Happy birthday to my favorite (rum) ham. Danny DeVito is everything you want him to be. Lights up every room, makes sure everyone is taken care of, gives his whole heart to everything and everyone he loves. Here’s to 80 more. I wouldn’t put it past him.
May we offer you an egg in these trying times?
Life is wild. Natural disasters don’t realize they shouldn’t happen at the same time as my show getting picked up for another season. Plan better, fires. Don’t make me look like an asshole. Thank you all for watching. Thank you @abc for the immeasurable support. I’m filled with gratitude. (For this, for the @losangelesfiredepartment and for neighbors coming together like I’ve never seen. I ♥️you, LA)
My family and pets are evacuated and safe. So many friends and neighbors are dealing with overwhelming devastation. Please look out for each other, evacuate when suggested and contact Airbnb.org if you need a place to go. Thank to @losangelesfiredepartment for working tirelessly without nearly enough support. 🙏🏼♥️
My family and pets are evacuated and safe. So many friends and neighbors are dealing with overwhelming devastation. Please look out for each other, evacuate when suggested and contact Airbnb.org if you need a place to go. Thank to @losangelesfiredepartment for working tirelessly without nearly enough support. 🙏🏼♥️
Anal glands 🤷♀️
“Thank you to Kaitlin Olson for settling our long standing debate of how to say ‘caramel.’ (It’s pronounced ‘caramel’)” -Conan.
#1 in 18-49?? Can someone show this to all the boys who didn’t like me back?
#1 in 18-49?? Can someone show this to all the boys who didn’t like me back?
👀
Love♥️
Only a few episodes left!! @abc @hulu #applesauce
Winter finale of @highpotentialabc is here and it’s a doozy! See you tonight at 10pm! (Then you’ll have to wait until January for the rest. Don’t scream at me, I make television, not schedules.)
If you’re looking for another way to help…please consider donating to @clairesplacefoundation to help people in LA with Cystic Fibrosis who are especially struggling in this terrible air quality. Link in bio
If you’re looking for another way to help…please consider donating to @clairesplacefoundation to help people in LA with Cystic Fibrosis who are especially struggling in this terrible air quality. Link in bio
If you’re looking for another way to help…please consider donating to @clairesplacefoundation to help people in LA with Cystic Fibrosis who are especially struggling in this terrible air quality. Link in bio
Kaitlin Olson has a knack for playing underestimated women. On her long-running sitcom “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” she’s Dee, perpetually insulted by her pals and coworkers at Paddy’s Pub. She’s been Emmy nominated twice for her guest turn on “Hacks” as DJ Vance, the floundering adult daughter of a self-involved comedian. And now, on her new ABC series “High Potential,” she plays Morgan, a mother with an extraordinarily high IQ who is working as a cleaning lady when recruited by the LAPD for her crime-solving prowess. During our Zoom interview, I ask Olson about this recurring thread throughout her work. “If you ask my therapist,” she says with a giggle, “It is 100% because when I was very little, I was like, ‘Oh, I’m going to be an actor,’ and everyone’s like, ‘so cute.’ ” Her parents were always supportive, but no one else in Tigard, Ore., was. The situation got worse when she was in a bike accident before entering seventh grade. She flipped over the handlebars and landed on her teeth. The recovery required facial reconstruction surgery. “I spent all of middle school and high school just feeling like I wanted to hide and nobody wanted to talk to me,” she remembers, before correcting herself. “My perception was, ‘No one wants to talk to me.’ I’m sure their perception was, ‘I don’t know what to say to this poor mangled thing.’ ” @kaitlinolson sat down with The Times. Read more at the link in @latimes_entertainment’s bio. 🖊️ @ezwrites 📸 @yourpalmarcus #HighPotential #ItsAlwaysSunny #KaitlinOlson
Kaitlin Olson has a knack for playing underestimated women. On her long-running sitcom “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” she’s Dee, perpetually insulted by her pals and coworkers at Paddy’s Pub. She’s been Emmy nominated twice for her guest turn on “Hacks” as DJ Vance, the floundering adult daughter of a self-involved comedian. And now, on her new ABC series “High Potential,” she plays Morgan, a mother with an extraordinarily high IQ who is working as a cleaning lady when recruited by the LAPD for her crime-solving prowess. During our Zoom interview, I ask Olson about this recurring thread throughout her work. “If you ask my therapist,” she says with a giggle, “It is 100% because when I was very little, I was like, ‘Oh, I’m going to be an actor,’ and everyone’s like, ‘so cute.’ ” Her parents were always supportive, but no one else in Tigard, Ore., was. The situation got worse when she was in a bike accident before entering seventh grade. She flipped over the handlebars and landed on her teeth. The recovery required facial reconstruction surgery. “I spent all of middle school and high school just feeling like I wanted to hide and nobody wanted to talk to me,” she remembers, before correcting herself. “My perception was, ‘No one wants to talk to me.’ I’m sure their perception was, ‘I don’t know what to say to this poor mangled thing.’ ” @kaitlinolson sat down with The Times. Read more at the link in @latimes_entertainment’s bio. 🖊️ @ezwrites 📸 @yourpalmarcus #HighPotential #ItsAlwaysSunny #KaitlinOlson
