Jim Rash
Jim Rash
James "Jim" Rashis an American actor, comedian, producer, screenwriter, and director. He is known for playing Dean Craig Pelton on the NBC/Yahoo! sitcom Community. In 2012, he received a Golden Globe nomination and won an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay for the film The Descendants...
NationalityAmerican
ProfessionActor
Date of Birth15 July 1970
CountryUnited States of America
bigger journey learning translate
Writing sketches, you're also learning about a journey and characters, and you translate that to bigger things.
behind keeping sort stage
In a weird way, the drama behind the stage was sort of keeping 'Community' on people's minds.
both immensely
Improv has been immensely beneficial to me as both an actor and a writer.
sketch
When I teach sketch writing, there's still a beginning, middle and end.
advanced technology tv
We all know that technology has advanced to the point of watching TV online.
people
To me, if people really want to improvise, get into classes and learn.
morning
With Saturday morning cartoons, you've got to start at 6 A.M., right?
abandoned created moments novel pilot shares
'Dexter,' while the pilot shares moments with the novel that created the character of Dexter, they completely abandoned the book from that moment on.
certainly family growing mind mine people phone pulling
I've certainly been someone who has loved to mine the trials and tribulations of growing up in general, and the people who are in our lives, and I don't mind pulling from them and writing things down on my phone that my family says.
people
People are vocal, so you hear the pros and cons of your shows.
people purge until
Some people like to purge out a draft and just let it go and then go back and fix it, but I'm a writer-rewriter. I can't move on until I feel like it's presentable.
As far as working with actors, I feel very comfortable working in that aspect of directing.
good
As long as a teaser saves some things, that's good.
asking attack car life needed scale telling
One summer, when I was a kid, I was in the car with my stepfather, and he was asking me where I thought I ranked, on a scale of 1 to 10. I said, '6,' and he said, '3.' I think it was his way of telling me that I needed to get out and really attack life.