Harry Shearer

Harry Shearer

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Harry Shearer is a comic personality who takes "hyphenate" to new levels. First and foremost an actor, he is also an author, director, satirist, musician, radio host, playwright, multi-media artist and record label owner. For nineteen years the Los Angeles native has enjoyed enormous success and planted the fruits of his talents in the heads of millions worldwide thanks to his voice work for The Simpsons and The Simpsons Movie. Shearer plays a stable of characters: most notably Mr. Burns, Smithers, Ned Flanders, Rev. Lovejoy and Scratchy .

In July, 2007, Shearer plunged into the on-line video universe when the Harry Shearer Channel became a cornerstone of My Damn Channel, an entertainment studio and new media platform specifically created to empower artists to co-produce, distribute and monetize original, episodic video content. Each week a new political or pop culture satire written by and featuring Shearer is unveiled.

In October 2006, Shearer released his first novel, Not Enough Indians (Justin, Charles & Company). The book takes a darkly comic look at the proliferation of Native American gaming and what happens to the fictional town of Gammage, New York, when it transforms into the sovereign nation of the long lost Filaquonsett tribe. The critically acclaimed novel is also available in paperback and on tape.

Last November, movie audiences saw Shearer’s newest collaboration with Christopher Guest and friends from A Mighty Wind, in the feature film, For Your Consideration. For Your Consideration was a hilarious depiction of independent filmmaking and how the "buzz" about a potential award nomination impacts the lives of three actors played by Parker Posey, Catherine O'Hara and Shearer.

In the summer of 2006, Shearer and his wife, singer/songwriter Judith Owen took their comical commentary on American culture to Scotland for the Edinburgh Festival in This is So not About the Simpsons – American Voyeurs. This multi media theatrical experience takes American culture and politics head on through original song intertwined with live feed news footage.


In 2005, Shearer and Owen, launched Courgette Records (which is English for zucchini - a nod to the infamous airport scene from This Is Spinal Tap). The label is Your browser may not support display of this image.distributed by Warner Music Group's Alternative Distribution Alliance. Courgette’s debut release was Owen's critically acclaimed Lost and Found and the follow-up, HERE. Other releases include a compilation DVD of Shearer’s comedy sketches from Saturday Night Live and HBO’s - Now You See It and Dropping Anchors, a comedy CD about the sudden disappearance of a generation of network TV News anchors. His most recording is Songs Pointed and Pointless, a compilation of original music released in August, 2007.

A child of Hollywood, Shearer made guest appearances on a variety of A-list television series while still in his teens. Credits include The Jack Benny Program, General Electric Theatre and Alfred Hitchcock Presents

Shearer attended UCLA as a political science major, where he edited and wrote for the school humor magazine. He pursued graduate work at Harvard University and served a political internship in Sacramento before turning to freelance journalism, most notably covering the Watts riots for Newsweek.

In 1968, Shearer auditioned for a satirical news team at KRLA-AM called The Credibility Gap. The crew developed a fanatical following, engaging in guerilla comedy actions like alternative live running commentaries to the annual Rose Parade in Pasadena. The classic Gap lineup including Shearer, future bandmate Michael McKean, David Lander, and Richard Beebe began to play local clubs and eventually recorded a number of hilarious - and now scarce - albums, including A Great Gift Idea, The Bronze Age of Radio and Floats.

In the early 1980s, he and friends Michael McKean and Christopher Guest, along with director Rob Reiner, began to incubate an idea for a fake documentary about an aging heavy metal band. The resulting movie, This Is Spinal Tap, became the granddaddy of the mock-umentary genre and gave the world new insight into the concepts of spontaneously-combusting drummers andYour browser may not support display of this image. amps that go up to eleven. The band was reunited in July 2007, for a special performance at The Live Earth Concert at London’s Wembley Stadium.

Theatrically, Shearer has collaborated with writer Tom Leopold and composer Peter Matz to create the book and lyrics for an original musical about J. Edgar Hoover simply called J. Edgar!: The Musical. The play premiered to sold out houses and critical raves at The Aspen Comedy Festival and is currently being developed for Broadway.


