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HBO's 'Curb Your Enthusiasm,' which features Larry David as a misanthropic version of himself, ends its 10th
season on March 22.
As the 10th season of HBO's "Curb Your Enthusiasm" closes Sunday, it seems like
the perfect time to celebrate TV's comedic masters of embarrassment, unease
and annoyance.
And that's meant entirely as a compliment. Trump says unproven coronavirus drugs could
be 'gift from God'
As "Curb" curmudgeon Larry David, a heightened, misanthropic version of star Larry AFP
David, finishes up a season centered on creating "a spite store" to irritate a
neighboring coffee shop owner, we rank TV's titans of tension, the comedic characters
who make us laugh nervously and knowingly as we go into the fetal position.
The desperate need to be a cool dad results in awkward comments, odd magic tricks
and dumb stunts that lead to personal embarrassment and occasional injury to this
well-meaning but often unaware family man. We laugh until he hurts. (Series finale:
What's on TV Tuesday, March 24: 'FBI' and 'FBI:
April 8).
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LA Times
9. Valerie Cherish (Lisa Kudrow), “The Comeback” (HBO: 2005, 2014)
Former sitcom star Valerie’s unquenchable desire for stardom means there’s no bar
too low to crawl under – Hello, reality TV! – in her pursuit of the dimming glow of
fame. That puts her into plenty of cringe-inducing situations.
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Delusions of grandeur, anyone? Ben Chang (Ken Jeong) after his takeover of Greendale Community College
in the Season 3 'Community' episode, 'The First Chang Dynasty.'
Benjamin Franklin Chang, aka Senor Chang, El Tigre Chino and Kevin, is an
unstable Spanish teacher – and later, a student, after discovery of his fake
credentials – who veers from delusions of grandeur to bouts of self-pity. He's known
for his unbridled ego: "I am a Spanish genius!" A role Jeong was born to play!
Liz Lemon (Tina Fey), right, leads blindfolded colleague Jenna Maroney (Jane Krakowski) during an episode
of NBC's '30 Rock.'
Fading star Jenna would do anything, no matter how embarrassing, to hold on to what
remains of her fame. Along the way, the blissfully ignorant actress created more than
her share of PR crises with her politically incorrect statements.
In the series premiere of FXX’s “Dave,” the neurotic title character, portrayed by star
and executive producer Dave Burd, aka rapper Lil Dicky, raises a urologist visit to a
new level of wincing and is so sure of future rap stardom that he impulsively invests
$10,000 in bar mitzvah money before realizing he may have been scammed.
Dave's awkward mix of grandiose, TMI candor and self-obsessed uncertainty might
make him the Typhoid Mary of unease, passing it to others as he remains happily
unaware. "Dave" has impressive discomfort DNA: Executive producer Jeff Schaffer
has the same title on "Curb" and is a "Seinfeld" alumnus.
Even a dog can smell the fear on Dave (Dave Burd), left, as he hopes to impress a rapper and his entourage
as friend GaTa (GaTa) looks on in the series premiere of FXX's "Dave."
Late-night talk host Sanders was the piece de resistance of showbiz insecurity. Larry's
vain obsession with everything from his star wattage to whether he looked fat might
have paralyzed him emotionally, but it left viewers rolling on the floor laughing.
4. Sheldon Cooper (Jim Parsons), "The Big Bang Theory" (CBS, 2007-
2019)
The behavior of Sheldon Cooper (Jim Parsons) could be maddening, but his friends on "The Big Bang Theory"
nevertheless loved him.
On a sitcom famed for graceless behavior, George was the prince of pettiness, a
character whose eagerness to lie and embellish in the most trivial of matters almost
always ended with deep personal embarrassment – and a bushel of belly laughs.
Mid-level manager Michael takes Phil Dunphy's emotional neediness to a higher and
more offensive level, with inappropriate comments and all manner of political
incorrectness as he begs for the love of Dunder-Mifflin employees. The squirm
quotient might even have been higher for David Brent (Ricky Gervais), his oily
predecessor on the original British edition of the series.
"Seinfeld" co-creator David, the inspiration for Costanza on "Seinfeld," cuts out the
middle man as an exaggerated version of himself – we're not sure how much – in this
Olympic Games of personal offense. Besides the coffee wars, Larry's transgressions
this season include misusing a disabled friend's parking permit and hitting on a widow
at her husband's funeral. While many TV characters are unaware of their
annoying behavior, David positively revels in effrontery.
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animated in 'Earth' video
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