Information about Battlebots can be found at the official Battlebots webpage. The company host robot competitions and there is a television show based on this.
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yes in come on ESPN i do not know what time sorry
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Battlebots
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Rim Tin Tin was a lightweight BattleBot that competed in Seasons 2.0 through 5.0 0f BattleBots.
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I do it just to learn and have fun. The ones that get the publicity and make money are the ones that do something too dangerous for humans to do safely (like looking for bombs in a war zone or searching the bottom of the ocean) and take much of the time consuming drudgery out of monotonous work (like washing dishes and clothes, vacuuming,...). And don't forget the battlebots. Those are fun if you like smashing things.
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Mark Beiro has: Played Himself - Ring Announcer in "HBO World Championship Boxing" in 1973. Played Himself - Referee in "ESPN Top Rank Boxing" in 1980. Played Himself - Ring Announcer in "ESPN Top Rank Boxing" in 1980. Played Himself - Ring Announcer in "Tuesday Night Fights" in 1982. Played Himself - Ring Announcer in "HBO Boxing After Dark" in 1996. Played Himself - Ring Announcer in "ESPN Friday Night Fights" in 1998. Played Announcer in "BattleBots" in 2000.
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Robots have killed two people so far in automated plants. (Urada of Japan and Robert Williams, a worker at a Ford Motor Company factory in Michigan) The border between North and South Korea is protected by automated tower mounted weapons systems that can identify and eliminate anyone who approaches. not quite the picture of wandering robots.
The American Army is developing mobile weapons platforms 9such a "Big Dog") which will be killer robots in all senses
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Sean Salisbury has: Played Himself - Minnesota Vikings Quarterback in "NFL Monday Night Football" in 1970. Played Himself - San Diego Chargers Quarterback in "NFL Monday Night Football" in 1970. Played Himself (Football Analyst) in "SportsCenter" in 1979. Played Himself (2006) in "NFL Primetime" in 1987. Played Himself - NFL Analyst in "NFL Live" in 1998. Played Himself - Play by Play Anchor (2000-2001) in "BattleBots" in 2000. Played Himself - Team Reporter in "2000 NFL Draft" in 2000. Played himself in "Pardon the Interruption" in 2001. Played himself in "Cheap Seats: Without Ron Parker" in 2004. Played Vic in "The Longest Yard" in 2005. Played himself in "Quite Frankly with Stephen A. Smith" in 2005. Played Brad in "The Benchwarmers" in 2006. Played himself in "2007 NFL Draft" in 2007. Played himself in "The House Bunny" in 2008. Played himself in "30 for 30" in 2009.
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One definition of robot is "artificial agent" (a better definition is in the link below). Artificial just means someone made it, agent means it does something for someone (my favorite robot is the dishwasher - someone built it to wash dishes for me). Many people assume "agency" includes the ability to act by itself (autonomy), or at least look like it can. These days most of the really popular robots are exploring places people can't go yet (Voyager left the solar system not too long ago, Spirit and Opportunity are still running around Mars) and doing things too dangerous for humans to do safely (like hunting for roadside bombs in war zones or searching the bottom of the ocean). I used to work with a parts placer in an electronics assembly plant, it took very small parts from reels and bins and placed them on circuit boards. Some car manufacturers use big industrial robots for welding and lifting cars and trucks. Nanotechnology is finally catching on, with motors and wheels the size of atoms. I have seen pictures of remote control robots for doing surgery from somewhere outside the hospital, like from another country. Anything you can build to do something for you is basically a robot. Oh yeah, don't forget battlebots! Some of us like the sound of smashing and tearing metal.
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Almost anything. One definition of robot is "artificial agent" (a better definition is in the link below). Artificial just means someone made it, agent means it does something for someone (my favorite robot is the dishwasher - someone built it to wash dishes for me). Many people assume "agency" includes the ability to act by itself (autonomy), or at least look like it can. These days most of the really popular robots are exploring places people can't go yet (Voyager left the solar system not too long ago, Spirit and Opportunity are still running around Mars) and doing things too dangerous for humans to do safely (like hunting for roadside bombs in war zones or searching the bottom of the ocean). I used to work with a parts placer in an electronics assembly plant, it took very small parts from reels and bins and placed them on circuit boards. Some car manufacturers use big industrial robots for welding and lifting cars and trucks. Nanotechnology is finally catching on, with motors and wheels the size of atoms. I have seen pictures of remote control robots for doing surgery from somewhere outside the hospital, like from another country. Then there are the vacuuming robots. Anything you can build to do something for you is basically a robot. Oh yeah, don't forget battlebots! Some of us like the sound of smashing and tearing metal.
