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Default The Ten Worst Actors Ever On TV

On Tuesday, May 19, 2015 at 11:38:22 AM UTC-4, Ubiquitous wrote:
Kaley Cuoco
Kaley Cuoco, who has played the character Penny on "The Big Bang Theory" for
the last seven seasons, is an actress who could use a few more acting classes.
Those who watch the show might agree that her character brings sex appeal to
the show, but not much else.
One might wonder why the creators of the show don't just replace her with
another pretty face who can indeed act.

Jared Gilmore
Jared Gilmore plays Henry on the popular fairy-tales turned into real life
characters show "Once Upon a Time," but the early seasons focused way too much
on Henry's annoying perspective and exposition-heavy dialogue. Thankfully, as
the show progresses, he becomes much less of the story's focus.

Laura Prepon
Sure, Laura Prepon is cute, tall, and redheaded. She was Eric Forman's love
interest on "That '70s Show" for several seasons, but nearly every scene that
she was in felt forced and had all of the humor sucked out of it. It isn't
clear why she was unable to play Donna well, because her role on "Orange Is
the New Black" showed much better acting.
Maybe she took some acting lessons between the two series.

Adrian Grenier
Adrian Grenier, whom you might remember as the lead on "Entourage," had the
weakest acting skills of anyone else on the show. That might include the
extras as well as the supporting cast. Grenier has had exactly four acting
gigs in the years since "Entourage" ended, and one of them was an "Entourage"
movie.

Cathy Cahlin Ryan
"The Shield" was one of the best television series of the past couple of
decades, and Michael Chiklis was one of the major reasons why. Nevertheless,
Cathy Cahlin Ryan, who played Corrine Mackey on the series, was the opposite
end of the spectrum, making a good series worse for her part in it.However,
she wasn't the only bad actor on the show; Chiklis' real-life wife, Autumn,
also had some problems with believability.

Nolan Gould
Okay, so Nolan Gould, who plays Luke Dunphy on "Modern Family," is just a kid.
You can't blame him for his bad acting, but you can blame the casting director
for "Modern Family. " Gould's lines are stiff and wooden, and if you replaced
him with that robot that beat everyone on "Jeopardy," you might not be able to
tell the difference.

Jonathan Ahdout
When it came time for season 4 of "24" and the character of Behrooz Araz, the
casting director failed his or her job miserably. Every line that Jonathan
Ahdout delivered was toneless. It makes you wonder if he had something on the
producers of "24" to keep him from losing his job.
Thankfully, his character was here and gone in season 4.

Chandler Riggs
"The Walking Dead" is one of the best shows on television; however, Chandler
Riggs, who plays Carl Grimes, is not living up to his potential. Carl has some
great lines on the show and some great moments with Rick, but Riggs just isn't
able to bring the emotion that would make his character endearing and likable.

Gillian Anderson
Gillian Anderson would probably be best at the end of this list, were it in
any particular order. Agent Dana Scully wasn't that unbelievable on "The X-
Files," but when it came to showing real emotion, when tension was at its
highest, Gillian simply didn't bring it. Part of this might have been the
squabbles that insiders say existed between her and Duchovny and the lack of
chemistry in later seasons.

Jerry Seinfeld
Jerry Seinfeld is funny, and his self-titled television show was hilarious,
but among the excellent level of acting on that show, Jerry was the only one
who you could tell was acting.


I somehow always thought Martin Sheen looked like he was about to start laughing in pretty much every scene.