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16Apr/100

Kristen Wiig

Biography Kristen Wiig

Carroll Christian Wiig was born August 22, 1973, is an American comic actress who currently appears as a cast member on Saturday Night Live.

He is a member of the Groundlings, and also appeared in the first season of Spike TV Show The Joe the fool.

Wiig was born in Canandaigua, New York. At the age of three years he and his family moved to Lancaster, Pennsylvania, and then to Rochester, New York, where she lived until she graduated from Brighton High School in 1991. He continued to study at the University of Arizona with a major in art. He was employed as a graphic artist by a plastic surgery clinic to show clients what they would look like after surgery, but went to Los Angeles before ever starting the job to pursue an acting career. In Los Angeles he joined The Groundlings, working odd jobs.

He was married to actor / comedian Hayes Hargrove.

Wiig work is mainly in the comedy circuit, including as a regular player at The Perks, the show featured on Comedy Empty Stage Theater that runs ended in 2000. In 2003 she starred in the Spike TV show spoof fools Joe Show, a satire of reality television in which he plays Dr. Pat, the Quack Marriage Counselor.

Wiig debuted on Saturday Night Live season immediately into 31 companies, on November 12, 2005. In Wiigs first sketch, he played the wife of Jason Sudeikis; two accidentally took a killer escape (Jason Lee), unwittingly giving full powers to the killer into their home and violate their blind niece. Wiig SNL escaped the budget cuts, became a full member of the repertory players at the beginning of the season in 32 events in 2006. Wiig characters including Penelope, one-on; Gilly, very naughty school children, Sue, who can not control the excitement over the surprise; The Lady Target, an employee at the chain stores and collectors of kitsch; and Judy Grimes, the nervous travel agents often appear in Weekend Update. He also has played a real life person like Suze Orman, and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

According to New York magazine, Wiig appeared in more sketches on Saturday Night Live Season 34 than members of other players, appearing in 124 sketches, and viewing an average 5.8 per episode. He is also the only female cast member on SNL during the regular season, 34, following the departure of Amy Poehler to work in the NBC sitcom, Parks and Recreation.

Wiig big screen debut in Judd Apatow, s 2007 comedy Knocked Up as Katherine Heigl, s passive-aggressive bosses. He also played opposite John C. Reilly in the Jake Kasdan, Walk Hard s, another film Apatow-produced, and the opposite Ricky Gervais in the David Koepp, Ghost Town s. Wiig also appeared opposite Ryan Reynolds in Greg Mottola, s Adventureland, Mike Judge, s Extract, co-starring Jason Bateman, Ben Affleck, Clifton Collins Jr., and Mila Kunis, and in Whip It!, Drew Barrymore, s directorial debut with Ellen Page, Marcia Gay Harden and Juliette Lewis.

He co-wrote a script with colleague Annie Groundlings Mumolo for Universal Pictures. Judd Apatow will produce the film. Upcoming work includes Greg Mottola, s Paul, co-starring Seth Rogen, Jason Bateman, Jane Lynch, and Bill Hader,, MacGruber, opposite Will Forte SNL castmate AU, and the first purely dramatic role opposite Ryan Gosling, Kirsten Dunst and Frank Langella in Andrew Jarecki, s All Things Good. Wiig also has signed on recently appeared on SNL castmate Casey Wilson, s upcoming 2011 comedy Ass Backwards.

In December 2008, Wiig was featured in Entertainment Weeklys list of 15 Performing Great for imitating him in Saturday Night Live, and in April 2009, Wiig is featured in EWs list of the 25 Funniest Women in Hollywood.

On July 16, 2009, Wiig was nominated for an Emmy Award for Best Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series for his work on Saturday Night Live.

On December 17, 2009, Wiig called on special holidays SNL Presents: A Very Gilly Christmas featuring new sketches with Gilly and highlights from old clips.

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10Feb/100

Countdown To Lost: ‘what Kate Does’ And ‘what Doc Missed’

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We are hours away from the arrival of the third episode of Losts last season, a Kate-centric affair entitled What Kate Does. Thats right, you heard me: third episode. Even though this is only week two, last weeks two-hour premiere counted as two episodes. Which means that after tonight, we will already be finished with 1/6th of the season. Holy Smokey! And it feels like the season only began last week. Waitwhat?!

