![]() ![]() Honestly, I wouldn’t blame him if he felt that way now. ![]() ![]() I don’t blame him for feeling that way as a teenager. In an interview about 10 years ago, Odenkirk had expressed his teenage desire to get out of Naperville, which he referred to as “Nowheresville.” This statement then infamously spiraled into the narrative: “Bob Odenkirk hated living in Naperville! And he still hates it to this day!” However, in a recent interview with the Daily Herald, Odenkirk corrected this assumption as he explained that he had wanted to leave when he was 15, but “that teen sentiment doesn’t represent how felt as a child, or as an adult.” Odenkirk went on to say that he enjoyed his childhood in Naperville and still appreciates the town as he returns often to visit family. ![]() I attended the event and read the book in the interest of learning more about the comedy nerd turned drama actor, and more importantly, about that one guy from Naperville who made it in show business. The event, held by Anderon’s Bookshop at the Yellow Box church, was a stop on his ongoing book tour in honor of his recently published New York Times best selling memoir, Comedy Comedy Comedy Drama. On March 3, comedian, actor and author Bob Odenkirk spoke at a live event in a fateful return here, to Naperville– his hometown. ![]()
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