hard—after he pinches her ass. 5. Franco’s “You could be a looter. A rapist. A titty fucker” speech. 4. Emma Watson clocking Seth Rogen with an ax handle. 3. Robinson declaring: ” We’re actors. We pretend to be hard, man. We soft as baby shit!” 2. The bald dude offering to “titty fuck” his way to safety 1. Danny McBride : “Hermione just stole all of our shit.” Follow Frank DiGiacomo on  Twitter . Follow Movieline on  Twitter .

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‘This Is The End’ Red Band Trailer: Ranking The 20 Funniest Moments

‘This Is The End’ Red Band Trailer: Ranking The 20 Funniest Moments

With three laugh-out-loud trailers in circulation, This Is The End is looking like the comedy of the summer. At the very least, it’s going to make the phrase “titty fucking” extremely popular. And if it doesn’t live up to the hype? We’ll always have this latest red band clip, which is such a laugh riot that I’ve taken the opportunity to list the 20 funniest moments, in ascending order.  Disagree? Leave your ranking in the comments section. And memo to Mr. Rogen:  please find a cameo for Will Ferrell before the movie is released. He and Craig Robinson should have a bat fight . ‘This Is The End’ Red Band Trailer The 20 Funniest Moments: 20.  Paul Rudd  getting third billing on IMDb without even even appearing in the trailer. 19. The Beavis & Butthead way James Franco  says “Machinima” in the introduction. 18.  Emma Watson in extreme looting mode. 17. Craig Robinson expressing a little James Franco envy — “Fuck your house, Franco!” — after a runaway helicopter rotor leaves him with a boo-boo. 16.  Mindy Kaling  overstating her desire to hook up with the “fucking pale, 110 pounds, hairless” Michael Cera . 15. The freaked-out lady getting crushed by a gigantic vintage air conditioner. 14. Cera shotgunning a massive cloud of cocaine into Christopher Mintz-Plasse’s face and finishing with a Karate Kid move. 13. Jason Segel  falling into a sinkhole with his belly hanging out. 12. Rihanna falling into the same sinkhole. 11. Robinson declaring Aziz Ansari unfit to rescue because “you’re already in the [sink]hole.” 10. Jay Baruchel  managing to look sleepy even when he’s terrified. 9. Robinson screaming like a little girl (in the last scene). 8. Michael Cera asking “Is it bad?” After being impaled by a lamp post. 7. The debate over who gets to a piece of James Franco’s “special” Milky Way . 6. Rihanna smacking Cera—really hard—after he pinches her ass. 5. Franco’s “You could be a looter. A rapist. A titty fucker” speech. 4. Emma Watson clocking Seth Rogen with an ax handle. 3. Robinson declaring: ” We’re actors. We pretend to be hard, man. We soft as baby shit!” 2. The bald dude offering to “titty fuck” his way to safety 1. Danny McBride : “Hermione just stole all of our shit.” Follow Frank DiGiacomo on  Twitter . Follow Movieline on  Twitter .

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‘This Is The End’ Red Band Trailer: Ranking The 20 Funniest Moments

WATCH: ‘This Is The End’ Trailer Doubles As ‘Pineapple Express 2’ April Fool’s Gag

Finally, an April Fool’s joke that actually sells something. This clips starts out like a half-assed so-bad-it’s-good sequel to Pineapple Express with Seth Rogen, James Franco and Danny McBride  and eventually reveals itself to be a clip within a clip to one of the most hotly anticipated movies of the summer:  The funny actor apocalypse movie, This Is The End . I can’t wait to see this movie, although I’m already bummed that Michael Cera dies in the movie. Not A Trailer For Pineapple Express 2 Follow Frank DiGiacomo on  Twitter . Follow Movieline on  Twitter .

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WATCH: ‘This Is The End’ Trailer Doubles As ‘Pineapple Express 2’ April Fool’s Gag

