Sorry Clint Craig Please Stand by My Computers Acting Retarded Again

American actor and writer (born 1972)

Wil Wheaton

6.29.13WilWheatonByLuigiNovi1.jpg

Wheaton at the Wizard World New York Experience con in Manhattan

Born

Richard William Wheaton 3


(1972-07-29) July 29, 1972 (historic period 49)

Burbank, California, U.S.

Alma mater Academy of California, Los Angeles
Occupation
  • Role player
  • television personality
  • author
  • blogger
Years active 1980–present
Spouse(s)

Anne Prince

(g. )

Children 2
Website wilwheaton.net

Richard William Wheaton III (born July 29, 1972) is an American histrion, blogger, and author. He portrayed Wesley Crusher on the television receiver series Star Expedition: The Adjacent Generation, Gordie Lachance in the film Stand by Me, Joey Trotta in Toy Soldiers, and Bennett Hoenicker in Flubber. Wheaton has also appeared in recurring vocalisation acting roles as Aqualad in Teen Titans, Cosmic Boy on the Legion of Super Heroes, and Mike Morningstar/Darkstar in the Ben 10 franchise'south original continuity. He appeared regularly as a fictionalized version of himself on the sitcom The Big Bang Theory and in the roles of Fawkes on The Guild, Colin Mason on Leverage, and Dr. Isaac Parrish on Eureka. Wheaton was the host and co-creator of the YouTube lath game show TableTop. He has narrated numerous sound books, including Fix Player One and Ready Player Two.

Early life [edit]

Wheaton was born July 29, 1972, in Burbank, California, to Debra "Debbie" Nordean (née O'Connor), an actress, and Richard William Wheaton Jr., a medical specialist.[one] [2] [3] He has a brother, Jeremy, and a sister, Amy,[4] each of whom appeared uncredited in the Star Trek: The Adjacent Generation episode "When the Bough Breaks".[5] Amy appeared alongside Wil in the 1987 picture show The Curse.[6]

Equally an developed, Wheaton described his father as existence abusive to him as a child and his female parent as being an enabler of that abuse. He as well stated that his parents forced him to become an actor.[7] [8]

Career [edit]

Early work and Stand By Me [edit]

Wheaton made his acting debut in the tv set picture A Long Way Dwelling (1981), which starred Timothy Hutton.[9] He voiced the graphic symbol of Martin in the animated picture show The Hush-hush of NIMH (1982), the movie adaptation of Robert C. O'Brien's volume Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH (1971).[x] Wheaton besides appeared in Hambone and Hillie (1983), The Buddy System (1984) (opposite Richard Dreyfuss and Susan Sarandon),and the Concluding Starfighter.[nine]

Wheaton first gained widespread attention for his work in Stand past Me (1986), the film adaptation of Stephen King's novella The Torso.[eleven] [12] [13] In Stand up by Me, Wheaton played the lead role of Gordie Lachance, a 12-year-old storyteller mourning the loss of his elder blood brother.[13] In her review of the film, Sheila Benson of the Los Angeles Times wrote that "Wheaton makes Gordie'southward 'sensitivity' tangible, but non effete. He'southward a precious stone".[14] In addition to existence successful at the box part,[fifteen] Stand up past Me was nominated for the Aureate Globe Award for Best Move Picture – Drama[16] [17] and became known every bit a coming-of-age classic.[18] [xix]

Star Trek [edit]

Wheaton played Wesley Crusher, a "boy genius and Starfleet hopeful",[20] during the first four seasons of Star Trek: The Next Generation.[21] He appeared in an additional four episodes of the remaining iii seasons. The Wesley Crusher grapheme is a "polarizing" character; while some Star Trek fans love him, others are vocal almost their hatred for the character.[22] [21] Wheaton commented about his critics in a 2004 interview for WebTalk Radio:

Later, I determined that the people who were really, really brutal – like the Usenet weenies – really are a statistically insignificant number of people. And I know, simply over the years from people who've eastward-mailed me at my website and people who I've talked to since I started going to Star Expedition conventions again in the terminal 5 years, that at that place are so many more people who actually enjoyed everything about the show, including my performance, including the character.[23]

