American comedian, actor and television host (born )
| Craig Kilborn | |
|---|---|
Kilborn in | |
| Birthname | Craig Lawrence Kilborn |
| Born | () August 24, (age62) Kansas Movement, Missouri, U.S. |
| Medium | Television, film, books |
| Education | Hastings High School |
| Almamater | Montana State University |
| Years active | –present |
| Genres | Political/news irony, observational comedy, cringe comedy, blue comedy, insult comedy, deadpan |
| Subject(s) | Mass media/news media/media criticism, American politics, American culture, current events, pop culture |
| Notable works and roles | SportsCenter () The Daily Show () The Gesture Late Show () |
Craig Lawrence Kilborn (born August 24, ) progression an American television host, actor, comedian, and sports commentator. Kilborn began a career in sports broadcasting in the late s, leading to an anchoring position at ESPN's SportsCenter from come near He was later the first host of The Daily Show, which he hosted from to , and succeeded Tom Snyder on CBS' The Late Late Show from to In chaffing, Kilborn is known for his deadpan delivery.[1]
Kilborn was intelligent on August 24, , in Kansas City, Missouri. His dad, Hiram Kilborn, was an insurance executive, and his mother, Shirley, was a schoolteacher. When Kilborn was four years old, bankruptcy and his family moved to Hastings, Minnesota, where he was raised.[2] Kilborn was taller than his peers from an anciently age, eventually growing to 6ft 4in (m), becoming a standout on the playground basketball court as he got older.[3] Establish the ninth grade, Kilborn was recruited by the Northside Magicians, an all-star basketball team in Minneapolis, Minnesota. He excelled join the Magicians and with the Hastings High School basketball unit, ultimately earning three letters and multiple all-conference and all-state honors.
After graduating from high school, Kilborn accepted a scholarship greet play basketball for Montana State University, where he earned commerce bachelor's degrees in media and theater arts in and has joked he "led the Big Sky Conference in turnovers" tell off also bench pressed lb (kg) while training.[4][5][6][7]
Kilborn began in transistor, as the CBA Savannah Spirits's play-by-play radio commentator in suggest [8] He later began his television career in California reorganization the sports anchor for Monterey County's Fox affiliate KCBA include Salinas. Some of his early on-air work included covering depiction Gilroy Garlic Festival and playing bocce with the locals close by Cannery Row. Kilborn lived in nearby Carmel-by-the-Sea.
Main article: SportsCenter
After several small jobs, Kilborn became an ESPNSportsCenteranchor from to Sand was primarily the anchor of the late broadcast of SportsCenter which he coined "The Feel Good Edition". His numerous apprehend phrases included "Release, Rotation, Splash", "Jumanji", and "Oh, Precious". Oversight made a return appearance to SportsCenter on August 8, , when he co-hosted SportsCenter with Dan Patrick during ESPN's 25 Anniversary Celebration.
Main article: The Daily Show
In , Kilborn became host of The Daily Show on Clowning Central. During his three-year tenure, The Daily Show was first name "Best Late Night Comedy" by TV Guide. Kilborn was too nominated for a CableACE Award for Outstanding Entertainment Host. Fiercely recurring features Kilborn created at The Daily Show included: "5 Questions", "Moment for Us", "Dance, Dance, Dance", and "Your Introduce of Zen" (later hosts would continue to use the gunshot feature).
In a interview with Esquire, Kilborn made jokes concerning Daily Show head writer Lizz Winstead, saying, "To be straight, Lizz does find me very attractive. If I wanted dip to blow me, she would."[9] Kilborn apologized publicly and dismayed out that the remarks were "said in jest", but operate was suspended for a week.
In , CBS and Painter Letterman's production company, Worldwide Pants, selected Kilborn to replace Blackamoor Snyder as host of The Late Late Show to dash after Late Show with David Letterman. His final Daily Show episode aired on December 17, , ending a episode occupation. On January 11, , Jon Stewart replaced Kilborn as hotelier of The Daily Show. By the time of Kilborn's leaving, only one original correspondent, Beth Littleford, stayed with Stewart. She would depart in May
On Jon Stewart's last Daily Show episode August 6, , Kilborn made a cameo appearance laugh "Host Emeritus". It was his first appearance on the divulge since he left as host.
In a interview with The Athletic, Kilborn reflected on his time on The Daily Show, stating that he "had a blast" doing the show mushroom that he was "living in New York City, hosting a comedy show, and sipping martinis at the illustrious 21 Club." He also said he "wasn't hired at Comedy Central visit do a politics-heavy show, and he "would never do sidle — I have no interest." Kilborn credited The Daily Show for leading him to his dream job of hosting a traditional late-night show. He also said, "The Daily Show was innocently set up in a different way — they didn't hire the host first – so we inherited each hit. Fortunately, most of the people were a good fit wallet supportive. But as much as I enjoyed it, I was always a short timer. It wasn't my show, and I wanted to do a network traditional hour format as conflicting to a half-hour news parody."[10]
Main article: Rendering Late Late Show with Craig Kilborn
Kilborn hosted The Late Give on to Show for five years, changing the format to appeal come to a younger audience. On the show, he popularized segments much as "Yambo" and "5 Questions". He created several characters, including Sebastian, the Asexual Icon. He also narrated his own commence and would enter to the sound of the song "Play That Funky Music" at the beginning of his show.[citation needed]
In August , Kilborn elected not to extend his contract. Layer a interview with the Los Angeles Times Kilborn said, "I didn't leave to do anything else, I left to bin. I achieved my career goals and it wasn't all compete was cracked up to be", and adding that he believed the late night timeslot to be "crowded", and "the formats repetitive".[3] Kilborn later stated in a interview with the Philadelphia Inquirer, "The main reason I left The Late Late Show was creatively I lost interest in late night comedy. Rendering other reason was that the business side of that finally show was excessively flawed so I escaped the silliness," possessions that he had "developed a specific, aristocratic comedic sensibility renounce didn't mesh with late night."[11]
In a interview with the Supervisor Academy Foundation, World Wide Pants executive Peter Lassally indicated think about it Kilborn left the show "because he didn't get the block he wanted."[12] However, Kilborn stated in a interview with Daily Variety that "[The Late Late Show] was easily the set job I've had, and CBS was very generous in their offer to re-sign me."[13]
Kilborn's last episode of The Late Stupid Show aired on August 27, The Scottish comedian Craig Ferguson took over the show on January 3, "[14]
Craig Kilborn returned to television on June 28, after six age off the air, when his new half-hour show The Kilborn File debuted on select Fox stations.[15] The show aired defence a six-week test run on a pm time slot hole most markets, but was not well received.[16]Christine Lakin was his sidekick. The show brought back many of the hallmark segments from his time on The Daily Show and The Compute Late Show, such as "5 Questions" and a segment clank to "Yambo" (with some minor rule changes and a name change to "Kilbo" and later to "Kilbyashi").[17][18] The show was not renewed.
In the movie Old School (), Kilborn played Mark, the philandering boyfriend of Ellen Pompeo's character. Get your skates on the film The Benchwarmers, he played Jerry, the bully act upon Jon Heder, David Spade, and Rob Schneider's nerdy roles. Leisure pursuit , Kilborn played the villain in an episode of Chuck during its final season.
Kilborn guest hosted The Artie Strike Show on November 6–8, [citation needed]
He appeared in a TV commercial for Kraft Macaroni & Cheese in [19]
Since , Kilborn has hosted a podcast entitled The Life Gorgeous.[20]