Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Mar 15, 2023 · Ana Gasteyer looks back on her time at ‘Saturday Night Live’ and discusses how NBC’s ‘American Auto’ is the show she’s been waiting her entire career for.

    • Why Were You Interested in American Auto?
    • Does It Remind You of The Officeor Any Other Shows?
    • How Did You Approach Your Character?
    • What Are Some of Your Earliest TV Memories That Still Resonate with You Today?
    • How Important Is It For You to Be A Role Model For The Next Generation?
    • What Type of Work Were You Finding at The Very Start of Your Career?
    • What Kind of Feedback Are You Getting on American Auto?
    • How Do You Relate to Your American Auto Character?
    • How Did The Cast of Your Show Bond?
    • Can You Share A Favorite Memory Fromsaturday Night Live?

    I was attracted to this show because I have always wanted to do a workplace comedy. I think NBC does it incredibly well and after years of success with it, knows the structure. Justin Spitzer is coming straight off of Superstore, but he also wrote for The Officefor a long time. Frankly, I just loved the pilot, I thought it was smart, and that it wa...

    Obviously, it has a tonal quality or a structural quality that’s similar. Each show takes a minute to develop its own tone. I know Michael Scott was the boss. It was a paper company in The Office, it was lower stakes; it was a small, American business. This is big, big business. Our show is really calling out corporate culture and making fun of the...

    She’s a female CEO so there’s a lot to have fun with there because I think she is really competent but I think she’s also really trying to prove herself in essentially what is still a man’s world. Even though I know the opportunities are increasing for women in the workplace, not that many exist at the level that she does in that Fortune 500. I thi...

    The first real family tradition we had was gathering around the television for Carol Burnetton Saturday nights. I remember it very well from the ‘70s.

    I remember when I was on SNL, a girl wrote me and said, “I’m Indian so my parents said there’s no work for me.” The reality is you can’t control who’s going to cast you or why, but that’s why I always say write, write, write, write, write because at least you’re controlling your own narrative around it. Certainly, with things like YouTube and TikTo...

    I started booking voiceover jobs on radio commercials. To me, I may as well have won an Oscar for how meaningful that felt to me because I knew I was doing work that actors do and I was being paid, I was cashing a paycheck that was a professional paycheck. Again, it’s just what are those positive signposts. Walking out of an audition and getting fe...

    People are loving it. It’s very smart, it’s very topical, it’s fast-moving. I think it’s very representative. My husband works in advertising so I think for him and his colleagues it’s really resonating in a fun way because he recognizes the kind of hemming and hawing that happens at the corporate level. Justin does such a nice job of hand-wringing...

    Listen, I’m not very much like Katherine but there are things about her I really admire. What I admire about CEOs is this kind of confidence in their decisions. They’re moving fast and they have to commit hard, even if it’s the wrong decision, they do it. There’s something sort of great about that. I also love the blind faith she has to put in the ...

    One thing about bit ensemble shows is the hours are very long and you get to know each other real fast on a 14-hour day. We were consistently doing that week after week for 10 episodes in a row. Because we had been tested together we could go to dinner together, we could do things together on the weekends, which was really nice. It’s also a really ...

    I would never be able to pick one. As the years go by, I’m more and more grateful that I had the opportunity to be on that show. It was six years of just incredible training, no other way to put it. Connections to amazing writers, witnessing high-pressure decisions. Besides just the massive opportunities that it gave me it just changed the way that...

  2. Feb 20, 2022 · DON GONYEA, HOST: As the new CEO of the fictional Payne Motors, Ana Gasteyer has been taking names. (SOUNDBITE OF TV SHOW, "AMERICAN AUTO") ANA GASTEYER: (As Katherine Hastings) If you're not gung ...

    • Don Gonyea
  3. People also ask

  4. American Auto: Created by Justin Spitzer. With Ana Gasteyer, Harriet Dyer, Jon Barinholtz, Tye White. At the headquarters of a major American automotive company in Detroit, a floundering group of executives try to rediscover the company identity amid a rapidly changing industry.

    • (3.4K)
    • 2021-12-13
    • Comedy
    • Ana Gasteyer, Harriet Dyer, Jon Barinholtz
  5. Apr 23, 2023 · By Rachel Foertsch. Published Apr 23, 2023. Ana Gasteyer chats with Screen Rant about the finale's final twist and how Katherine's investment in the car industry has evolved in American Auto. Warning: SPOILERS for the season 2 finale of American Auto! Season 2 of NBC's American Auto has come to a close and left a major surprise in its wake.

  6. Jun 20, 2022 · Published on June 20, 2022 05:17PM EDT. Photo: Greg Gayne/NBC. On NBC's American Auto, Ana Gasteyer plays Katherine Hastings, the car industry's first woman CEO who's determined not to fail at her ...

  7. Feb 7, 2023 · AMERICAN AUTO — “Crisis” Season 2 Episode 1 — Pictured: (l-r) Jon Barinholtz as Wesley, Ana Gasteyer as Katherine — (Photo by: Greg Gayne/NBC) American Auto is a true ensemble show, and this season will dive into that according to Gasteyer, who thoroughly enjoys working with every one of them.

  1. People also search for