In the world of fine art, the Fullerton Museum Center presented Shearer's installation Telesthesia in the early 1990s, featuring video clips of various media personalities saying nothing. The Museum Of Contemporary Art (MOCA) in Los Angeles presented Shearer's installation, Wall of Silence, that featured key figures from the O.J. Simpson Trial in their least soundbite-stealing moments. Most recently, Face Time featuring the Presidential and vice presidential candidates and the members of the mediocracy that covered them, was displayed in Washington, D.C.'s Conner Contemporary Gallery.

And on radio, Shearer's one-hour satirical sandbox Le Show is heard weekly on stations worldwide.

Shearer's film credits include Real Life, The Right Stuff, Portrait of a White Marriage, The Fisher King, Godzilla, The Truman Show, Small Soldiers, Dick, and A Mighty Wind, For Your Consideration. He has been a regular cast member on Saturday Night Live twice (dates) and, in 2002, wrote and directed his first feature film, Teddy Bears' Picnic.

He has won two Cable Ace Awards.

Blog Entries by Harry Shearer

The Failure of "Because I Say So"

19 Comments | Posted September 30, 2008 | 02:32 AM (EST)


LONDON -- Over dinner last night, i was trying to explain to a British friend why the majority of House Republicans fled the bailout bill compromise. Reading the polls, it's easy to understand why those with the most hotly contested elections this November were the least eager to sign...

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Alchemy Lives!

136 Comments | Posted September 21, 2008 | 08:55 AM (EST)


I'm not an economic idiot -- I remember what "elasticity of demand" means -- but I may be an economic special-needs person. Even so, there's one fact about the current credit meltdown that seems to be escaping a lot of attention. I know President Bush wants to solve the problem,...

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Bush Favors Texas Over Louisiana -- Even Bobby Jindal Notices

261 Comments | Posted September 18, 2008 | 11:05 PM (EST)


As horrible as Hurricane Ike was to Texas, and it was, one can't help noticing the disparity in death tolls between Ike and Katrina. It is dispositive, I think, as to the difference between even the nastiest of hurricanes (the Ike event) and the breaching in more than fifty places...

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Dick Cheney Lied -- to a Republican

74 Comments | Posted September 16, 2008 | 01:15 PM (EST)


Of course, the Wall Street swoon is bigger news. But bigger news as well were the somewhat newsworthy revelations in Bob Woodward's book -- bigger because Woodward is a journalistic celeb who gets to flack his wares on 60 Minutes.

His WashPost colleague Barton Gellman, though, scored the bigger...

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New Orleans Exhales, Then Gasps Again

102 Comments | Posted September 5, 2008 | 03:37 PM (EST)


Gustav, as far as New Orleans was concerned, was not "the mother of all storms," in the latest immortal words of Mayor Ray Nagin, and as my friends and neighbors (the ones who didn't stay) make their way back into town, they're greeted today by another shoe dropping: the...

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New Orleans: Nobody Asked, Why Not Sooner?

191 Comments | Posted August 30, 2008 | 12:09 PM (EST)


LOS ANGELES -- Of course, the primary hope is that this question remains, if not rhetorical, at least not forensic. The hope is that Hurricane Gustav doesn't prove the fragile repairs of the deeply defective levee and floodwall system in New Orleans have been repairs in name only, that the...

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"Katrina and Cronyism"

262 Comments | Posted August 27, 2008 | 11:30 PM (EST)


My friends in New Orleans are either deciding what to pack, or deciding to hunker down. There's an ominous mass gaining power in the Gulf. And in Denver tonight, exactly three words were spoken that served as a shout-out from the powerful and the would-be powerful to a city on...

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The Base Hillary Didn't Touch

521 Comments | Posted August 26, 2008 | 11:19 PM (EST)


Hillary Clinton's job, we were told, was to unite her supporters behind Barack Obama. The speech she gave had several mentions apiece of her chosen themes -- ending the war (!), universal health care, helping the middle class. In a speech that ran nine minutes past its end-of-prime deadline, there...

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All Those Federal Funds: Why the New Orleans Recovery is Slow

56 Comments | Posted August 21, 2008 | 05:58 PM (EST)


For commenters to my posts on New Orleans who keep asking a variant of "why, with all the federal billions sent down there, is the city's recovery so slow?", an authoritative answer is now available, thanks to this report in today's Times-Picayune.

