
These days, he thinks about violence constantly, because he’s an action hero and because he doesn’t do half measures. “His entire approach to anything he does is solely to make it the best thing that it can be,” says David Cross, who should know, since the two made “Mr. Show” together.
Somewhere along the way he ended up in the kitchen at a party at Janeane Garofalo’s house, riffing with Cross and realizing that, as Cross puts it, “We were wildly, oddly compatible.” The duo went on to make the beloved “Mr. Show,” an HBO comedy cult favorite of the mid-’90s.
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