Watch Tina Fey Bring Back Her Sarah Palin Impression
She's back! At least, for just a few minutes.
She's back! At least, for just a few minutes.
Let's not kid ourselves about this. Part of consuming Hollywood entertainment is that, on some level, we like these people. It's strange, but I probably like Tina Fey and Paul Rudd more than actual live humans I've met and have to deal with on a regular basis. Yes, I recognize that I only know them through the characters they play (and that includes their "as themselves" appearances on Letterman's couch or the Golden Globes stage) but their finely sculpted personas of vibrant, clever, likable people automatically gives them lift in any project they choose. When they star together in 'Admission' - a romantic comedy that is just a little bit smarter than the other leading brands - and one where they find a degree of happiness together, well, this puts the movie far off the likability charts.
Tina Fey has been keeping pretty busy in this post-'30 Rock' world. Her latest job teams her up with Jason Bateman for the sibling comedy 'This Is Where I Leave You.'
Only a day after Seth MacFarlane said, in no uncertain terms, that he would not be returning to the Oscars after his much-criticized stint as host, we're slapped with the news that the ideal choice to replace him, Tina Fey, won't be taking the stage either.
'Mean Girls' quickly became the cult hit of the early 2000s and defined a new generation of movie goers dealing with their own versions of "The Plastics." But are we ready to hear "that's so fetch" on the Broadway stage?
A Princeton admissions officer Portia Nathan visits an unconventional school of kids and meets the boy she may have given up for adoption while she herself was in college.