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Rob Reiner

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Robert "Rob" Reiner (born March 6, 1947) is an American actor, director, producer, writer and anti-tobacco activist. He is the eldest son of writer, actor and producer, Carl Reiner.

Contents

[edit] Biography

[edit] Background

Reiner was born in The Bronx, New York, and lived as a child in New Rochelle, New York, where his family resided at 48 Bonnie Meadow Road, similar to the fictitious address of 148 Bonnie Meadow Road, as the Petries on The Dick Van Dyke Show. When Reiner was about 13, the family moved to the Los Angeles area, where Reiner attended Beverly Hills High School and the University of California, Los Angeles. Reiner was married to actress-director Penny Marshall from 1971 to 1981. He then married Michele Singer Reiner in 1989. Reiner is also Jewish.

[edit] All in the Family

He became famous playing Michael "Meathead" Stivic, Archie Bunker's liberal son-in-law, on the 1970s sitcom All in the Family, which was the most-watched television program for five years in the United States (19711976).

[edit] Films

In the 1980s and 1990s, Reiner was best known as a director of successful Hollywood films. Some of these films — such as The Princess Bride and This Is Spinal Tap — have achieved cult status. The latter film, intended as a parody of rock documentaries, was so successful in imitating the style of rock films that many viewers were inadvertently fooled into thinking that the subject of the film, the fictitious heavy metal group "Spinal Tap," really existed.

He then went on to direct other critically and commercially successful films like Stand By Me, Misery, A Few Good Men, and his most famous work - When Harry Met Sally..., which has become a classic romantic comedy. However his career has taken a plunge in recent years, starting with North, which was critically panned (notoriously by Roger Ebert). His subsequent films Alex & Emma and Rumor Has It have been unsuccessful both critically and commercially.

[edit] Production

In addition to his creative work with cinema, Reiner also had a significant administrative role, as founder and long-time co-owner of Castle Rock Entertainment. He named the production company after the fictitious town featured in many stories by Reiner's frequent collaborator, Stephen King.

[edit] Political activism

In the late 1990s and continuing into the 2000s, Reiner has taken a vocal role supporting certain education-related proposals in California, including serving as a primary spokesman for the successful 1998 cigarette-tax initiative. He also campaigned in Iowa for Democratic Presidential candidate Howard Dean just before the 2004 Iowa caucus. Reiner had been mentioned as a possible candidate to run against California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger in 2006, but decided not to run for personal reasons.

Reiner has been criticized for keeping his job with the state First Five Commission (a California state government institution) while at the same time campaigning for a proposition which would fund state-run preschools. The criticism caused Reiner to resign from his position with the First Five Commission on March 29, 2006. An audit of the commission's funds will be conducted in the face of accusations of misuse of state money for the political campaign for his proposition. Proposition 82 failed with 39.1% support.

He has been a contributing blogger at The Huffington Post since May 2005.

He supported a law allowing girls under 18 to have abortions without parental consent.

He tries to limit the amount of cigarette smoking in his films [1], and is a member of the Social Responsibility Task Force, an organization advocating moderation where social issues (like violence and tobacco use) and the entertainment industry meet.

[edit] Criticism of Mel Gibson movie

In comments that appeared the week of August 21, 2006, Reiner spoke about the recent incident regarding Mel Gibson's arrest on charges of drunk driving. Reiner went on to ask for Gibson to apologize for making his movie The Passion of the Christ anti-semitic, and spoke of how the incident revealed racism in Gibson that must be recognized in order for healing to take place. [[2]]

[edit] Television

[edit] Film

[edit] Trivia

  • The term "Meathead", referring to Reiner's character Mike Stivic in All in the Family, became a pop culture reference. Indeed, Reiner has stated that "I could win the Nobel Prize and they’d write 'Meathead wins the Nobel Prize.' " [3].

[edit] Parodies

  • Rob Reiner was the subject of a parody in the South Park episode "Butt Out," which criticized his objection to smoking as hypocritical and fascist, due to the fact his weight problem was just as big a danger, if not more than smoking. Throughout the episode, while constantly stuffing his face, Reiner uses lies, false studies, and doctored photographs to make tobacco companies look bad. "You kids need to understand something, okay? Sometimes lying is okay. Like, when you know what's good for people more than they do." He is loved by Cartman because "He just goes around imposing his will on other people; he's my idol." Another Cartman quote "Wow. It's like, it's like, smoking brings a lot of people just a little bit of joy and, and you get to take that away from them. You are so awesome."


  • Another episode, "Gnomes," has a character claiming, "We're as low and despicable as Rob Reiner [for using children for political purposes]."
  • In yet another parody, in The Simpsons episode "Million Dollar Abie," Reiner is the spokesman for Los Angeles in a commercial calling for a football team there. He is shown driving over pedestrians and covering names on the Hollywood Walk of Fame with his own during the commercial.

[edit] External links

es:Rob Reiner fr:Rob Reiner he:רוב ריינר nl:Rob Reiner ja:ロブ・ライナー fi:Rob Reiner

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