Wheaton left Star Expedition: The Adjacent Generation due to concerns over how the production squad addressed a scheduling conflict related to his wish to announced in the 1989 film, Valmont.[24] [25]

Post-Star Trek [edit]

Wheaton played Joey Trotta in the action movie Toy Soldiers (1991). Later on leaving Star Trek, he moved to Topeka, Kansas, to work for NewTek, where he helped to develop the Video Toaster 4000 doing product testing and quality command[26] [27] and later used his public profile to serve as a technology evangelist for the product.[28]

Afterward, he returned to Los Angeles, attended acting school for five years, and so re-entered the acting world.[29] [30] In the belatedly 1990s and early on 2000s, Wheaton appeared in several independent films, including the award-winning The Expert Things (2001), in which he portrays a frustrated Kansas tollbooth worker.[31] For his performance in Jane White Is Sick & Twisted (2002) he received the honor for Best Player at the Melbourne Cloak-and-dagger Film Festival.[32]

Voice work [edit]

Wheaton has worked as a voice player in animation, video games and audiobooks, showtime with the function of Martin Brisby in The Hush-hush of NIMH at age 10. His most noteworthy credits include the roles of Aqualad in the cartoons Teen Titans and Teen Titans Go!, the voice of radio journalist Richard Burns in Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, Kyle in the Nickelodeon cartoon, Kyle + Rosemary as well as himself and various other characters on both Family Guy and Seth MacFarlane's Column of Drawing One-act. Wheaton also featured as the second Blue Beetle, Ted Kord, on Batman: The Brave and the Bold, Dr. Peter Meechum in Generator Rex, Mike Morningstar / Darkstar in Ben x: Alien Strength, Ben 10: Ultimate Conflicting & Ben 10: Omniverse. Wheaton took upon the anime roles of Yakumo in Kurokami: The Animation, Menma in Naruto, Hans in Slayers Evolution-R, Aaron Terzieff in Mobile Adapt Gundam Unicorn. He appeared as himself in a skit on nerdcore rapper MC Frontalot's 2008 album Last Boss attempting to be a rapper, whose rhymes only involved shellfish. Wheaton afterwards collaborated with Frontalot on "Your Friend Wil", a track from the 2010 album Naught Day on the field of study of what Wheaton calls "Wheaton's law": "don't be a dick".[33] [34]

Wheaton has narrated a number of bestselling audiobooks, mostly in the science-fiction and fantasy category, including Ready Histrion One past Ernest Cline (Wheaton also exists in the novel'southward universe, described every bit being joint President along with Cory Doctorow, of the OASIS User Quango in the virtual globe, which is the setting for much of the book) and its sequel Set up Histrion Two, Fleet, also by Cline, Redshirts by John Scalzi, Fuzzy Nation by Scalzi, and books 6–10 of the Chronicles of Amber series by Roger Zelazny.[ commendation needed ]

Tv set and web [edit]

Wheaton at W00tstock 2.four in San Diego, July 2010

Wheaton was a contestant on a 2001 episode of The Weakest Link featuring Star Trek actors attempting to win coin for charity. He has made guest appearances on the November 23, 2007, episode of the TV series Numb3rs, and the October 22, 2008, episode of the serial Criminal Minds, and appeared in Cyberspace presentations, including a cameo in a comedy sketch ("Lock Out") for LoadingReadyRun [35] (and a reprise of the aforementioned the post-obit year, in CommodoreHustle 4), and the May 30, 2008, episode of the Internet serial Gorgeous Tiny Chicken Car Prove. From 2009-2011, Wheaton appeared in seasons 3, 4, and 5 of the web series The Guild equally Fawkes, the leader for a rival guild known as Axis of Chaos.[36] Wheaton credits his roles in Gorgeous Tiny Chicken Machine Show and The Guild for reigniting his career by encouraging him to seek out roles every bit the "Villain Yous Dear To Hate" stock character.[37] He besides appears in seasons two, 3, and 4 of the telly serial Leverage, as rival estimator hacker Colin "Chaos" Mason, adversary to Leverage squad hacker Alec Hardison. He made regular appearances in many web productions for Geek & Sundry, including hosting TableTop, a board game based prove,[38] and Titansgrave, a roleplaying game based testify.[39]

