TAG: Fred Armisen

Feb08

Fred Armisen’s Punk Rock Past (Video)

Lots of folks are excited about this weekend’s SNL skit that featured cast member Fred Armisen leading a fictional  ’80s hardcore band Crisis of Conformity, now middle-aged performing at Armisen’s daughter’s wedding. More than just a funny gag, the group—which also featured Dave Grohl in an awful greying ponytail wig—hit all the right cues when it comes to this semi-forgotten punk rock sub-genre. From the Reagan fascism references to Armisen’s Darby Crash-meets-Herny Rollins stage postures, and the song, “Fist Fight In A Parking Lot” that could have easily come off your old Black Flag cassette tapes.

Off course, Armisen has genuine punk rock credentials, starting his entertainment career in the Chicago math-rock band Trenchmouth. And Armisen got into a serious discussion of punk rock in an URB feature last spring. Here’s some of our favorite clips of Armisen waving his punk flag high.

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May01

VIDEO: Fred Armisen Photo Shoot

On location at the Red Bull Space NYC with TheNewPop 

Check out the behind-the-scenes action and interview with Fred Armisen, shot on location at the Red Bull Space during Xmas break from Fred’s day job at Saturday Night Live.

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Mar08

Fred Armisen’s :: Portraying Obama

Fred Armisen is bringing back the man-forall- seasons utility player to Saturday Night Live, but not without some controversy. 

THE GOVERNOR? HE AIN’T LOVIN’ YA

Just before this interview, I watch Fred Armisen’s Saturday Night Live performance as New York ’s legally blind Governor David Paterson—the unexpected fill-in for disgraced politicaltitan-in-the-making former Governor Eliot Spitzer, who’d made enemies on Wall St., City Government, and Organized Crime in Gotham. The newly-promoted Paterson is six days away from selecting a senatorial replacement for Hillary Clinton, and is currently embroiled in a campaign with powerful allies of Caroline Kennedy, who are pressuring him to select her to fill the Senate vacancy.

Armisen’s impersonation of the Governor delivers what can be seen as either the exponential scale-up of a lunchroom bully turning the cafeteria into a Parthenon of shame, or a bold bit of in-your-face physical comedy. It serves as a garish  eminder of our unfamiliarity with the disabled, whom society de-normalizes—as evidenced …

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Mar08

LIVE FROM NEW YORK: Mr. Saturday night special, 02.25.07

I won’t lie—proximity to charisma, influence and fame is a little intoxicating. I’m not ashamed to admit it. Plus, I just naturally like to be where the action is. From backstage greenrooms to exclusive soirees at Sundance to URB photo shoots, I’m drawn to the flame of celebrity like a moth. I didn’t start a magazine to live vicariously, but it’s become a nice vehicle to occasionally put me upfront and personal with celebrity culture.

When I got my first chance to go to a taping of Saturday Night Live at NBC Studios in Rockefeller Plaza a few years ago, I was giddy like a little boy. SNL was a show I grew up with, like many ‘70s kids with parents cool enough to let them watch the edgy, politically incorrect skits. And even …

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