Rory Scovel Biography
Rory Scovel is an American comedian, actor, and writer. In 2011, he released Dilation, his debut stand-up comedy CD. He has now produced several stand-up specials, including The Charleston Special, Rory Scovel Tries Stand-Up for the First Time, Live Without Fear, and Religion, Sex, and a Few Things In Between.
How old is Rory Scove? – Age
He is 43 years old as of 6 August 2023. He was born in 1980 in Greenville, South Carolina, United States.
Rory Scove Family – Education
He has six siblings. As a child, he played basketball, tennis, and soccer and regarded himself as energetic and the class clown. From kindergarten to eighth grade, he attended St. Mary’s Catholic School, which later became Christ Church Episcopal School. He graduated from Greenville Senior High School in 1999. Scovel spent a year at the University of Central Florida before enrolling in the University of South Carolina Upstate, where he earned a communications degree in 2003. He played Division II soccer during his time there.
Rory Scove Wife – Daughter
Scovel is married to the actress Jordan Boughrum. They live in Los Angeles, and their daughter was born in 2015.
Rory Scove Net Worth
He has an estimated net worth of $2 million.
Rory Scove Podcasts
With fellow comedian Van Kirk, Scovel has co-hosted The Pen Pals Podcast since 2018. Numerous well-known podcasts have featured Scovel, such as Conan O’Brien Needs a Friend with Conan O’Brien, Comedy Bang! Bang! with Scott Aukerman, Doug Loves Movies with Doug Benson, Sklarbro Country with The Sklar Brothers, The Nerdist Podcast with Chris Hardwick, You Made It Weird with Pete Holmes, Maximum Fun’s Stop Podcasting Yourself, The Dead Authors Podcast with Paul F. Tompkins, The Todd Glass Show, WTF with Marc Maron, Mega, and Films to Be Buried With with Brett Goldstein.
Rory Scove Netflix
White would later serve as executive producer for Scovel’s 2017 Netflix special. Scovel recorded his first hour-long stand-up special at the Woolfe Street Playhouse in Charleston, South Carolina, in 2015, and it was appropriately titled Rory Scovel: The Charleston Special. Rory Scovel Tries Stand-Up for the First Time, his next special, premiered on Netflix in 2017.
Rory Scove Comedy
In December 2003, Scovel made his comedic debut at an open mic event in Spartanburg, South Carolina. Following his graduation from college, he was employed as a cameraman at WSPA, a local television station. He relocated to Washington, D.C. the next year, where he gave performances for three years. After that, he relocated to New York City, where he worked as a performer for three years until relocating to Los Angeles, his current home.
Scovel competed in the 2006 Seattle International Comedy Competition and advanced to the championship round. He made his television debut in 2010 as a late-night host on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon. Using the ruse that the show had inadvertently scheduled two comedians, Scovel performed on Conan the next year alongside comedian Jon Dore. Scovel would go on to appear on Conan numerous times over the next ten years, as well as be interviewed by him. Additionally, Scovel published Dilation, his debut stand-up album, through Stand Up! Records. The Huffington Post ranked Scovel and the album as one of the top fourteen in their “Guide To New Comedy Albums of 2011”.
Variety magazine listed Scovel as one of the 10 Comics to Watch in 2012. His performance was shown on Comedy Central’s The Half Hour in April of that year. He gave a concert at Jack White’s record label, Third Man Records, back in 2013. The live performance was taped, then turned into a vinyl record. This recording is not available in digital format.
Daniel Tosh, Nick Swardson, and Louis C.K. are just a few of the comedians that Scovel has opened for. He’s done stand-up at the Just for Laughs Montreal, the FYF Fest in Los Angeles, the Vancouver Comedy Festival, the Bumbershoot Festival in Seattle, the Chicago Improv Festival, the Del Close Improv Marathon in New York, and the Vancouver Comedy Festival.
Rory Scove Career
Scovel’s advanced acting job was as Harvard in the TBS sitcom Ground Floor. He was a primary person for the two times of the show, which circulated from 2013 to 2015. Following the dropping of Ground Floor, Scovel joined the primary cast of The people Who Can’t, which started circulating on TruTV in 2016, repeating his job as Head Quinn from the 2013 Amazon film of a similar name. He had different little acting and voice acting jobs all through the 2010s, remembering repeating jobs for MTV’s Zach Stone Will Be Well known, NBC’s Undateable, and TBS’ Destroyed. Scovel played a little part in Demetri Martin’s non mainstream satire film Senior member. He played a supporting part in the 2017 wide-discharge satire The House. Strikingly, he featured as the primary love interest in the 2018 Amy Schumer satire film I Feel Pretty.
Scovel was important for the composing staff for the second and fourth times of The Eric Andre Show, which broadcasted in 2013 and 2016, separately. He was highlighted in the show’s “New Years Eve Spooktacular” as well as an episode in season two where he played the made up Gourmet specialist Rory Scovel.
In November 2018, it was reported that Funny TV had approved an eight-episode prearranged TV series created, co-composed, and featuring Scovel, called Robbie. In a February 2020 meeting, Scovel unveiled that the show had been delivered and was searching for a wholesaler. On May 6, 2020, Good times TV declared that Robbie would debut soon thereafter. The show debuted on May 7, 2020, when Good times TV delivered the series completely on its web based stage and YouTube. Robbie is Funny TV’s most memorable gorge discharge. As of late, Scovel played the lead in the Chris Blake quarantine satire, Removing Socially shot remotely utilizing the iPhone 11. The film was obtained and delivered by Cinedigm in October 2021.