He appeared every bit a fictionalized version of himself in 17 episodes of the sitcom The Big Bang Theory, starting in season 3, episode 5: "The Creepy Candy Blanket Corollary" (2009). On the show, Wheaton behaves in comically petty and manipulative ways towards chief character Sheldon Cooper, who regards him as an archenemy until the flavour 5 episode "The Russian Rocket Reaction", when they make amends and become friends. Wheaton appears in 12 episodes in a recurring, guest-starring role on Eureka, playing Dr. Isaac Parrish, the head of the Non-Lethal Weapons Lab at Global Dynamics and a thorn in Fargo's side.[40] Wheaton besides voices the character of the onetime scoutmaster and current sous-chef Earl Harlan in the popular dark, surreal-comedy podcast Welcome to Dark Vale.[ citation needed ]

Wheaton played Alexander Rook in the Syfy TV serial Night Matter, based on the eponymous comic book.[41]

Hosting [edit]

From September 2006 to September 2007, Wheaton hosted a Revision3 syndicated video podcast chosen InDigital forth with Jessica Corbin and Hahn Choi. He hosted a NASA video on the Mars Marvel rover which landed on Monday August half-dozen, 2012.[42] He has hosted "second Watch", interviews with cast members and producers of the science-fiction series Falling Skies that appears online after each episode.[43] On Apr iii, 2014, Wheaton announced on his blog that his new show called The Wil Wheaton Projection would premiere on the SyFy network at 10pm on May 27 for an initial projected run of twelve episodes.[44] [45] However, on August 29, Wheaton blogged that SyFy canceled the bear witness after only one flavor.[46] Wheaton has hosted Star Trek aftershow The Ready Room since the second season in 2020.[47]

Other ventures [edit]

Games [edit]

In 2003, Wheaton mentioned his beloved for the game of poker on his blog. The following twelvemonth, he began writing more than extensively virtually his poker-playing experiences, including stories almost playing Texas hold 'em tournaments locally and in Las Vegas. Eventually, he worked upwards to regular play, including a run at the 2005 Earth Poker Tour Championships. On June 23, 2005, Wheaton accustomed an invitation to join Squad PokerStars.[48] He went on to play in that year's World Series of Poker and was the invitee speaker for the 2005 BARGE Feast. In June 2007, he appear he would no longer exist on Team Pokerstars due to changes in the US legal system that would crusade poker sites to have to focus on European and Asian markets[49] and held a farewell Pokerstars tournament on June 5, 2007, which he titled So Long and Thanks for All the Chips.[50]

Wheaton is a Dungeons & Dragons histrion,[51] and played during the PAX 2010 event using the 4th edition rules. Wheaton, along with webcartoonists Jerry Holkins and Mike Krahulik of Penny Arcade, and Scott Kurtz of PvP, played in forepart of a live audience. The game was hosted and recorded past Wizards of the Coast with Chris Perkins as the dungeonmaster.[52] Wheaton also played D&D 4th edition at the PAX 2011 event using the fourth edition rules, and used the D&D Adjacent play test rules at PAX Prime 2012.[ citation needed ]

Wheaton hosts the web series TableTop that he created with Felicia Day, in which he explains how to play various carte du jour, board, and dice games, then plays the game with celebrity guests. This web series has had over iv.5 million views[53] and raised $1.iv one thousand thousand on Indiegogo for its 3rd series, a record amount for a web series at that fourth dimension[54] In 2018 it appears in syndication on the TBD cable television.[55]

Wheaton starred in the Kickstarter-funded game At that place Came an Echo by Iridium Studios.[56] In Dungeons and Dragons Online, he became the dungeon primary of the Temple of Elemental Evil quests.[57]