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Almost anything. One definition of robot is "artificial agent" (a better definition is in the link below). Artificial just means someone made it, agent means it does something for someone (my favorite robot is the dishwasher - someone built it to wash dishes for me). Many people assume "agency" includes the ability to act by itself (autonomy), or at least look like it can. These days most of the really popular robots are exploring places people can't go yet (Voyager left the solar system not too long ago, Spirit and Opportunity are still running around Mars) and doing things too dangerous for humans to do safely (like hunting for roadside bombs in war zones or searching the bottom of the ocean). I used to work with a parts placer in an electronics assembly plant, it took very small parts from reels and bins and placed them on circuit boards. Some car manufacturers use big industrial robots for welding and lifting cars and trucks. Nanotechnology is finally catching on, with motors and wheels the size of atoms. I have seen pictures of remote control robots for doing surgery from somewhere outside the hospital, like from another country. Then there are the vacuuming robots. Anything you can build to do something for you is basically a robot. Oh yeah, don't forget battlebots! Some of us like the sound of smashing and tearing metal.
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One definition of robot is "artificial agent" (a better definition is in the link below). Artificial just means someone made it, agent means it does something for someone (my favorite robot is the dishwasher - someone built it to wash dishes for me). Many people assume "agency" includes the ability to act by itself (autonomy), or at least look like it can. These days most of the really popular robots are exploring places people can't go yet (Voyager left the solar system not too long ago, Spirit and Opportunity are still running around Mars) and doing things too dangerous for humans to do safely (like hunting for roadside bombs in war zones or searching the bottom of the ocean). I used to work with a parts placer in an electronics assembly plant, it took very small parts from reels and bins and placed them on circuit boards. Some car manufacturers use big industrial robots for welding and lifting cars and trucks. Nanotechnology is finally catching on, with motors and wheels the size of atoms. I have seen pictures of remote control robots for doing surgery from somewhere outside the hospital, like from another country. Then there are the vacuuming robots. Anything you can build to do something for you is basically a robot. Oh yeah, don't forget battlebots! Some of us like the sound of smashing and tearing metal.
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Almost anything. One definition of robot is "artificial agent" (a better definition is in the link below). Artificial just means someone made it, agent means it does something for someone (my favorite robot is the dishwasher - someone built it to wash dishes for me). Many people assume "agency" includes the ability to act by itself (autonomy), or at least look like it can. These days most of the really popular robots are exploring places people can't go yet (Voyager left the solar system not too long ago, Spirit and Opportunity are still running around Mars) and doing things too dangerous for humans to do safely (like hunting for roadside bombs in war zones or searching the bottom of the ocean). I used to work with a parts placer in an electronics assembly plant, it took very small parts from reels and bins and placed them on circuit boards. Some car manufacturers use big industrial robots for welding and lifting cars and trucks. Nanotechnology is finally catching on, with motors and wheels the size of atoms. I have seen pictures of remote control robots for doing surgery from somewhere outside the hospital, like from another country. Then there are the vacuuming robots. Anything you can build to do something for you is basically a robot. Oh yeah, don't forget battlebots! Some of us like the sound of smashing and tearing metal.
