Seth Rogen
Seth Rogen
Seth Aaron Rogen is a Canadian–American actor, filmmaker, and comedian. He began his career performing stand-up comedy during his teenage years, winning the Vancouver Amateur Comedy Contest in 1998. While still living in his native Vancouver, he landed a supporting role in the series Freaks and Geeks. Shortly after he moved to Portland, Oregon for his role, Freaks and Geeks was officially cancelled after one season due to low viewership. Rogen later got a part on sitcom Undeclared, which also...
NationalityCanadian
ProfessionMovie Actor
Date of Birth15 April 1982
CityVancouver, Canada
CountryCanada
Alzheimer's is a family disease...It requires countless hours of care, which are typically provided by family caregivers...Wi thout professional help, it can be impossible to juggle providing that care with jobs, raising kids or just time for yourself.
A TV show is constant work, which is the great thing about it.
You want to create an environment where we're fostering ideas, not rejecting them.
When it came to, like, appropriate behavior towards one another, it was - I was well-versed.
I met Evan Goldberg at bar-mitzvah class. It was called tallis and tefillin.
I don't even have a stalker. I'm just not the guy that people stalk.
I feel much more comfortable as a writer than an actor. I feel like I am a much better writer than I am an actor.
It's my mission to sue the MPAA and take them down. I don't know how to go about doing that. But to me, it seems like it's something that has to be taken care of.
Steve Wozniak admittedly would never like say the things he said to Steve Jobs [in the movie] in the context that he said them.
Please don't wear skinny jeans if you don't have skinny genes.
There was, like, a week straight of shooting, where, like, all I did was shoot a machine gun. And I hate to - every - it went against all my Jewish and Canadian instincts, but I enjoyed every second of it.
It's not dying you need to be afraid of, it's never having lived in the first place.
It's nice to win an award, I would assume. I've never won one, but I would imagine it's great. I have no idea what I'll do.
Americans whisper the word Alzheimer's because their government whispers the word Alzheimer's. And although a whisper is better than the silence that the Alzheimer's community has been facing for decades, it's still not enough. It needs to be yelled and screamed to the point that it finally gets the attention and the funding that it deserves and needs.