Jason Reitman and The Big Lebowski at LACMA: Seth Rogen’s Dude Abides

To close out his popular live-reading program at LACMA Thursday night Jason Reitman selected a film that seemed to tie the series and the room together: The Coen brothers’ 1998 noir-comedy opus The Big Lebowski . In the hot seat filling Jeff Bridges’ slippers as The Dude sat Seth Rogen , whose own slacker charm proved oddly suitable, with folks like Hank Azaria (as Donny), Rainn Wilson (as Walter) and Christina Hendricks (as Maude) alongside him re-enacting one of the most quotable films of the past two decades. The cherry on top? Playing the role of The Stranger originated by Sam Elliott and written explicitly for an actor like Sam Elliott, perhaps… was none other than Sam Elliott. Also onboard for the final night of the series’s first run? (According to Reitman, the live-reads will resume again in October – blame the gap on his “day job.”) Jason Alexander as Jeffrey Lebowski; Fred Savage replacing Patton Oswalt at the last minute as the Big Lebowski’s assistant, Brandt; Nick Kroll as Jesus ; and Reitman’s sister, actress Catherine, as Bunny. And of course all the while there was Reitman himself, reading along all the stage directions and fantastically detailed scene descriptions, including both of the film’s trippy dream sequences. (But, strangely enough, not Jackie Treehorn’s mysterious moment of artistic inspiration, scribbled on a notepad, which was conspicuously skipped over.) Elliott’s surprise appearance was the special casting move of the night, a fitting gesture following Reitman’s previous strokes of genius which included tapping original director Rob Reiner to narrate the excellent Princess Bride live-read and re-envisioning Quentin Tarantino’s Reservoir Dogs with an all-black cast. With his first line Elliott drew applause (and subsequently flubbed a few words, saying his eyesight wasn’t what it used to be) but whenever he came back around to deliver another deep, mellifluous nugget of wisdom – the film’s narrator, sitting right there, narrating The Dude’s story right to the audience! — the theater was rapt. Elliott’s vision may have gotten worse over the years, but his sarsaparilla-soaked cowboy flair is as rich and twangy as ever. Besides, this was a “Los Angeleez” story being retold in L.A., right down the street from a Ralphs to boot. How could Reitman not invite the man who so specifically inspired a character that his name was used in the script to describe the role?? In many ways, Elliott had it the easiest; the rest of the cast, through no fault of their own, battled the specter of their onscreen counterparts the whole night – a testament to the indelible performances Bridges, John Goodman, Steve Buscemi, John Turturro, David Huddleston, Ben Gazzara, Julianne Moore and Co. gave in the Coens’ film. Rainn Wilson’s Walter Sobchak was at times uproarious, especially when he, Rogen, and Azaria cross-talked like a well-rehearsed comedy trio. But his Walter was perhaps the most conspicuous example of the film’s performances overshadowing the live-read’s; no matter how well Wilson nailed Walter’s aggro-cluelessness, comparisons to Goodman’s unforgettable work kept creeping into my brain, and it was no contest. Advantage: Goodman. In fairness to Wilson and his cohorts, the live-read can be an extremely limiting setting for an actor. Performance here is primarily aural rather than physical, and one has to establish as best one can, within seconds of spoken dialogue, the kind of character nuance that is otherwise built through months of preparation and rehearsal. Instead of costuming and sets, you’re chair-bound on a stage staring at pages. This can work well with the right script – say, one reliant on dialogue or especially well-suited to alternate forms of storytelling, like, say, a movie about storytelling – but tackling a well-known and beloved film like Lebowski adds the additional challenge of having to compete, in the hearts and minds of your audience, with the cinematic specter of the movie they already know and love. Also suffering from inescapable comparisons to the film: Hendricks’ perfectly good Maude, still much flatter and straighter than Moore’s wonderfully condescending version; Alexander’s Big Lebowski, highly entertaining in his pomposity but naggingly reminiscent of George Costanza; and Rogen’s Dude, effective for the most part in a highly entertaining Rogenesque way but still lacking the subtle variations that made Bridges’ turn so iconic. On the other hand, colorful vocal performances from a few supporting players provided much-needed jolts of creative energy, including voice-over pro Azaria’s multitude of distinct voices (including an off-the-cuff Bush impersonation dropped into the opening supermarket scene as Reitman realized he hadn’t assigned the line to anyone beforehand) and Kroll’s Tony Montana-like Jesus and other assorted delightful side characters. But the biggest discovery of the night, aside from the fact that Reitman’s sister is herself quite talented at accents, was Savage, of all people. The former Wonder Years child thesp-turned-director had done a spunky version of himself months ago at The Princess Bride , but he earned some of the biggest laughs playing Jackie Treehorn’s thug, the third Nihilist, and, most impressively, doing an uncanny Philip Seymour Hoffman impression as Brandt. I’m glad to hear that the live-read series will continue in October, because that gives Reitman time to choose his next selections and cast wisely. One flaw in his group casting Thursday night was the relative similarity in vocal range of many of his actors; variety of tone and register should help differentiate one voice from the next, giving the audience more to paint the imagination with. Viewer familiarity can be both a blessing and a curse; oftentimes during the Lebowski read it felt as if the room was just waiting to hop from one iconic line to the next, laughing along more out of recognition than from the discovery of new and unexpected nuance in the way, say, our hero wakes up to find his rug missing, or struggles to spit out the simplest of platitudes. And while live-read regulars like Kroll (not to mention Mindy Kaling and Oswalt) have absolutely killed, I’d encourage Reitman to think more and further outside the box as he plans his next run. A friend suggested gender-switching as a potential way to keep the energy of these sold-out shows going while daring to push the envelope – why else stage a live-reading, except to explore “what might have been” (i.e. Tom Selleck as Indiana Jones, Christopher Walken as Han Solo) and “what will probably never be?” I’m still convinced that the live-read concept may never turn out as magically as it did with The Princess Bride , a quotable classic built on unforgettable film performances and a fantastic script that nonetheless lent itself well to re-imagination. Following along those lines, with a varied and vocally interesting cast in place, what films should Reitman consider next? Here are my suggestions, off the top of my head: Pulp Fiction , The NeverEnding Story , The Goonies , Annie Hall , Casablanca , Fight Club . But, you know. That’s just, like, my opinion, man. Follow Jen Yamato on Twitter . Follow Movieline on Twitter .

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Jason Reitman and The Big Lebowski at LACMA: Seth Rogen’s Dude Abides