Nintendo of America appear on Twitter that Wheaton would be voicing Abraham Lincoln in Code Name: STEAM.[58] Wheaton appear in February 2015 that he was chosen to provide voiceover talent for the strategy function-playing video game Firefly Online, a game based on Joss Whedon's Firefly sci-fi franchise.[59] Wheaton does the voice narration on the Secret Hitler companion app for the Hole-and-corner Hitler social deduction game.[threescore]

Wheaton has spoken out confronting misogyny in video game culture,[61] [62] and wrote a profile of Anita Sarkeesian for the 2015 Fourth dimension 100.[63]

Comic book [edit]

A fictionalized version of Wheaton was included in the comic book PS 238, in which he harbors the ability of telekinesis. Wheaton'due south debut comic book The Society: Fawkes, which he wrote alongside Felicia Day, was released on May 23, 2012.[64]

Audiobooks [edit]

Wheaton has recorded several of his non-cocky-published books as downloadable audiobooks. These include Just A Geek, Dancing Barefoot, The Happiest Days of Our Lives, Dead Trees Give No Shelter, asteraleS, kamaKiri and The Criminal Minds Product Diary, an excerpt from his book Sunken Treasure.[ commendation needed ]

Narrations [edit]

Wheaton has provided the phonation-over for the digital gamebook, Trial of the Clone.[83]

Live shows [edit]

Wheaton has performed improvisational and sketch one-act at the Acme Comedy Theater in Hollywood.[84] He has a traveling sketch comedy/improv troupe called "EarnestBorg9" that performs science fiction-related comedy at conventions.[85]

Writing [edit]

Wheaton runs his own blog, Wil Wheaton Dot Internet. Between 2001 and late 2004, he operated a message board, known as "The Discourse" or "Paracosm", equally part of the web log site. Two collections of writings taken from postings to the message lath have been published, titled Boxer Shorts (ISBN 1-932461-00-0) and Boxer Shorts Redux (ISBN 1-932461-03-5). He contributes regularly to the Los Angeles-based Metroblogging site. In June 2005, he became that month's featured Tech author for the SuicideGirls Newswire.[86]

In early 2003, he founded the contained publishing visitor Monolith Press and released a memoir entitled Dancing Barefoot. Monolith Printing was "founded on the idea that publication should non exist limited past opportunity."[87] Most of the entries are extended versions of his blog entries. Dancing Barefoot sold out three printings in four months. In winter 2003, Wheaton signed to publisher Tim O'Reilly with a three-book contract. O'Reilly caused Dancing Barefoot, and published his extended memoirs, Simply a Geek, in summertime of 2004. He has since written almost his bitterness regarding how the book was marketed, believing information technology was pitched as a Star Trek book when he intended it every bit more than of a personal memoir.[88] Later on, in 2007, his next book, The Happiest Days of Our Lives was once more published by Monolith Printing.[ commendation needed ]

With the release of Sunken Treasure: Wil Wheaton's Hot Cocoa Box Sampler in February 2009, instead of using traditional publishing, Wheaton decided to self-publish using Lulu Publishing, releasing paperback and digital copies, something he has continued to do with all his publications since.[ citation needed ] As a chapbook, Sunken Treasure contains several minor extracts of various dissimilar projects, including two short stories from Ficlets, an Tiptop comedy sketch, William's Tell and a Criminal Minds production diary. The product diary was later released as an audiobook. Later that same twelvemonth, Wheaton released Memories of the Future: Volume one, a humorous critique, too every bit an account of Wheaton's own experiences with, and memories of, the first thirteen episodes of Star Expedition: The Next Generation.[ commendation needed ] Closing up 2009, Wheaton published a special edition of The Happiest Days of Our Lives, which included an afterword past his son, Ryan. The Happiest Days of Our Lives and Sunken Treasure were released on a Creative Eatables license.[ citation needed ]

In 2017, Wheaton wrote the short story "Laina" for the Star Wars album From a Certain Signal of View. The book features 40 brusk stories, each by a different author, to commemorate the 40th ceremony of Star Wars.[ citation needed ]

In 2022, Wheaton published Still Just a Geek, an annotated memoir that includes extensive (and frequently constructively self-critical) writer's commentary on Merely a Geek, as well equally previously unpublished piece of work.[89]