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Depending on how we define "robot", there are many uses. One definition of robot is "artificial agent" (a better definition is in the link below). Artificial just means someone made it, agent means it does something for someone (my favorite robot is the dishwasher - someone built it to wash dishes for me). Many people assume "agency" includes the ability to act by itself (autonomy), or at least look like it can. These days most of the really popular robots are exploring places people can't go yet (Voyager left the solar system not too long ago, Spirit and Opportunity are still running around Mars) and doing things too dangerous for humans to do safely (like hunting for roadside bombs in war zones or searching the bottom of the ocean). I used to work with a parts placer in an electronics assembly plant, it took very small parts from reels and bins and placed them on circuit boards. Some car manufacturers use big industrial robots for welding and lifting cars and trucks. Nanotechnology is finally catching on, with motors and wheels the size of atoms. I have seen pictures of remote control robots for doing surgery from somewhere outside the hospital, like from another country. Then there are the vacuuming robots. Anything you can build to do something for you is basically a robot. Oh yeah, don't forget battlebots! Some of us like the sound of smashing and tearing metal.
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Mostly, to get things done that we can't or don't want to do ourselves. One definition of robot is "artificial agent" (a better definition is in the link below). Artificial just means someone made it, agent means it does something for someone (my favorite robot is the dishwasher - someone built it to wash dishes for me). Many people assume "agency" includes the ability to act by itself (autonomy), or at least look like it can. These days most of the really popular robots are exploring places people can't go yet (Voyager left the solar system not too long ago, Spirit and Opportunity are still running around Mars) and doing things too dangerous for humans to do safely (like hunting for roadside bombs in war zones or searching the bottom of the ocean). I used to work with a parts placer in an electronics assembly plant, it took very small parts from reels and bins and placed them on circuit boards. Some car manufacturers use big industrial robots for welding and lifting cars and trucks. Nanotechnology is finally catching on, with motors and wheels the size of atoms. I have seen pictures of remote control robots for doing surgery from somewhere outside the hospital, like from another country. Anything you can build to do something for you is basically a robot. Oh yeah, don't forget battlebots! Some of us like the sound of smashing and tearing metal.
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Mostly perception. If it looks like a robot to someone, then it's a robot. If you prefer something more objective, one definition of robot is "artificial agent" (a better definition is in the link below). Artificial just means someone made it, agent means it does something for someone (my favorite robot is the dishwasher - someone built it to wash dishes for me). Many people assume "agency" includes the ability to act by itself (autonomy), or at least look like it can. "Anthropomorphism" is "the attribution of uniquely human characteristics to non-human" things and critters (some people don't think it's a robot unless it looks like humans, animals or something else recognizable). These days most of the really popular robots are exploring places people can't go yet (Voyager left the solar system not too long ago, Spirit and Opportunity are still running around Mars) and doing things too dangerous for humans to do safely (like hunting for roadside bombs in war zones or searching the bottom of the ocean). I used to work with a parts placer in an electronics assembly plant, it took very small parts from reels and bins and placed them on circuit boards. Some car manufacturers use big industrial robots for welding and lifting cars and trucks. Nanotechnology is finally catching on, with motors and wheels the size of atoms. I have seen pictures of remote control robots for doing surgery from somewhere outside the hospital, like from another country. Then there are the vacuuming robots. Anything you can build to do something for you is basically a robot. Oh yeah, don't forget battlebots! Some of us like the sound of smashing and tearing metal.
