As I talk with Tom Scharpling, there’s a little voice in my head telling me that I should apologize. But this isn’t about me; it’s about him and his new memoir, It Never Ends. Basically, it’s hard to ...
“I was so nervous about it because we hadn’t done anything like that,” Scharpling says. “It was just working right from the get-go. It was like me plus Jon was like one plus one equals 11. It just ...
Celebrity Apprentice Recap: Tom Scharpling’s Epic Take on the FinaleTrump capriciously chooses between Marlee Matlin and John Rich, and Tom has a lot to get off his chest. overnights May 16, 2011 ...
Also read guest editor Patton Oswalt’s introduction to SPIN’s first ever “Funny” Issue, plus our Das Racist cover story and feature on the kings of (very, very, very short) comedy. Trying to explain ...
He’s referred to himself as the “The Chump Steamroller” and “The Dollar-Menu Dickens,” but to the rest of the world, Tom Scharpling is a television writer and video director, and also the funniest ...
When you’re about to interview Tom Scharpling over the phone, you might feel a twinge of anxiety. After all, on The Best Show with Tom Scharpling, he’s made an art out of creatively hanging up on poor ...
As mentioned, Tom Scharpling‘s much loved, much missed The Best Show makes its return tonight (12/16) in live podcast form with the whole gang (Mike, Gary, Roy, Vance) in tow. Listen (and call in) ...
As the “Best of the Best Show” box set hits stores, writer and radio host Tom Scharpling walks us through a career of creative restlessness. The experimental nature of The Best Show makes sense in the ...
One would think that the “hook” of Tom Scharpling’s memoir, It Never Ends would be the fact that he a) was institutionalized for depression and eventually reinvented himself and b) changed his last ...
Watch Tom Scharpling’s New Funny or Die Video: ‘The Postal Service […] The Best Show on WFMU’s Tom Scharpling wrote and directed this new video that just dropped on Funny Or Die today. It follows the ...
One would think that the “hook” of Tom Scharpling’s memoir, It Never Ends would be the fact that he a) was institutionalized for depression and eventually reinvented himself and b) changed his last ...