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Joe Krol (1919–2008), Canadian Football League player; John Krol (1910–1996), American Roman Catholic Cardinal; Katharine L. Krol, M.D., FSIR, FACR, American interventional radiologist; Leendert Krol (born 1939), Dutch field hockey player. Louisa John-Krol, Australian folk/pop musician; Melvin Krol (born 1998), German football forward
The episode begins with the titular skit, "Cake Train", featuring people rushing to catch cakes being thrown off a moving train by Zach Galifianakis, filmed in slow motion. Afterwards, in a parody reality television series entitled Dad Academy , C-Czar (Nick Kroll) returns to find a child he had with his girlfriend "Pretty" Liz B. ( Jenny Slate ...
Jack Kroll (c. 1928 – 2000), American drama and film critic; Leon Kroll (1884–1974), American painter; Lucy Kroll (1909–1997), American theatrical and literary agent; Natasha Kroll (1914–2004), Moscow-born display and production designer in Germany; Nick Kroll (born 1978), American actor and comedian, son of Jules Kroll
Nicholas Kroll (born June 5, 1978) is an American actor, comedian, writer, and producer. He is known for the FX comedy series The League (2009–2015), creating and starring in the Comedy Central series Kroll Show (2013–2015), starring in and co-creating the animated Netflix series Big Mouth (2017–present) and Human Resources (2022–2023) and the Hulu sketch comedy series History of the ...
Kroll (film), a Polish thriller released in 1991; Kroll & Prumni, a war-game released in 1979; Kroll Show, an American sketch comedy television series, 2013–2015; The Power of Kroll, a British science fiction television series, 1978–1979
From 2007 to 2009, she portrayed Molly Kroll (the daughter of Phyllis Kroll, who was played by Shepherd) on the Showtime drama series The L Word. In 2009, she won the role of Mackenzie Browning on the soap opera The Young and the Restless. She left the series in 2010. In June 2011, Ford featured in People magazine for embracing her real body. [3]
He moved to the North American Soccer League to play for the Vancouver Whitecaps [8] for one season. He then joined Napoli , where he played for the next four seasons. His last club before he retired in 1986 was the French club Cannes , at the time in Ligue 2 (the French 2nd division).
In June 2012, Hofmann co-founded Vine, which was a 6-second video service with Rus Yusupov and Colin Kroll. [3] Twitter acquired the app in 2012 for $30 million [4] and the app was shut down by Twitter in 2016. [5] [6] During the shutdown process, Hofmann went public with his disagreement on how Vine was handled. [7]