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Bil Dwyer has: Played himself in "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" in 1992. Played Ed in "The Larry Sanders Show" in 1992. Performed in "Hugging the Edge" in 1996. Played Bandleader in "Ally McBeal" in 1997. Played Rodney in "Shucking the Curve" in 1998. Performed in "Comedy Central Presents" in 1998. Played Host in "Ultimate Fan League" in 1998. Played Andrew in "A Sudden Loss of Gravity" in 2000. Performed in "Once and Future Queen" in 2000. Played Anchorman ("Into The Woods" segment) in "The Bogus Witch Project" in 2000. Played Billy Rockets in "King of the Open Mics" in 2000. Played Play by Play Anchor in "BattleBots" in 2000. Played himself in "Late Friday" in 2001. Played himself in "Lingo" in 2002. Performed in "Comic Remix" in 2002. Played Himself - Host in "Pyramid" in 2002. Played Himself - Comedian in "Last Comic Standing" in 2003. Played Host in "Dirty Rotten Cheater" in 2003. Played Color Commentator in "Extreme Dodgeball" in 2004. Played himself in "101 Biggest Celebrity Oops" in 2004. Played Himself - Guest Speaker in "The Sports List" in 2004. Played Himself - Commentator in "101 Most Unforgettable SNL Moments" in 2004. Played himself in "I Love the Holidays" in 2005. Played himself in "I Love Toys" in 2006. Played Himself - Guest in "The Ointment" in 2006. Played Himself - Host in "The 50 Greatest Game Shows of All Time" in 2006. Played (2007) in "What I Learned About... From the Movies" in 2007. Played himself in "What I Learned About... From the Movies" in 2007. Played Dr. Shole in "iCarly" in 2007. Played himself in "Rock of Love with Bret Michaels" in 2007. Played Himself - Host in "GSN Live" in 2008. Played Hank in "San Saba" in 2008. Played himself in "I Love the New Millennium" in 2008. Played Paul Shaw in "Parks and Recreation" in 2009. Played himself in "The Great Debate" in 2009. Played Leon in "Kill Spin" in 2010. Performed in "Kill Spin" in 2010. Performed in "Undateable" in 2010. Played himself in "Comedy.TV" in 2010. Played Bill Strickland in "Clippervention" in 2010. Played Anders in "Hot in Cleveland" in 2010. Played Rex Martin in "Funny in Farsi" in 2010. Played Father in "Suburgatory" in 2011. Played Tom Harper in "HumanWeb Inc." in 2012.
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first you need to have all the crew members established, basicly a welder, electronics technician, driver (a devoted and reliable one), and any other role nessecary to the success of the project. not every role must be filled by only one person, nor must there be a person for every role, there have been one-man builders who weld, solder, drive, strategize, and design. likewise there have been huge teams with many welders, many designers, etc. and somtimes teams choose to have more than one driver (one steers and one controls weapons). after that, the process branches off into two methods.
for the low-funded, resourceful and creative builder, the thing to do is obtain the cheapest key components available (used or on sale or whatever) decide what to do with them, and build the bot around them.
for the well-funded builder, you should create a practical design (effecient, reliable, powerful, well armored, low cost if nessecary and most important-COOL! nobody wants to watch a bunch of wedges run into each other) draw it out (many problems reveal themselves in the sketching stage) and don't think that you can create the ulimate bot (performance in some areas diminish as performance in other areas increase, so just design what you think will be cool), next make a parts list-motors, armor, radio control system (not that hard to attain), electronic speed control, hydraulics, etc.-and make sure it has a kill switch wired directly to the negative on the power source so that it can be turned on or off from the outside (nobody wants a 500 pound 600 horse power block of metal firing up unexpectedly), build and test test test! you want to know every problem and the driver (or drivers) have to build skill at operating the bot-many bots have met their end at the hand of mediocre operaters.
keep in mind that fortune favors the bold. new ideas are key to the development and success of the sport. I'll say it again! no one wants to watch a ring full of wedges run into each other! if you want your robot to slap opponents with a big metal hand, or bounce around on springs, people will love you (well, your bot anyway). this is why it must be cool, to make sure that people remember it. wether it wins or not.
