Harry Shearer is a comic personality who takes "hyphenate" to new levels. First and foremost an actor, he is also an author, director, satirist, musician, radio host, playwright, multi-media artist and record label owner. For nineteen years the Los Angeles native has enjoyed enormous success and planted the fruits of his talents in the heads of millions worldwide thanks to his voice work for The Simpsons and The Simpsons Movie. Shearer plays a stable of characters: most notably Mr. Burns, Smithers, Ned Flanders, Rev. Lovejoy and Scratchy .

Following 2007's Grammy-nominated CD, "Songs Pointed and Pointless", Shearer has written and performed an album dedicated to the tireless stars and underlings of the Bush Administration, "Songs of the Bushmen". With an all star band, he's performed the cycle of satirical songs live in locations ranging from Seattle to Manhattan. In fact, the locations have been Seattle and Manhattan.

In December of this year, Shearer's latest "video art" exhibit, "The Silent Echo Chamber", opens at the Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art in Ridgefield, Connecticut, for a two-month run.

In July, 2007, Shearer plunged into the on-line video universe when the Harry Shearer Channel became a cornerstone of My Damn Channel, an entertainment studio and new media platform specifically created to empower artists to co-produce, distribute and monetize original, episodic video content. Each week or so new political or pop culture satire written by, directed by and featuring Shearer is unveiled.

In October 2006, Shearer released his first novel, Not Enough Indians (Justin, Charles & Company). The book takes a darkly comic look at the proliferation of Native American gaming and what happens to the fictional town of Gammage, New York, when it transforms into the sovereign nation of the long lost Filaquonsett tribe. The critically acclaimed novel is also available in paperback and on audio.



A child of Hollywood, Shearer made guest appearances on a variety of A-list television series while still in his teens. Credits include The Jack Benny Program, General Electric Theatre and Alfred Hitchcock Presents

Shearer attended UCLA as a political science major, where he edited and wrote for the school humor magazine. He pursued graduate work at Harvard University and served a political internship in Sacramento before turning to freelance journalism, most notably covering the Watts riots for Newsweek.

In 1968, Shearer auditioned for a satirical news team at KRLA-AM called The Credibility Gap. The crew developed a fanatical following, engaging in guerilla comedy actions like alternative live running commentaries to the annual Rose Parade in Pasadena. The classic Gap lineup including Shearer, future bandmate Michael McKean, David Lander, and Richard Beebe began to play local clubs and eventually recorded a number of hilarious - and now scarce - albums, including A Great Gift Idea, The Bronze Age of Radio and Floats.

In the early 1980s, he and friends Michael McKean and Christopher Guest, along with director Rob Reiner, began to incubate an idea for a fake documentary about an aging heavy metal band. The resulting movie, This Is Spinal Tap, became the granddaddy of the mock-umentary genre and gave the world new insight into the concepts of spontaneously-combusting drummers andYour browser may not support display of this image. amps that go up to eleven. The band was reunited in July 2007, for a special performance at The Live Earth Concert at London’s Wembley Stadium.

Theatrically, Shearer has collaborated with writer Tom Leopold and composer Peter Matz to create the book and lyrics for an original musical about J. Edgar Hoover simply called J. Edgar!: The Musical. The play premiered to sold out houses and critical raves at The Aspen Comedy Festival and is currently being developed for Broadway.


In the world of fine art, the Fullerton Museum Center presented Shearer's installation Telesthesia in the early 1990s, featuring video clips of various media personalities saying nothing. The Museum Of Contemporary Art (MOCA) in Los Angeles presented Shearer's installation, Wall of Silence, that featured key figures from the O.J. Simpson Trial in their least soundbite-stealing moments. Most recently, Face Time featuring the Presidential and vice presidential candidates and the members of the mediocracy that covered them, was displayed in Washington, D.C.'s Conner Contemporary Gallery.

And on radio, Shearer's one-hour satirical sandbox Le Show is heard weekly on stations worldwide.