Some highlights:

Researchers concluded that "enormous obstacles"...

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What Bush Said in New Orleans Today, and What He Didn't Say

71 Comments | Posted August 20, 2008 | 07:30 PM (EST)


"Never before has our nation seen such destruction by nature."

It's almost three years after the federal levees failed and flooded 80% of New Orleans, and George W. Bush stood today in Jackson Barracks, the National Guard h.q. in the Lower Ninth Ward, and spoke those words. They were...

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Oil: Supply vs. Demand

334 Comments | Posted August 14, 2008 | 02:37 AM (EST)


After all the speculation about whether speculators were behind this summer's oil price spike, there seems to be widespread agreement (see here, here, here, here, here, and here) that the more recent backslide in oil prices is due to one cause: a fall in...

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Putin's Lesson

197 Comments | Posted August 11, 2008 | 07:07 PM (EST)


When George W. Bush famously said after his first meeting with Vladimir Putin, "I looked the man in the eye. I found him to be very straight forward and trustworthy and we had a very good dialogue. I was able to get a sense of his soul," my assumption...

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Why Not Trust The Corps? They're "Scrambling"

121 Comments | Posted August 2, 2008 | 02:01 PM (EST)


This July was good to New Orleans. No major storms nearby, and a wealth of visitors packing the streets, clubs, restaurants. The Essence Music Festival, the big cocktail convention (seriously), then an international classical piano competition (ditto), and the SCLC's national convention--compared to last July, when the streets were empty,...

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Some Hounds from St. Bernard (and some cats)

8 Comments | Posted August 1, 2008 | 02:08 PM (EST)


I don't blanket email, but this is as close as it comes. The St. Bernard Parish animal shelter, just east of New Orleans, has run out of room, and a lot of dogs and cats either have to be adopted or....you know the rest. They will provide out-of-state transportation for...

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CNN Anchor Heidi Collins -- Incredible

53 Comments | Posted July 31, 2008 | 09:32 AM (EST)


Let's be charitable. Let's assume that it's CNN morning anchor Heidi Collins' local-news background that accounts for her ability to ad-lib during a conversation with Dr. Sanjay Gupta that boggles the mind.

Gupta was doing a story on the FDA's fingering of serrano peppers from a Mexican farm as...

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Louisiana's "Road Home"--the Goalposts Keep Moving

13 Comments | Posted July 26, 2008 | 01:29 PM (EST)


For those outside New Orleans who ask, "what happened to all the Federal money down there?", another guide appears in Saturday's Times-Picayune, a Cook's tour of some of the Kafkaesque labyrinth homeowners have had to navigate to get their Road Home grant.

Just to review, that grant is Federal...

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Intel Goes Down the Memory Hole Again

Posted July 20, 2008 | 10:29 AM (EST)


Verbs are important. The Bush administration has gone from saying we "know" something--as in, "we know Saddam has nuclear weapons"--to we "believe" something. Which is fair warning, for a faith-based foreign policy. (No longer a Faith-based one).

Nonetheless, Sunday morning on Fox News Sunday, Joint Chief of Staff Chairman Mike...

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Even Paid Speech Isn't Free

Posted July 16, 2008 | 03:06 PM (EST)


This post is not about me, or complaining about what happened to me. I'm doing fine. This post is just another snapshot of life in this nutty country.

You may have noticed the ad here in the HuffPo for my new record of songs about Bush administration members. The title...

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Miss Universe in Vietnam -- Isn't That Wild?

Posted July 13, 2008 | 11:14 PM (EST)


Anybody who was alive and sentient during the Vietnam War had to do at least one double-take during Sunday night's NBC telecast of the Miss Universe Pageant. For one thing, the show originated live from Ho Chi Minh City, the former Saigon. The last time I think a prime time...

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The Iranian Missile Photos -- Be Very Afraid

Posted July 11, 2008 | 01:47 PM (EST)


We know about the Photoshopping (authorized copy or bootleg?) of the fourth missile into the photo of the Iranian missile launch printed around the world this week. But, while spotting the missile that wasn't launched, world media may have missed a bigger story.

An Iranian blogger posts this...

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