please remember safety! destroying old computers with a high powered diamond studded grinder is fun, but shrapnel is inevitable. anyone watching or operating a ROBOT BUILT TO DESTROY should have safety glasses at least, and should probably be on a ledge out of reach of the robot or behind a polycarbonate wall like in robot wars and battlebots (bullet proof glass)
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Arj Barker has: Played Himself - Guest - Stand-up Comedian in "Late Show with David Letterman" in 1993. Played himself in "Good Morning Australia" in 1993. Played himself in "Tompkins Square" in 1996. Played himself in "Good News Week" in 1996. Played himself in "Comics Come Home 3" in 1997. Played Himself - Comedian in "Live at Jongleurs" in 1997. Played Himself - Stand-up Comedian in "Premium Blend" in 1997. Played himself in "Comedy Central Presents" in 1998. Played Garnett in "Shooting the Past" in 1999. Played Himself - Feature Reporter in "BattleBots" in 2000. Played himself in "Rove Live" in 2000. Played himself in "The Glass House" in 2001. Played himself in "Late Friday" in 2001. Played himself in "The World Comedy Tour: Melbourne 2002" in 2002. Played himself in "Just for Laughs" in 2002. Played himself in "Real Time with Bill Maher" in 2003. Played Himself ("My First Time, Summer Vacation") in "My Coolest Years" in 2004. Played Arj in "Unlucky in Love" in 2005. Played himself in "Spicks and Specks" in 2005. Played himself in "Shpants" in 2005. Played Jimmy in "Car Babes" in 2006. Played Himself - Guest in "Robins" in 2006. Played himself in "Arj Barker Live" in 2006. Played The Cube in "Electric Apricot" in 2006. Played himself in "The Sideshow" in 2007. Played Dave in "Flight of the Conchords" in 2007. Played himself in "Super High Me" in 2007. Played himself in "Arj Barker: Balls" in 2008. Played himself in "America the Punchline" in 2009. Played (2014) in "Just for Laughs" in 2009. Played himself in "Flight of the Conchords: On Air" in 2009. Played himself in "The 7PM Project" in 2009. Played himself in "Just for Laughs" in 2009. Played himself in "Melbourne International Comedy Festival Gala" in 2010. Played Arj Barker in "Edinburgh 2010" in 2010. Played himself in "The Green Room with Paul Provenza" in 2010. Played himself in "Arj Barker: LYAO" in 2010. Played himself in "Can of Worms" in 2011. Played himself in "Adam Hills in Gordon St Tonight" in 2011. Played himself in "Ben Elton Live from Planet Earth" in 2011. Played himself in "The Comedy Festivals Preview Show" in 2011. Played Himself - Comedian in "Funny as Hell" in 2011. Played himself in "The Project" in 2011. Played himself in "Arj Barker Heavy" in 2013. Played himself in "Melbourne International Comedy Festival 2013 Gala" in 2013. Performed in "Just for Laughs: All-Access" in 2013. Played himself in "The Comedy Club" in 2014.
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Traci Bingham has: Played herself in "Entertainment Tonight" in 1981. Played Lap Dancer in "Married with Children" in 1987. Played Jordan Tate in "Baywatch" in 1989. Played Santa Helper in "The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air" in 1990. Played Porno Actress in "Dream On" in 1990. Played herself in "Howard Stern" in 1994. Played Party babe in "Tales from the Crypt: Demon Knight" in 1995. Played Donyel in "The Jamie Foxx Show" in 1996. Played herself in "65th Annual Hollywood Christmas Parade" in 1996. Performed in "Head Over Heels" in 1997. Played herself in "Light Lunch" in 1997. Played herself in "The Roseanne Show" in 1998. Played Julie in "Beach Movie" in 1998. Played herself in "Hollywood Squares" in 1998. Performed in "Sin City Spectacular" in 1998. Played Host in "Exploring the Fantasy" in 1999. Played Victoria Carrera in "D.R.E.A.M. Team" in 1999. Played Victoria Carrera in "The Dream Team" in 1999. Played Herself - Party footage in "Hollywood: Wild in the Streets" in 1999. Played Angela in "The Parkers" in 1999. Played Simone in "Foolish" in 1999. Played Feature Reporter (2001) in "BattleBots" in 2000. Played Candy in "Girlfriends" in 2000. Played Dawna (2000) in "Strip Mall" in 2000. Played herself in "The Test" in 2001. Played herself in "Spy TV" in 2001. Played Vapor in "Black Scorpion" in 2001. Played herself