Pete Davidson
In a movie about GameStop investor Keith Gill, all eyes are on his brother, the dopey DoorDash driver Kevin.
“There’ll be a restaurant, there’ll be a concert venue, there’ll be a movie theater... and then there’s hotels in it,” Davidson told Seth Meyers on a new podcast episode.
Between “Bupkis,” “The King of Staten Island,” and “Big Time Adolescence,” Pete Davidson has shown time and again that his career is bigger, and better, than his personal drama.
The actor opens up about becoming a man on screen, which unfolds in hilarious fashion as the show skewers how Hollywood sexualizes and monetizes the coming of age.
The actor spills all the details behind the love scene in Davidson’s new series, “Bupkis,” that has to be seen to be believed.
A guide to the week’s best and worst TV shows and movies from The Daily Beast’s Obsessed critics.
Haters of bro-y comedy might be surprised by Davidson’s new show—especially by a beautiful episode about loss, family, and looking back at the past.