My mind is still reeling in a good way from what we got out of LA X. The premiere inspired a wide range of reactions mostly positive, but with varying degrees of confusion (from severe frustration to just-rolling-with-it) or interest in the parallel world storyline the show has introduced this season, tracking the lives of a group of familiar characters who are actually profoundly different than the castaways we know, alterna-world people who landed safely in Los Angeles instead of crashing on an Island which, in their world, is actually sunk. One of my fave Lost bloggers, a very astute and very creative fellow who goes by the handle Fishbiscuit, has posted an insightful, well-researched and somewhat mixed assessment of LA X. I encourage you to read it. I dont share his opinion, but I respect and am greatly entertained by his engagement.

Here within the halls of EW, our contingent of Lost fans had a variety of different reactions, too. Periodically through the season, Im going to be sharing their thoughts with you, so that together, we might be able to reflect back the Lost communitys varied responses to the final year of the show. Perhaps one of these fine folk speak for you. Consider:

WHITNEY PASTOREK:
The revelation of Smokey Locke was cool, the alternate-universe plane stuff a real brain-buster, and Im glad Sayids not dead. But Im not sure we needed the introduction of yet another mysterious group of people, or more fake-looking ancient architecture. If they dont come up with some answers by the end of this season, Im gone. Oh, wait.

ADAM B. VARY:
Despite all my concerns about a continuity-free reboot going into Season 6, what was most surprising and satisfying about the premiere was how completely engaged I was with the rebooted timeline after spending five seasons with these people, seeing (most of) them (mostly) back to their pre-crash selves was incredibly moving and resonant to me. And Terry OQuinns killer pimp acting kicked my keister five ways from Tuesday. But the writers really need to begin shifting gears away from answering mysteries with more mysteries. The New Big Mystery of the dual timelines is great, but the new small mysteries the Japanese dude and his superfluous translator, the dirty hot-tub and its all-important hour glass, etc. just felt tedious and unnecessary. The ground is already fecund with storytelling possibilities; theres no need to seed it with even more fertilizer.

DALTON ROSS:
My biggest problem with the Lost premiere was this: Too much Kate, not enough Locke/Fake Locke. Never really cared about Kate as a fugitive, so it was kind of a bummer to be served a heaping helping of that yawner of a storyline. Im also worried that the flash-sideways trick wont carry the same emotional resonance as the flashbacks. In the flashbacks, the present and past were linked in that we saw how events that had already transpired forged the personality of a person in the here and now. The flash sideways, however, had no such connection and was instead merely a case of now youre here; now youre there. Oh, and the underwater scene looked like bad CGI from a SyFy channel movie starring Dean Cain and a posse of serpents. Im just sayin

SEAN SMITH:
It was wonderful to see all these characters again, but an hour into the premiere, I found myself suffering from mystery-fatigue. This series has always been so brilliant about implanting new burning questions into our brains, and weve been soooooo patient, but now that were in the final season, Im ready for some f-ing answers already. So, okay, the Man in Black is the smoke monster and John Locke is really dead (and Terry OQuinn needs an Emmy, stat!), but now weve got these characters in two different locations in two different versions of reality, and we dont know why or which reality (Both? Neither?) is real, and whether Juliets really dead, or just dead on the Island. And if Sayid is alive on the Island, does that mean hes dead in Los Angeles? And why is it that no one on this series ever asks follow-up questions? These characters may be comfortable with not knowing, but Im increasingly not. Of course, Ill be sticking it out to the bitter end, but I have to say Im frustrated. We have five seasons of questions burning in our brains. Did we really need a whole set of new ones? I feel like my head needs a hug.

As for me well, you know what I think. All 8000-plus words of it. If you havent read my recap of LA X, feel free to read it now in preparation for tonights new episode. Then come right back, because as it happens, I somehow managed to miss some stuff. Can you believe that? Truth is, as much as I write about Lost each week, I can actually write even more. Yes, it is a sickness. Also, when Im blurry-eyed and blurry-minded at 3 AM, little things can slip my mind. Little things like Charlies entire storyline last week. (The shame, the shame) So beginning this week, Im going to post a list of Things Doc Missed as part of each Tuesdays Countdown To Lost PopWatch post. The title was inspired by two top-notch Lost bloggers, Vozzek (Things I Noticed) and Nikki Stafford (Things Nikki Noticed). Without further ado:

THINGS DOC MISSED: LA X

Desmonds got a wedding ring. But are Jin and Sun even husband and wife?

