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McBride Is A Hit As Washed-Up Ballplayer

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Published: February 15, 2009

NEW YORK - In the current climate of Major League Baseball, there's something particularly fitting about a story of an elite ballplayer who falls from fame and fortune thanks to his own steroid-fueled self-destruction.

In the new HBO comedy series "Eastbound & Down" (debuting at 10:30 tonight), Danny McBride plays Kenny Powers, a closer whose career as a star reliever rapidly implodes, leaving him a substitute teacher back in his North Carolina hometown. It would be a fall from grace, if he ever possessed anything like grace.

Powers is arrogant, offensive, crude and filled with 'roids rage. Most people forgive him, though, because of his celebrity.

His career arc will immediately remind baseball fans of Atlanta Braves reliever John Rocker, and his mullet will bring to mind the lanky ace Randy Johnson. But McBride and co-writers (and longtime buddies) Jody Hill and Ben Best aren't great baseball fans and had no particular player in mind when they fashioned Powers.

"There's so many stories about nice guys," McBride says over breakfast. "There's a million underdog sports stories. That's kind of the trick with us. We like starting with a character that you're disgusted by and hate, but somehow you can't take your eyes off watching his story and seeing where it goes."

Hill said the show is more like 1970s anti-hero films "on a lowbrow Southern scale" than current comedies, which he thinks make too many concessions for the sake of "relatability."

"Eastbound & Down" is the biggest project yet to put McBride front-and-center. The shaggily bearded, curly haired 32-year-old actor is seen as an up-and-coming talent of the Will Ferrell school of character-driven comedy.

After starring as a tae kwon do instructor in "The Foot Fist Way," a low-budget comedy co-written by Best and Hill, McBride attracted the attention of Ferrell and director Adam McKay, and their production company picked up the film.

The movie had a small release last year, and McBride got good notices in two summer comedy hits: "Tropic Thunder" and "Pineapple Express." The latter was directed by David Gordon Green, who gave McBride his first movie role in 2003's "All the Real Girls." (This summer, McBride will star with Ferrell in "Land of the Lost.")

"Eastbound & Down" brings them all together. It's produced by Ferrell and McKay (Ferrell also plays a used-car salesman), and directed by Green. Shot in Wilmington, N.C., it's the fullest expression yet of McBride's comedy and his specialty: twisted, unlikeable characters.

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