Shearer's film credits include Real Life, The Right Stuff, Portrait of a White Marriage, The Fisher King, Godzilla, The Truman Show, Small Soldiers, Dick, and A Mighty Wind, For Your Consideration. He has been a regular cast member on Saturday Night Live twice (dates) and, in 2002, wrote and directed his first feature film, Teddy Bears' Picnic.

He has won two Cable Ace Awards.

Blog Entries by Harry Shearer

New Tiger Woods Ad Campaign

Posted December 4, 2009 | 03:36 PM (EST)


Tiger's new ad campaign: Keepin it real.

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Hey, Tiger, Lack of Privacy Is Part of the Deal

178 Comments | Posted December 3, 2009 | 11:38 AM (EST)


The spectacle of near-celebrities going on Larry King Live to ask for the return of their privacy has been one of the long-running jokes of our era.  Now Tiger Woods puts a new spin on it with his profound-apology-but-give-me-my privacy press release. 

Memo to Tiger: if you really wanted...

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Taking the Fall in Crashergate

49 Comments | Posted December 1, 2009 | 12:03 PM (EST)


As the Salahis begin their media tour with an admirable descent into self-described victimhood, we're being treated to an even more familiar spectacle, perhaps.  White House news secretary Robert Gibbs assured his questioners yesterday that all attention in the investigation of the State Dinner crash focuses on the Secret Service...

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Was The Surge Just A Fig Leaf?

117 Comments | Posted November 30, 2009 | 04:57 PM (EST)


As the stage is being set for an “AfPak Surge,” it might be time to take a look at Surge 1.0, in the now-forgotten war (the one we barged into when we forgot the Afghan War, which we’re now remembering), the one in Iraq.  What we’ve been told incessantly, especially...

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"Reality Stars": Sign Us Up Before We Kill Again

164 Comments | Posted November 27, 2009 | 03:46 PM (EST)


This should be the year that made clear the distinction between the publicity-hungry, irremediably ego-needy actual denizens of show business (like myself) and the way more grotesquely hungry and ego-needy residents of the show-business underworld known charitably as "reality TV." If the Heenes weren't warning enough, here came the...

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"Signed in Blood" -- Tony Blair's Deal With Bush

9 Comments | Posted November 26, 2009 | 10:18 AM (EST)


Now we're getting somewhere, and it's only day three of Britain's inquiry into the origins of the Iraq war, a quaint little enterprise to strip away years of political folklore.  Britain's ambassador during the period leading up to the invasion places the date when Tony Blair signed up for...

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Britain's Iraq War Inquiry, Day 2

4 Comments | Posted November 25, 2009 | 02:42 PM (EST)


The Guardian sums up the second day of the official Chilcott inquiry into the origins of the Iraq War.  Hm, why can't we have one of those?  Oh, that's right, we move forward.  Anyway, some juicy revelations that casts even more of a cloud on Bush administration assertions that...

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The Brits Look Back, We Look At Sarah Palin

22 Comments | Posted November 24, 2009 | 07:56 PM (EST)


Admittedly, we have so many more important things on our minds, but the Brits -- backward-looking sort, don't you think? -- have just opened an official inquiry into how that country got into the Iraq War.

Here, of course, where the word "history" is a synonym for "toast", the idea...

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Why Obama Needs to Weigh In With the Corps of Engineers

100 Comments | Posted November 24, 2009 | 02:08 PM (EST)


Of course, Republicans defended George W. Bush and blamed state and local officials when independent investigations (here and here) pointed to the US Army Corps of Engineers' culpability for the 2005 flooding of New Orleans.  Now Democrats are doing the same thing when critics, like myself, find the...

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The End of a Public-Radio Era

7 Comments | Posted November 19, 2009 | 12:58 PM (EST)


When Ruth Seymour announced earlier this week her retirement as general manager of Santa Monica's pioneering public-radio station, KCRW, it really did mark the end of an era.  Ruth basically founded the modern KCRW, and set the template for much of modern public radio as a result.  She built it,...

