William Ronald Trosper (Tim Robinson) with his phone speaker next to his ear in 'The Chair Company' Image via HBO Tim Robinson fans, your wishes have come true, as HBO has just announced that they ...
Tim Robinson is an American actor, comedian, writer, and producer with an estimated net worth of $2 million. He is best known ...
In The Chair Company, Tim Robinson plays Ron Trosper, a project manager working at a property development firm. Though he has a family at home and a big responsibility with finishing a mall, he’s ...
Lake Bell also stars in the comedy-thriller about a husband and father who goes down a conspiracy rabbit hole following an embarrassing workplace incident. By Angie Han Television Critic In the very ...
Comedian Tim Robinson has gained a cult following thanks to series like Detroiters and I Think You Should Leave, in which his brand of cringe comedy is on full display. The former Saturday Night Live ...
So what is The Chair Company about, you may ask? Think about it. It's Tim Robinson. After an embarrassing (noooooo, really?) incident at work, a man (Robinson) finds himself investigating a ...
Makuochi Echebiri is a News Writer for Collider. He has been interested in creative writing from as far back as high school, and he would consume pretty much anything that’s film or TV. However, his ...
The Chair Company is just as weird and wonderful as you’d expect a show from Tim Robinson to be and it seems viewers agree. The series, which premiered on Sunday night, has become HBO’s most-watched ...
Tim Robinson plays a man who witnessed a problem. A big problem. And he’s working to uncover “a vast criminal conspiracy” in HBO‘s upcoming comedy The Chair Company. HBO on Thursday released the ...
Tim Robinson is the comedic equivalent of cilantro: His onscreen persona — a fully committed, physical embodiment of social unease — either resonates with you or, on some fundamental, perhaps genetic ...
For some, it’s an unwatchable kind of discomfort; for others, it’s sidesplitting absurdity. With Friendship, for 100 minutes, Robinson and DeYoung stretch the same formula to a nearly fatal dose.