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Jacob Penn Cooper "Jake" Hurwitz (; born August 5, 1985) is an American comedian, writer, actor, and member of the comedy duo Jake and Amir. He was hired by the comedy website CollegeHumor after becoming an intern there in 2006, and has written and appeared in original videos for the website, as well as contributing articles which have been published both online and in print. He also starred in The CollegeHumor Show, an MTV sitcom that ran for one season in 2009. Outside of CollegeHumor, Hurwitz has hosted Myspace's BFF series.

He is best known as the comedy partner of Amir Blumenfeld: the two appear as humorous and exaggerated versions of themselves in the web series Jake and Amir, with Hurwitz generally assuming the role of the straight man. Originally made as a hobby by the pair, the series is now produced by CollegeHumor. Episodes of Jake and Amir average over 500,000 views; by 2012, over 500 had been produced. The pair have also hosted numerous live shows, and started the advice podcast If I Were You in 2013. Beginning in April 2016, they announced the streaming of their new video series, Lonely and Horny, exclusively on vimeo.


Video Jake Hurwitz



Early life

Hurwitz was born in Connecticut. The son of a Jewish father and a Christian mother, he had a Bar Mitzvah and attended Hebrew school, but also celebrated Christmas and Easter. He attended Hunter College and New School University in New York City.


Maps Jake Hurwitz



Career

CollegeHumor

In 2005, as the book The CollegeHumor Guide to College was nearing completion, Hurwitz began to write a column for the comedy website CollegeHumor while attending school. When he transferred to Hunter College, he became an intern at the company--he summarized his duties saying "I put together desks and microwaved". He later got a full-time position at CollegeHumor, where he writes and acts in original videos. Having originally wanted to be a sitcom writer, he "spent a year or two feeling really uncomfortable on camera", but now says he "love[s] it".

Hurwitz was a cast member on The CollegeHumor Show, a 2009 sitcom set in the CollegeHumor offices and featuring videos from the website. His character's biography on the MTV website reads: "Jake might not be smarter than his coworkers, but he's better looking, and that's good enough for him." The show was heavily criticized, being called "a series of atrocious sketches haphazardly strung together" by Pajiba's Dustin Rowles; GigaOM's Liz Shannon Miller said it was "deeply disappointing, given how many of CollegeHumor's web shorts rank as fantastic examples of fresh and creative online content". After it had gone nearly a year without being recommissioned, Hurwitz commented "We stopped holding our breath for a second season".

Jake and Amir

Hurwitz met his colleague Amir Blumenfeld in 2006, when the former began his internship at CollegeHumor. When their offices moved to Union Square, the two were seated across from each other. Hurwitz received a digital camera as a birthday present from his father, and the two used it to make videos together, which they uploaded to the video-sharing website Vimeo. Hurwitz thought Blumenfeld was "the funniest person in the office" and said "Amir and I were constantly joking around in different, strange characters, so it seemed natural that once I had a camera we began to record it." Their first video was called "Quick Characters": it was unscripted, and involved either Hurwitz or Blumenfeld spontaneously pointing a camera at the other and instructing them to act in a certain way.

The two later began the web series Jake and Amir, episodes of which they posted to jakeandamir.com In it, Hurwitz plays Jake, a "normal guy", and Blumenfeld plays Amir, his annoying and obsessive co-worker, who craves Jake's attention.

Hurwitz summed up the writing process by saying "me and Amir sit in a room and we make each other laugh for an hour or two and somehow we leave with a script"--he also noted the series' increased production values, saying that he and Blumenfeld have become better at editing it over time. Describing how his character has developed, Hurwitz said "I think the Jake character has become a little more wacky, which is fun for me. We've given me triggers for my insecurity and then I get to be a little weird which is cool." He also noted that the characters' roles had swapped somewhat because "when we're writing together we do each other's voices sometimes ... it was just making us laugh a lot when I was doing the crazy/funny man and he was doing the straight man when it came to fashion and girls."

If I Were You

On May 13, 2013, Hurwitz and Blumenfeld announced their first new project since Jake and Amir: a comedy audio podcast called If I Were You, in which they give advice to listeners who submit questions. Kayla Culver of The Concordian lauded the podcast as "comfortable to listen to" and "genuinely funny" and said "It's like listening to two best friends having a hilarious conversation on the couch next to you." The Guardian's Miranda Sawyer called If I Were You "a typical example of a comedy podcast" and "amiable enough", but said it contained "far too much laughing", commenting that "New Yorkers Jake and Amir laugh and laugh, giggle and chortle their way around a topic" and "if I wanted stream-of-consciousness waffle with the occasional funny line, I'd listen to [my small children]."

HeadGum

In 2015, following the success of Hurwitz and Blumenfeld's If I Were You podcast, the duo founded the HeadGum podcasting network. HeadGum includes 39 podcasts, many of which are hosted by comedians who were involved with CollegeHumor. Some of the notable program that can be found on the network includes Hurwitz and Blumenfeld's very own If I Were You podcast, The Complete Guide to Everything and Gilmore Guys.

BFF

In 2009, Hurwitz was selected as the host of the second season of BFF, a game show produced for Myspace that Hurwitz described as "The Dating Game for friends". This was the first time he had been hired to appear in a non-CollegeHumor series; he called it "the first time I've been tapped on the shoulder to do anything that wasn't frat boy humor" and said the show's format was "out of [his] wheelhouse". Hurwitz was given the chance to film a Jake and Amir video on the set, which he said "turned out pretty well". Tubefilter's Marc Hustvedt said of the season: "It's a bit of a shame to see the typically absurd Hurwitz stripped of any real comedy purpose and thrown into what is pretty squarely a young, fashion-loving women's chit-chat." Although some episodes of the season appeared to have been viewed over 500,000 times, Hustvedt said that many of them appeared to come from embedded video advertising and doubted the veracity of this number.


Amir Blumenfeld and Jake Hurwitz | HOLLYWOOD, CA - FEBRUARY … | Flickr
src: c1.staticflickr.com


Personal life

Hurwitz has been in several relationships since he was a senior in high school, but wrote in an article for AskMen, "I have yet to find true love". Beginning in 2009, he was in a relationship with Bee Shaffer, the daughter of the English fashion journalist Anna Wintour, whom he met after Shaffer became CollegeHumor co-founder Ricky Van Veen's assistant. The two attended the Webby Awards in 2010, where Hurwitz was awarded for his acting work. They moved to Los Angeles together in 2011, and split up in May 2012. Since around 2013, he has been in a long-term relationship with Jillian Vogel with whom he is now engaged.

He has cited the television series Arrested Development and comedian Mitch Hedberg as major influences in his comedy styling.


Jake Hurwitz and Allison Williams Photos Photos - Zimbio
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Filmography

Television

Online video


Jake Hurwitz Archives - Tubefilter
src: www.tubefilter.com


Bibliography

  • The writers of CollegeHumor.com (2011). CollegeHumor: The Website. The Book. New York: Da Capo Press. ISBN 9780306820496. 

Jake Hurwitz Archives - Tubefilter
src: www.tubefilter.com


References


Me and Marah | Jake Hurwitz | Flickr
src: c1.staticflickr.com


External links

  • Jake Hurwitz on IMDb
  • Jake Hurwitz on Twitter
  • Jake Hurwitz on Tumblr
  • Jake Hurwitz on Instagram

Source of the article : Wikipedia

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