Jesse Eisenberg Was Warned Not to Meet Mark Zuckerberg
The actor, who played the Facebook founder in "The Social Network," told Bill Maher there's something he can't understand about Silicon Valley moguls.
Jesse Eisenberg was prevented from meeting Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg before portraying him in 'The Social Network'. The 41-year-old actor earned an Oscar nomination for his portrayal of the social media gurur in the 2010 film and has now revealed that,
The actor who portrayed Zuckerberg on the big screen 15 years ago is sharing some candid thoughts on the Meta CEO’s latest actions.
The Oscar-nominated writer (he's a finalist for his semi-autobiographical original screenplay about a transformative trip to Poland) and actor (2010's 'The Social Network') talks to THR about his life and career.
Maher then cheekily pointed out that Eisenberg had played not just Zuckerberg, but also Lex Luthor in Batman v Superman, asking if his portrayal of the “tech bro” supervillain archetype came from personal feelings.
The actor, who played Mark Zuckerberg in "The Social Network," said "tech bros" would be better off focusing their money and attention elsewhere.
Jesse Eisenberg has opened about facing major hinderance while preparing his Oscar nominated role in The Social Network.The 41-year-old played Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg in the 2010. He made up
The actor, who notably portrayed Mark Zuckerberg in 'The Social Network,' made an appearance on 'Real Time With Bill Maher.'
Jesse Eisenberg will forever be associated with Mark Zuckerberg after earning an Oscar nomination for portraying the Facebook founder and CEO in the 2011 film The Social Network. But after watching who Zuckerberg has become over the past decade and a half,
Jesse Eisenberg might have played Meta boss Mark Zuckerberg in The Social Network, but that doesn't mean he went easy on him when asked about his opinion of the tech mogul. The American actor had an insightful answer when TV host and comedian Bill Maher asked him what he made of those who are now known as 'tech bros'.
As much as Mark Zuckerberg complained that the acclaimed 2010 film “The Social Network” was “hurtful” and manipulated facts about his life story and creation of Facebook, he had to admit that the Oscar-winning film helped turn him into a pop culture hero.