Ben Stiller explains how "The Office" was a major influence on his hit Apple TV+ series "Severance," now streaming Season 2.
The ‘Severance’ director (and not-so-secret Trekkie) on Spock ears, becoming a triple threat, and the torment of being a Knicks fan.
Apple TV+ show ‘Severance’, directed by Ben Stiller, is being called one of the greatest television shows of all time, and today we will discuss why. The show follows a simple concept – let’s make a world where people can separate their personal and work lives.
You can tell a lot about people’s answer for their favorite movie, and the 2025 movie schedule is bound to produce a handful that folks claim as their own. So hearing that Ben Stiller revealed that former first lady Laura Bush revealed 2001’s Zoolander as her own is a pretty amusing story.
Ben Stiller and Adam Scott revisited the waffle party in the Jan. 15 episode of The Severance Podcast with Ben Stiller & Adam Scott, along with podcast guest John Turturro. For Stiller, the waffle party — one of many Lumon terms coined by Severance creator and showrunner Dan Erickson — was "kind of an inflection point."
Stiller and Taylor have now been married for 25 years, but separated for an extended period starting in 2017. “In my mind, I never didn’t want us to be together,” Stiller to
Apple TV+ Though Severance tackles dark subject matter, the Apple TV+ thriller's cast and crew still find ways to bring the joy together. "I think we had 186 days of shooting this season. So, we all had a lot of moments together,
Ben Stiller was the latest guest on The New York Times’ “The Interview” podcast and admitted that he still doesn’t understand why he became such a popular comedy movie star in the late 1990s and 2000s.
Stiller said the two find it to be a "great release where you can just get into these other people's lives and their worlds"
Isaiah Trickey/FilmMagic Ben Stiller and his wife, Christine Taylor, are grateful that they found their way back to one another. The Zoolander actor, 59, and Taylor, 53, briefly separated in 2017 before reuniting during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“I remember opening up the L.A. Times, and there was this writer who wrote a letter: ‘Dear God, stop putting Ben Stiller in comedies,'” he recounted. “I was just like, I don’t know, I’m here, I love doing what I do.”