in "1st Annual BET Awards" in 2001. Played herself in "Longshot" in 2001. Played Jasmine in "The Proud Family" in 2001. Played herself in "Celebrity Big Brother" in 2001. Played Herself - Guest Host in "Rendez-View" in 2001. Played herself in "The 43rd Annual Grammy Awards" in 2001. Played Herself - Contestant in "Fear Factor" in 2001. Played Laina Brookhart in "The Private Public" in 2001. Played herself in "Celebrity Boot Camp" in 2002. Played herself in "Caiga quien caiga" in 2002. Played Kia in "Rock Me, Baby" in 2003. Played Sandra Marshall in "Bad Bizness" in 2003. Played herself in "The Surreal Life" in 2003. Played herself in "Party with Spike World Premiere Special" in 2003. Played herself in "G-Phoria" in 2003. Played Herself - Bikini Contestant in "Summer Music Mania 2003" in 2003. Played herself in "Four Fingers of the Dragon" in 2003. Played herself in "Negermagasinet" in 2005. Played herself in "The 2005 World Music Awards" in 2005. Played herself in "Bench Warmer: Behind the Scenes" in 2005. Played Herself - Host in "Official Fantasy Fest DVD" in 2005. Played herself in "The Tyra Banks Show" in 2005. Played herself in "CC Variety TV" in 2006. Performed in "Celebrity Paranormal Project" in 2006. Played herself in "Sunset Tan" in 2007. Played Herself - Participant in "The Surreal Life: Fame Games" in 2007. Played herself in "Fox Reality Really Awards" in 2008. Played Cashmere in "Hanging in Hedo" in 2008. Played The Usher in "Forever Plaid" in 2008. Played Herself - Presenter in "The 2008 World Magic Awards" in 2008. Performed in "Spats" in 2009. Played herself in "Comedy Central Roast of David Hasselhoff" in 2010. Played Lynda in "Black Widow" in 2010. Played Herself - Guest Judge in "Playboy Shootout" in 2010. Played Violet in "War of the Dragon" in 2011. Played herself in "Chasing Beauty" in 2013. Played Herself - Host (2014) in "Sugar Baby" in 2014.
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Carmen Electra married to
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Bill Hader has: Played Various in "Saturday Night Live" in 1975. Played Stefon in "Saturday Night Live" in 1975. Played Himself - Guest in "Live with Regis and Kathie Lee" in 1988. Played Slava in "The Simpsons" in 1989. Played Himself - Guest in "The Charlie Rose Show" in 1991. Played Himself - Host in "HBO First Look" in 1992. Played Himself - Guest in "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" in 1992. Played himself in "The Tonight Show with Jay Leno" in 1992. Played Himself - Guest in "Late Show with David Letterman" in 1993. Played himself in "Late Show with David Letterman" in 1993. Played himself in "Good Day L.A." in 1993. Played Plex in "South Park" in 1997. Played Alec Baldwin in "South Park" in 1997. Played himself in "Total Request Live" in 1998. Played Pod in "Aqua Teen Hunger Force" in 2000. Played Der Inflatable Hitler in "Aqua Teen Hunger Force" in 2000. Performed in "Last Call with Carson Daly" in 2002. Played himself in "American Idol: The Search for a Superstar" in 2002. Played Narrator in "The Venture Bros." in 2003. Played Headshot in "The Venture Bros." in 2003. Played Professor Impossible in "The Venture Bros." in 2003. Played Flying Squid in "The Venture Bros." in 2003. Played Barnaby G. Price in "Sounds Good to Me: Remastering the Sting" in 2004. Played himself in "Made in Hollywood" in 2005. Played Father in "Jenny Clone" in 2005. Played Receptionist in "Hallway" in 2005. Played himself in "The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson" in 2005. Played Various Characters in "Saturday Night Live: The Best of Commercial Parodies" in 2005. Played Little Kevin in "Shutterbugs" in 2005. Played Valet in "Uncommon Sense" in 2005. Played Bill Hader in "The Office" in 2005. Played Soldier Sam in "Doogal" in 2006. Played himself in "Saturday Night Live: The Best of Saturday TV Funhouse" in 2006. Played Kevin in "30 Rock" in 2006. Played Eric in "The Pity Card" in 2006. Performed in "Head in the Oven" in 2006. Played Mark in "You, Me and Dupree" in 2006. Played Little Kevin in "Human Giant" in 2007. Played Officer Slater in "Superbad" in 2007. Performed in "The Jeannie Tate Show" in 2007. Played Priest in "Xavier: Renegade Angel" in 2007. Played Dave in "Hot Rod" in 