Sharper eyes than mine alerted me to the fact that Sideways Desmond was wearing a wedding ring on the airplane. Maybe hes living a happily ever after life with Penelope somewhere in the world. Last week in my recap, I speculated that perhaps Desmond found new love with the woman he got his sailboat fromLibby. (As expected, the DesPen/PenMond lobbyists are now calling for my censure.) As for Jin and Sun, I defer to this email I received from reader William Riedel: Doc, Nobody seems to be mentioning it, but it doesnt appear that Jin and Sun are married. You dont see a ring on either. Watch the scene with the customs again. The second customs lady asks Sun, Ms. Paik, do you speak English? Its very quick, but she uses her maiden nameThought it was interesting.

Charlies Story
I actually feel really horrible about this. Allow me to atone for that error right now, using the format I employed for the other characters:
ISLAND WORD: The ex-rocker went to Australia to talk his brother into reuniting their band Driveshaft. When he said no, Charlie got wasted on drugs and booze. On the plane, an altercation with Cindy the flight attendant caused him to flee into the bathroom and attempt the old drug-flush. Then CRASH!
SIDEWAYS WORLD: It was cool seeing Cindy, Boone (who went down under to bring Shannon back from a bad boyfriend; this time, she wouldnt go), and especially Charlie, though the Sideways circumstances were pretty grim for this particular iteration of Mr. Pace. Charlie tried to swallow his bag of H an apparent suicide attempt. His crisis gave Jack a hero moment that required him to improvise, which reminded of the early Lost stories in which the clever, unbeatable doc relied on wits and scraps to pull off life-saving procedures for his fellow castaways. Still, Sideways Charlie was embittered toward Jack for saving his life, embellishing Jacks status in castaways lives as the unwanted/pathological savior-fixer. But I would say Jack made the right call in helping Charlie. Itll be interesting to see if Jacks hard-charging hero act will play as a virtue or vice in this world.

Sayids Passport
Last week, I claimed Sayids Sideways storyline didnt appear to have any deviations from Island Sayids history. Thats not true. Sharper eyes that mine have pointed out to me that former Iraqi soldier and torturer had an Iranian passport. Id be surprised if its a continuity error. Does Sideways Sayid have a whole new nationality in the Sideways world? Might this be a fake passport for some manufactured identity hes using? Something to track.

Dogen
I neglected to mention last week that The Temples English-hating master continued Losts tradition of naming characters after notable deep thinkers. Dogen = Dogen Zenji, the 13th century Japanese Zen Buddhist master, founder of the Soto School of Zen. Im no Zen expert, but my understanding is that Dogen emphasized the practice of sitting in silent meditation. But he put even more emphasis on the idea that there should be no distinction between daily living and spiritual discipline, that they should be integrated in a kind of lifestyle/mindset of constant, moment-to-moment enlightenment seeking, or what Christians might call ceaseless prayer. In doing so, the Truth appears, there being no delusion. If you understand this, you are completely free How much of this might get reflected in the Lost matrix this season? We shall see.

A new name for Fake Locke
David Skidmore in Murfreesboro, TN writes: Please use the phrase Locke-ness Monster in your write up. Pretty please? My friends are trying to settle on a name for the Lockes beyond Flocke, Alterna-Locke, Beached Locke, etc. We have a contest going and if you validate this and give me a dash of credit it would be the checkmate I need. David, feel free to declare victory! From now on, Locke-ness monster it shall be! (But I must tip my hat to my Totally Lost pal Dan Snierson, who coined this phrase for me weeks ago.) Also a big shout out to Adam B. Varys father, from whom I am swiping dirty hot tub to label The Others polluted magic spring. Look for the new jargon to make their first appearances in my recap of What Kate Does, posting tomorrow morning.

In the meantime, if youre looking for other stuff to do in advance of Lost tonight, theres my Doc Jensen column, or the new episode of Totally Lost below, complete with guest appearances by Matthew Fox, Terry OQuinn, and Michael Emerson, whose cryptic comments about the Sideways storyline have had Lost fans buzzing all day. Check it outand come back here right after the episode to start the conversation about What Kate Does.

Photo Credit: Mario Perez/ABC