Judd Apatow

This is 50: Judd Apatow on comedy, politics and mentorship

The writer, director and comedian discusses his relationship with late mentor Garry Shandling, his reluctance to be political and his hopes for #MeToo

Judd Apatow adds some colour to his comedic palette

Comedy king Judd Apatow has yet to cast a person of colour in a lead role. That’s why his next film, ‘The Big Sick’, could be a big deal.

‘Girls’ star Lena Dunham on the perils of self-referential comedy

The star and creator of the hit HBO show on set in New York

The best in holiday movies

Fed up with peace on earth? Check out ‘Jack Reacher,’ ‘Django Unchained,’ ‘The Impossible,’ ‘This is 40’ and ‘Rust and Bone’

Four funerals and a ‘Five-Year Engagement’

Romantic comedy’s new Tom Hanks

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Kristen Wiig is seriously annoying

Can’t the new female star of ‘Saturday Night Live’ come up with a likeable character or two?

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Judd Apatow’s latest discovery

Comedian Bo Burnham, 18, is charming and offending his way up the Hollywood ranks

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Robot, Go Home!

While we count the seconds until 90210, we should take time to remember The Ben Stiller Show‘s “Melrose Heights 90210,” where Stiller, co-creator Judd Apatow (in the first of his many TV cult flops) and their writers satirized the original 90210’s relentlessly pro-social messages, and Janeane Garofalo parodied Shannen Doherty’s weird line deliveries. This is the second of the two Melrose Heights sketches, where Vaughn (Bob Odenkirk) is shunned by his fellow students because they think he’s… a robot. The combination of melodrama with hit-you-over-the-head PSAs was a staple of Fox’s early programming — 90210 picked it up from 21 Jump Street — and also of Canadian programming (that’s kind of the Degrassi formula, but in a grittier way), but it’s what the producers of new 90210 are apparently trying to stay away from. For now at least.