

“As I said in my Facebook Marketplace posting, it’s 8' diameter round table in Maple plywood/MDF, 1.5" thickness with maple edgebanding. If anyone wants to buy it for $1,000 please contact us,” Suresh said. (“I know you’ve been working on Broccoli: Live!” “I will be playing the cheese that goes all over the broccoli … it’s a very intense role.”) There’s a whole bit within the bit about Theroux starring in a fake awards bait historical biopic directed by Ron Howard called MLK’s Dresser-about a fake tailor who dressed Martin Luther King Jr.-for which they shot actual footage. In the Hollywood Recorder version, Levick and Suresh, along with Vince Edgehill, Stu Li, Stephen Cofield, and moderator Colin Stokes-and, uh, Justin Theroux-straight-facedly discuss their processes, try to top each other with fake charitable endeavors, and bemoan missed opportunities, all in pitch-perfect tone.

For the unfamiliar, the actual segments consist of the year’s hottest actors discussing their careers, roles, and processes with a mixture of deep solemnity and self-effacing jokes. Enter: The Hollywood Recorder, a 54-minute-long parody in the style of The Hollywood Reporter’s venerable actors roundtable. The New York comedy duo is responsible for some of the finest satires of the cultural conversation, whether riffing on the Shane Gillis podcast appearance that got him fired from Saturday Night Live, a conservative lecturer destroying a SJW college student, or Joe Rogan-via a 12-hour podcast with Tim Heidecker.Īhead of the Oscars last week, Levick, 28, and Suresh, 27, dropped a new video that shows just how far that commitment goes. Few people today are committing to the bit at the level of Jeremy Levick and Rajat Suresh.