Politics [edit]

Wheaton described himself as a liberal in 2005.[90] In a column that he wrote for Salon.com in 2005, The Real State of war on Christmas, Wheaton attacked bourgeois commentators like Bill O'Reilly, Blitz Limbaugh and Sean Hannity for influencing the political views of his parents, with whom Wheaton found himself unable to accept political discussions during family get-togethers on holidays like Christmas.[xc] His parents were very offended by the article, and he posted a lengthy apology on his site and an interview in which his parents clarified their political views.[91]

Wheaton campaigned for Hillary Clinton in the 2016 full general election.[92]

Immediately following the Sutherland Springs church building shooting on November 5, 2017, Wheaton on Twitter stated in response to Congressman Paul Ryan's call for prayers for the victims that "The murdered victims were in a church. If prayers did anything, they'd still be live, you worthless sack of shit."[93] Wheaton subsequently clarified his stance after receiving criticism, writing "I repent to those of you who are sincere people of Organized religion, who felt attacked by me", but defendant "the correct wing dissonance machine" of using his comments "to deflect attention and anger abroad from the role that unfettered access to weapons of mass murder played in the latest incidence of mass murder in America".[94] [95] [96]

Personal life [edit]

Wheaton married Anne Prince on November 7, 1999,[97] and lives in Arcadia, California, with her and her two sons from a previous relationship.[98] Upon reaching maturity, both sons asked Wheaton to legally prefer them, which he did.[99]

Wheaton was roommates with Chris Hardwick while they were both students at UCLA.[29] [100] They met at a showing of Arachnophobia in Burbank, California.[29]

In Jan 2021, Wheaton appear he had been sober from alcohol for 5 years.[101]

Wheaton lives with generalized anxiety disorder and chronic depression. He supports mental health nonprofit organizations in raising awareness for these conditions.[102] [103]

Honors [edit]

  • Immature Creative person Awards: 1989 & 1987
  • Melbourne Clandestine Film Festival: Best Actor (2002)
  • International Academy of Web Tv set Awards: Best Host (Pre-Recorded) (2014)[104]

An asteroid was named later on him: 391257 Wilwheaton.[105]

Filmography [edit]

Films and television films [edit]

Telly shows and appearances [edit]

Web shows and series [edit]

Animation [edit]

Video games [edit]

Bibliography [edit]

  • Dancing Barefoot (ISBN 0-596-00674-eight) (2004)
  • Simply a Geek (ISBN 0-596-00768-10) (2004)
  • Stories of Forcefulness (ISBN 1-4116-5503-6) (2005; contributor)
  • The Happiest Days of Our Lives (ISBN 0-9741160-ii-5) (2007)
  • Sunken Treasure (2009)
  • Memories of the Future Vol. 1 (ISBN 0-9741160-iv-i) (2009)
  • Wil Wheaton's Criminal Minds Production Diary (2009)
  • Clash of the Geeks (2010; contributor)
  • The Day After, and Other Stories (2010)
  • The Monster in My Cupboard (2011)
  • Hunter (2011)
  • Dead Trees Requite No Shelter (2017)
  • Star Wars: From a Sure Bespeak of View (2017; correspondent)
  • Still Just a Geek (ISBN 978-0-06-308047-8) (2022)

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Further reading [edit]

  • Holmstrom, John. The Moving Motion-picture show Boy: An International Encyclopaedia from 1895 to 1995. Norwich, Michael Russell, 1996, p. 390-391.
  • Wheaton, Wil. "My proper noun is Wil Wheaton. I Alive With Chronic Depression and Generalized Feet. I Am Not Ashamed." Medium.com, June ane, 2018.

External links [edit]

  • Official website
  • Wil Wheaton talks nigh his depression and anxiety
  • WWdN: In Exile
  • Wil Wheaton at IMDb
  • Wil Wheaton at the TCM Movie Database Edit this at Wikidata
  • Wil Wheaton at AllMovie
  • Wil Wheaton at Curlie
  • Wil Wheaton at Anime News Network's encyclopedia

kellerarmompass.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wil_Wheaton

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