Kaitlin Olson has a knack for playing underestimated women. On her long-running sitcom “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” she’s Dee, perpetually insulted by her pals and coworkers at Paddy’s Pub. She’s been Emmy nominated twice for her guest turn on “Hacks” as DJ Vance, the floundering adult daughter of a self-involved comedian. And now, on her new ABC series “High Potential,” she plays Morgan, a mother with an extraordinarily high IQ who is working as a cleaning lady when recruited by the LAPD for her crime-solving prowess. During our Zoom interview, I ask Olson about this recurring thread throughout her work. “If you ask my therapist,” she says with a giggle, “It is 100% because when I was very little, I was like, ‘Oh, I’m going to be an actor,’ and everyone’s like, ‘so cute.’ ” Her parents were always supportive, but no one else in Tigard, Ore., was. The situation got worse when she was in a bike accident before entering seventh grade. She flipped over the handlebars and landed on her teeth. The recovery required facial reconstruction surgery. “I spent all of middle school and high school just feeling like I wanted to hide and nobody wanted to talk to me,” she remembers, before correcting herself. “My perception was, ‘No one wants to talk to me.’ I’m sure their perception was, ‘I don’t know what to say to this poor mangled thing.’ ” @kaitlinolson sat down with The Times. Read more at the link in @latimes_entertainment’s bio. 🖊️ @ezwrites 📸 @yourpalmarcus #HighPotential #ItsAlwaysSunny #KaitlinOlson
Kaitlin Olson has a knack for playing underestimated women. On her long-running sitcom “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” she’s Dee, perpetually insulted by her pals and coworkers at Paddy’s Pub. She’s been Emmy nominated twice for her guest turn on “Hacks” as DJ Vance, the floundering adult daughter of a self-involved comedian. And now, on her new ABC series “High Potential,” she plays Morgan, a mother with an extraordinarily high IQ who is working as a cleaning lady when recruited by the LAPD for her crime-solving prowess. During our Zoom interview, I ask Olson about this recurring thread throughout her work. “If you ask my therapist,” she says with a giggle, “It is 100% because when I was very little, I was like, ‘Oh, I’m going to be an actor,’ and everyone’s like, ‘so cute.’ ” Her parents were always supportive, but no one else in Tigard, Ore., was. The situation got worse when she was in a bike accident before entering seventh grade. She flipped over the handlebars and landed on her teeth. The recovery required facial reconstruction surgery. “I spent all of middle school and high school just feeling like I wanted to hide and nobody wanted to talk to me,” she remembers, before correcting herself. “My perception was, ‘No one wants to talk to me.’ I’m sure their perception was, ‘I don’t know what to say to this poor mangled thing.’ ” @kaitlinolson sat down with The Times. Read more at the link in @latimes_entertainment’s bio. 🖊️ @ezwrites 📸 @yourpalmarcus #HighPotential #ItsAlwaysSunny #KaitlinOlson
Kaitlin Olson has a knack for playing underestimated women. On her long-running sitcom “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” she’s Dee, perpetually insulted by her pals and coworkers at Paddy’s Pub. She’s been Emmy nominated twice for her guest turn on “Hacks” as DJ Vance, the floundering adult daughter of a self-involved comedian. And now, on her new ABC series “High Potential,” she plays Morgan, a mother with an extraordinarily high IQ who is working as a cleaning lady when recruited by the LAPD for her crime-solving prowess. During our Zoom interview, I ask Olson about this recurring thread throughout her work. “If you ask my therapist,” she says with a giggle, “It is 100% because when I was very little, I was like, ‘Oh, I’m going to be an actor,’ and everyone’s like, ‘so cute.’ ” Her parents were always supportive, but no one else in Tigard, Ore., was. The situation got worse when she was in a bike accident before entering seventh grade. She flipped over the handlebars and landed on her teeth. The recovery required facial reconstruction surgery. “I spent all of middle school and high school just feeling like I wanted to hide and nobody wanted to talk to me,” she remembers, before correcting herself. “My perception was, ‘No one wants to talk to me.’ I’m sure their perception was, ‘I don’t know what to say to this poor mangled thing.’ ” @kaitlinolson sat down with The Times. Read more at the link in @latimes_entertainment’s bio. 🖊️ @ezwrites 📸 @yourpalmarcus #HighPotential #ItsAlwaysSunny #KaitlinOlson
