Actor Hector Duran can currently be seen in Netflix’s new comedy “Space Force”, starring Steve Carell as General Mark Naird, tapped by the White House to lead the newest branch of America’s armed forces.
26.05.2020 - 22:05 / deadline.com
By Dino-Ray Ramos, Amanda N'Duka
Tawny Newsome is known for her improv chops in comedy shows and seriess like Bajillion Dollar Propertie$ and as the queen of many podcasts including Yo! Is This Racist? which she co-hosts with Andrew Ti. Now, Newsome is taking on the galaxy, universe and beyond in the new Netflix comedy Space Force.
The new series created by Greg Daniels and Steve Carell happens to share the same name as the real-life, new branch of the Armed Forces. The comedy follows
Actor Hector Duran can currently be seen in Netflix’s new comedy “Space Force”, starring Steve Carell as General Mark Naird, tapped by the White House to lead the newest branch of America’s armed forces.
Steve Carell’s new comedy Space Force has rocketed to the top of America’s Netflix on-demand chart.
AOC is getting time on the small screen.
In this very moment, and for the last three years of our current administration, American idiocy, political and otherwise, seems so pungently ripe for ridicule. So, when the creators of “The Office” and Steve Carrell announced they were creating a “Space Force” show for Netflix to mock the real-life initiative promoted by the oafish President Donald Trump and his inept White House, the premise and series seemed like a slam dunk that should easily write itself.
I'm just going to come right out and say it: The new Netflix comedySpace Force is a complete and utter disappointment. When you look at the creative minds behind Space Force — Steve Carell reuniting with The Office creator Greg Daniels! — it should be The Right Stuff of space comedies.
By Jazz Tangcay
It's easy to go into Space Force thinking it's The Office, but with space. It stars The Office star Steve Carell, it was created by Carell and The Office showrunner Greg Daniels, and it's essentially a workplace comedy about the crew of people working on Space Force.
Hollywood stars are taking a stand. On Monday night, Minnesota resident George Floyd, an African-American man, died at the age of 46 after a white police officer pinned his knee against Floyd's neck, while he struggled for air and begged for his life.
A number of Hollywood stars on Thursday said they made a donation to a fund meant to help bail out Minneapolis protesters. Some of those bold-faced names include Seth Rogen, Steve Carell and Ben Schwartz.
Space Force — Photo: Aaron Epstein
It’s all about your crew.
By Mackenzie Nichols
For the first time since leaving The Office in 2011, Steve Carell is back in a TV comedy with Netflix's Space Force. Carell co-created the series with Greg Daniels, the man behind NBC's The Office, and stars as General Mark Naird, the head of the newest branch of the military, Space Force.
By Caroline Framke, Variety.com
Hoo boy. Let's not sugarcoat anything: Netflix's new comedySpace Force is a massive disappointment. When you look at who's involved in Space Force — Steve Carell reuniting with The Office creator Greg Daniels! — it should be The Right Stuff of space comedies. But despite its pedigree and the pile of money Netflix threw behind it, it's more of a sleek, high-powered, expensive rocket that tips over and explodes on a school bus full of children before it can even launch.
By Caroline Framke
Steve Carell has said his new Netflix comedy is politically “fluid” rather than “hyper-political.”
1. Space ForceDebutThe Office’s Greg Daniels and Steve Carell reunite for a workplace comedy about the people commissioned to create Space Force, a new branch of the U.S. military tasked by the White House with getting American boots on the moon.When: Friday on Netflix
The US Office creator Greg Daniels takes aim at America’s rekindled space race in this new comedy starring Steve Carell. Carell plays a long-serving general who finds himself enlisted to head up the new Space Force, a haphazard team charged with getting to the moon, again. Lisa Kudrow, Noah Emmerich and John Malkovich co-star.
Lisa Kudrow had “no idea” that there was a real-life Space Force while she was filming a Netflix comedy about the military agency.