Dennis Miller
- Born:
- November 3, 1953, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.
- Also Known As:
- Dennis Michael Miller
Dennis Miller (born November 3, 1953, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, U.S.) is an American comedian and actor known for his work on Saturday Night Live (SNL), his brief run as a commentator on Monday Night Football, and his conservative political views. He is also famous for peppering his speech with obscure historical references and drawing from his extensive vocabulary.
Early life
Miller was raised by his mother, Norma Miller, a dietician; his father left the family when Miller was a young boy. He has described himself as being unnoticed as a kid, not particularly smart or handsome, but having an inner confidence that he would make it someday. He chose to major in journalism after watching the film All the President’s Men (1976) and earned a bachelor’s degree from Point Park College (now Point Park University) in Pittsburgh. Miller’s younger brother Jimmy went into entertainment too, but in a different way—managing the careers of celebrities, including Will Ferrell and Jim Carrey.
Career
Miller had several odd jobs following graduation from college, including working at a grocery store. In 1979 he finished second in a Playboy magazine joke-writing contest. In the early 1980s he worked in local television in Pittsburgh, hosting The Trolley Show, a program aimed at teenagers, and contributing to Evening Magazine, a nightly news-related show. He aspired to a career in stand-up comedy but suffered from stage fright and left his first two open-mic nights before performing. After getting over that hurdle, he began performing in comedy clubs across the country. He also competed in TV’s Star Search, during which he lost to comedian Sinbad. When Miller moved to Los Angeles, fellow comedian Jerry Seinfeld got him work at the renowned Improv Comedy Club, and Jay Leno (whom Miller has cited as influence, along with Jonathan Miller, Richard Pryor, and Richard Belzer) found an apartment for him. Impressed by Miller’s performance at Los Angeles’s Comedy Store, SNL producer Lorne Michaels made the comedian a member of the show’s cast in 1985.
As host of SNL’s “Weekend Update,” a segment that spoofs the news of the day, Miller employed a signature sarcastic deadpan style. He would often begin with the line “Good evening, and what can I tell you?” and end with his trademark sendoff “Guess what, folks? That’s the news, and I am outta here.” In 2022 Entertainment Weekly ranked Miller as the fourth best “Weekend Update” anchor in history, behind Norm Macdonald, coanchors Tina Fey and Amy Poehler, and Chevy Chase. “Passionate and prone to fiery screeds, he was something of a new breed for Weekend Update—a whip-smart, opinionated guy who cared more than he needed to, and was better for it,” the publication wrote, continuing, “Miller became such an institution that other cast members would show up to impersonate him. Impressionists aside, though, he was one of a kind.”
Miller hosted “Weekend Update” from 1985 to 1991 and then left SNL to launch a short-lived program in which he starred, The Dennis Miller Show (1992). He had more success with the Emmy-Award winning HBO show Dennis Miller Live, which ran from 1994 to 2002. He also appeared in several movies, including Disclosure (1994), The Net (1995), Murder at 1600 Pennsylvania (1997), and Joe Dirt (2001).
In 2000 ABC made him the surprise pick to be colour commentator on Monday Night Football, and the comedian had an immediate impact during his inaugural broadcast, telling play-by-play announcer Al Michaels, “If there’s anybody in this stadium more pumped up than me, they wouldn’t pass the league’s standardized drug test.”
That set the tone for Miller’s run as an announcer, during which he dished out so many obscure references that websites emerged to explain them to viewers. ABC had hired him in an attempt to bring in younger fans, and the move generated lots of publicity, but it did not achieve its goal of increasing ratings, which declined in both of his years on the Monday Night Football set. ABC fired Miller (and two other announcers) and brought in football coaching legend John Madden to join Michaels, who told the Los Angeles Times, “In Dennis’ case, what he tried to do was the hardest thing ever attempted in broadcasting. No other non-football person or someone of that ilk could have pulled it off as well as he did.”
Outspoken politics
Miller’s conservative political views make him somewhat of an outlier among comedians, though he has stressed that he is a liberal on social issues. Miller partly attributed his conservative politics to the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. He told the Associated Press in 2004, “9/11 changed me. I’m shocked that it didn’t change the whole country, frankly.” At the time, Miller was starting a new show on CNBC. Having appeared at fundraisers for Republican U.S. Pres. George W. Bush and ridden with him on Air Force One, Miller stated that he would not be mocking the president: “I like him. I’m going to give him a pass. I take care of my friends.” Miller was also a regular guest on the Fox News Channel.
In a 2018 TV interview, Miller told talk-show host Jimmy Kimmel, “I think liberalism’s like a nude beach. It sounds good till you get there…and there’s a lot of cankles and misspelled tattoos.” But that same year, Miller also said he was going to dial back some of his political humour by not talking about such issues as much.
In his 2022 book, Insurgency: How Republicans Lost Their Party and Got Everything They Ever Wanted, Jeremy Peters quoted Republican pollster Tony Fabrizio calling voters who prioritized cultural resentments over social or economic issues “Dennis Miller Republicans.” Peters characterized Miller as the “ultimate aggrieved white alpha male.”