2007. Played Pavlov in "Xavier: Renegade Angel" in 2007. Played himself in "Up Close with Carrie Keagan" in 2007. Performed in "Human Giant" in 2007. Played himself in "Human Giant" in 2007. Played himself in "The Jeannie Tate Show" in 2007. Played himself in "MTV Video Music Awards 2007" in 2007. Played Recumbent Biker in "The Brothers Solomon" in 2007. Played Brent in "Knocked Up" in 2007. Played Bookstore Fan in "Purple Violets" in 2007. Played Keith Morrison in "Saturday Night Live: Weekend Update Thursday" in 2008. Played Wilson Taylor Sr. in "Grand Theft Auto IV" in 2008. Played Various in "Saturday Night Live: Weekend Update Thursday" in 2008. Played Studio Executive Rob Slolom - Vietnam Crew in "Tropic Thunder" in 2008. Played Kevin Quigley in "Saturday Night Live: Weekend Update Thursday" in 2008. Played himself in "The Bonnie Hunt Show" in 2008. Played James Carville in "Saturday Night Live: Weekend Update Thursday" in 2008. Played Brian Bretter in "Forgetting Sarah Marshall" in 2008. Played himself in "Speechless" in 2008. Played Rob Slolom in "Tropic Thunder: Rain of Madness" in 2008. Played John Malkovich in "Saturday Night Live: Weekend Update Thursday" in 2008. Played Private Miller in "Pineapple Express" in 2008. Played Shaman in "Year One" in 2009. Played George Armstrong Custer in "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian" in 2009. Played General George Armstrong Custer in "Night at the Museum: Battle of the Smithsonian" in 2009. Played himself in "IFC News Presents: Sundance 2009" in 2009. Played Flint Lockwood in "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs" in 2009. Played Various in "Saturday Night Live: Just Shorts" in 2009. Played Bobby in "Adventureland" in 2009. Played Gazelle in "Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs" in 2009. Played himself in "Live from New York..." in 2009. Played himself in "Late Night with Jimmy Fallon" in 2009. Played himself in "Saturday Night" in 2010. Played himself in "Saturday Night Live in the 2000s: Time and Again" in 2010. Played Various in "The Women of SNL" in 2010. Played William Dyer in "Ugly Americans" in 2010. Played Tad in "Freaknik: The Musical" in 2010. Played himself in "Conan" in 2010. Played Willem Dafoe in "Happy Birthday Sam Raimi from James Franco" in 2010. Played The Voice in "Scott Pilgrim vs. the World" in 2010. Played Athletic Trainer (segment "Lady Refs") in "Funny or Die Presents..." in 2010. Played himself in "Sundance Skippy" in 2010. Played D-Bomb in "Moves: The Rise and Rise of the New Pornographers" in 2011. Played Haggard in "Paul" in 2011. Played Birdman in "Portlandia" in 2011. Played Store Clerk in "Back for the Future" in 2011. Played himself in "The 2011 Comedy Awards" in 2011. Played Tad McMilrthy in "NTSF:SD:SUV" in 2011. Played himself in "6 Days to Air: The Making of South Park" in 2011. Played himself in "Speakeasy: With Paul F. Tompkins" in 2012. Played Tom McDougall in "The Mindy Project" in 2012. Played Man at the Store in "This Is 40" in 2012. Played Himself - Guest in "Larry King Now" in 2012. Played Andy Warhol in "Men in Black 3" in 2012. Played Himself - Nominee:Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series in "The 64th Primetime Emmy Awards" in 2012. Played Flint Lockwood in "Cloudy with a Chance of Meatballs 2" in 2013. Played Additional Voices in "Star Trek Into Darkness" in 2013. Played Milo in "The Skeleton Twins" in 2013. Played Himself - in "Talking Bad" in 2013. Played Willy in "The To Do List" in 2013. Played John Pemberton in "Drunk History" in 2013. Played Himself - Nominated: Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series in "The 65th Primetime Emmy Awards" in 2013. Played Dr. Malocchio in "The Awesomes" in 2013. Played Rags in "Clear History" in 2013. Performed in "The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby" in 2013. Played Announcer in "Escape from Planet Earth" in 2013. Played himself in "Comedy Central Roast of James Franco" in 2013. Played Jeff Spiegel in "Rock and Roll Legends Present: Islands" in 2013. Played himself in "The 2014 Film Independent Spirit Awards" in 2014. Performed in "Trainwreck" in 2015. Played Forrest in "The Good Dinosaur" in 2015.
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