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New Orleans: Where Accountability Failed, Liability Follows

161 Comments | Posted November 19, 2009 | 12:30 AM (EST)


Okay, now it's official, or as official, at least, as the considered ruling of a Federal district judge can make it.  The United States Army Corps of Engineers has been found by Judge Stanwood Duval liable for the damages inflicted on at least three plaintiffs by its failure to...

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Waste in Your Levee? Don't Blame the Corps

69 Comments | Posted November 17, 2009 | 03:12 PM (EST)


"It's scary," says Tom Jackson, a regional levee commissioner and engineer, of the admission by the Army Corps of Engineers that a section of lakefront levee in East Kenner (a western suburb of New Orleans) is contaminated with construction waste, and will have to be lopped off, before scheduled...

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The Word Not Spoken: Bagram

79 Comments | Posted November 13, 2009 | 11:50 AM (EST)


When the Fox network staged a special Veterans' Day version of its NFL pregame show at Bagram AF Base last Sunday, two hours was apparently not long enough to mention one interesting fact about Bagram: It's the site of America's other Gitmo, a prison where detainees have been kept for...

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Another Letter About Afghanistan the President May Not Be Reading

109 Comments | Posted November 11, 2009 | 06:06 PM (EST)


Following up Matthew Hoh's resignation letter of a couple weeks ago comes this missive from William Polk who, like Hoh, finds the only prudent course of action regarding Afghanistan to be a timely removal of foreign (i.e., US and NATO) troops.  If you don't know why the "tribal...

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Flood Insurance: The Flip Side of Katrina

7 Comments | Posted November 6, 2009 | 12:20 PM (EST)


One of the questions New Orleanians have heard most often from outsiders since the 2005 flood is, "Why didn't you all have flood insurance?"  The answer bewilders those outsiders: Mortgage holders told homeowners, you're living inside a federal levee system, you don't need flood insurance.  When the system proved catastrophically...

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Out of the Mouths of Corps Managers...

17 Comments | Posted November 4, 2009 | 01:27 PM (EST)


For anyone who wonders why New Orleanians worry about what the Corps of Engineers is doing in the "rebuilding" of the levee-floodwall system -- now renamed the Hurricane and Storm Damage Risk Reduction System -- AP's Cain Burdeau gets the money quote of the year:

"On the East...

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One Year Along: freehopeandchange.com

81 Comments | Posted November 3, 2009 | 01:56 PM (EST)


It was maybe March of this year that I first said to someone who asked what I thought of the then-new President that he was in the process of making two major, perhaps historic, mistakes: pretending that Afghanistan had patiently waited for seven years while the United States dithered with...

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New Orleans: The Corps Defends the Future

117 Comments | Posted October 30, 2009 | 03:58 PM (EST)


NEW ORLEANS--I'm preparing to make a documentary film on the causes of the flooding of New Orleans, and where the city goes from here, and so I decided to attend one of the community outreach meetings the Corps of Engineers holds, and advertises in the local paper.  So I found...

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Afghanistan--A Voice for the Choice Obama Has Rejected

101 Comments | Posted October 29, 2009 | 05:02 AM (EST)


In case you haven't noticed, the "debate" about Afghanistan going on inside the White House (thanks for the transparency) has already been decided, and the answer is: we're staying.  The remaining question being considered is: how many troops?   The question not being considered, if leaks are any indication, is why?

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Stop the Music...and the Torture

65 Comments | Posted October 22, 2009 | 05:52 AM (EST)


Sam Stein's report that musicians are signing on to a Freedom of Information request for documents relating to the use of music as a torture tool at Gitmo leaves two questions unanswered.

First, why do human-rights campaigners fall for the misdirection inherent in the focus on Guantanamo Bay?  Yes,...

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