Culture Seth Rogen Says Negative Reviews Can Be “Devastating”: Some People “Never Recover” - Loves Throwing Shit, Cries When He Has To Take Shit, Keeps Making Shit Projects

Seth Rogen currently stars in The Fabelmans, a best-picture nominee at the 2023 Oscars. But he may still be holding on to the poor responses received by some of his previous films, including the 2011 superhero movie The Green Hornet and 2014’s The Interview—the release of which was compounded by North Korean interference and the Sony hack.

“I think if most critics knew how much it hurt the people that made the things that they are writing about, they would second-guess the way they write these things,” Rogen said on a recent episode of the Diary of a CEO podcast. “It’s devastating. I know people who never recover from it, honestly—years, decades of being hurt by [reviews].” He added that the rejection can feel “very personal…. It is devastating when you are being institutionally told that your personal expression was bad. That’s something that people carry with them, literally, their entire lives, and I get why. It fucking sucks.”

Rogen reflected on the largely negative critical reception to The Green Hornet, noting that “the reviews were coming out and it was pretty bad.” He continued, “People just kind of hated it. It seemed like a thing people were taking joy in disliking a lot. But it opened to like [$34 million], which was at the time the biggest opening weekend I’d ever been associated with.”

The actor and producer couldn’t find as much solace in the reaction to The Interview, which would eventually find a home at Netflix after its theatrical release was canceled amid a cloud of controversy. “People [were] taking joy in talking shit about [The Interview] and questioning the types of people that would want to make a movie like that,” Rogen said, adding that while The Green Hornet felt more like “a conceptual failure,” with The Interview, which he codirected alongside Evan Goldberg, “People treated us like we creatively failed, which sucked much worse.”

In the years after those films, Rogen said that he’s gotten more adept at accepting and processing bad reviews. “When I was younger I really did not have as much perspective as I do now,” the 40-year-old said. “I do not carry it with me as much as I used to.”


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I don't think any one figure exemplifies Jewish nepotism in Hollywood better than Seth Rogen. He is not funny in the least. He cannot act, all he does is play himself. He is not handsome, charismatic, or the least bit interesting. All of this leads to just one explanation as to how he made it.
 
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How many meals for starving kids could the billions spent on Hollywood CGI have bought?

You are in no position to lecture us on the evil of not licking your boots, fuckhead.

Yes, rejection hurts, I for one can't stand it - that's why I chose to NOT GO INTO A FIELD WHERE CRITICAL RECEPTION MATTERS.

You can't sign up for the army and then complain you got shot at.... don't go on stage if you can't handle being boo'd off it.
 
"DUDE, WEED LMAO." *laughs obnoxiously* "Man, fuckin' white people, am I right, fellow whites?" *laughs obnoxiouser*
There's the script for your next half-dozen movies, you fat fuck. You can send the royalty checks to my agent. Maybe Goebbels had a point; the Jew whines when he thrusts his shitty movies upon you
 
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