Kaitlin Olson has a knack for playing underestimated women. On her long-running sitcom “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” she’s Dee, perpetually insulted by her pals and coworkers at Paddy’s Pub. She’s been Emmy nominated twice for her guest turn on “Hacks” as DJ Vance, the floundering adult daughter of a self-involved comedian. And now, on her new ABC series “High Potential,” she plays Morgan, a mother with an extraordinarily high IQ who is working as a cleaning lady when recruited by the LAPD for her crime-solving prowess. During our Zoom interview, I ask Olson about this recurring thread throughout her work. “If you ask my therapist,” she says with a giggle, “It is 100% because when I was very little, I was like, ‘Oh, I’m going to be an actor,’ and everyone’s like, ‘so cute.’ ” Her parents were always supportive, but no one else in Tigard, Ore., was. The situation got worse when she was in a bike accident before entering seventh grade. She flipped over the handlebars and landed on her teeth. The recovery required facial reconstruction surgery. “I spent all of middle school and high school just feeling like I wanted to hide and nobody wanted to talk to me,” she remembers, before correcting herself. “My perception was, ‘No one wants to talk to me.’ I’m sure their perception was, ‘I don’t know what to say to this poor mangled thing.’ ” @kaitlinolson sat down with The Times. Read more at the link in @latimes_entertainment’s bio. 🖊️ @ezwrites 📸 @yourpalmarcus #HighPotential #ItsAlwaysSunny #KaitlinOlson
Kaitlin Olson has a knack for playing underestimated women. On her long-running sitcom “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” she’s Dee, perpetually insulted by her pals and coworkers at Paddy’s Pub. She’s been Emmy nominated twice for her guest turn on “Hacks” as DJ Vance, the floundering adult daughter of a self-involved comedian. And now, on her new ABC series “High Potential,” she plays Morgan, a mother with an extraordinarily high IQ who is working as a cleaning lady when recruited by the LAPD for her crime-solving prowess. During our Zoom interview, I ask Olson about this recurring thread throughout her work. “If you ask my therapist,” she says with a giggle, “It is 100% because when I was very little, I was like, ‘Oh, I’m going to be an actor,’ and everyone’s like, ‘so cute.’ ” Her parents were always supportive, but no one else in Tigard, Ore., was. The situation got worse when she was in a bike accident before entering seventh grade. She flipped over the handlebars and landed on her teeth. The recovery required facial reconstruction surgery. “I spent all of middle school and high school just feeling like I wanted to hide and nobody wanted to talk to me,” she remembers, before correcting herself. “My perception was, ‘No one wants to talk to me.’ I’m sure their perception was, ‘I don’t know what to say to this poor mangled thing.’ ” @kaitlinolson sat down with The Times. Read more at the link in @latimes_entertainment’s bio. 🖊️ @ezwrites 📸 @yourpalmarcus #HighPotential #ItsAlwaysSunny #KaitlinOlson
Kaitlin Olson has a knack for playing underestimated women. On her long-running sitcom “It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia,” she’s Dee, perpetually insulted by her pals and coworkers at Paddy’s Pub. She’s been Emmy nominated twice for her guest turn on “Hacks” as DJ Vance, the floundering adult daughter of a self-involved comedian. And now, on her new ABC series “High Potential,” she plays Morgan, a mother with an extraordinarily high IQ who is working as a cleaning lady when recruited by the LAPD for her crime-solving prowess. During our Zoom interview, I ask Olson about this recurring thread throughout her work. “If you ask my therapist,” she says with a giggle, “It is 100% because when I was very little, I was like, ‘Oh, I’m going to be an actor,’ and everyone’s like, ‘so cute.’ ” Her parents were always supportive, but no one else in Tigard, Ore., was. The situation got worse when she was in a bike accident before entering seventh grade. She flipped over the handlebars and landed on her teeth. The recovery required facial reconstruction surgery. “I spent all of middle school and high school just feeling like I wanted to hide and nobody wanted to talk to me,” she remembers, before correcting herself. “My perception was, ‘No one wants to talk to me.’ I’m sure their perception was, ‘I don’t know what to say to this poor mangled thing.’ ” @kaitlinolson sat down with The Times. Read more at the link in @latimes_entertainment’s bio. 🖊️ @ezwrites 📸 @yourpalmarcus #HighPotential #ItsAlwaysSunny #KaitlinOlson