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・ Otto J. Emme
・ Otto J. M. Smith
・ Otto J. Maenchen-Helfen
・ Otto J. Wolff
・ Otto J. Zahn
・ Otto Jacobs
・ Otto Jaekel
・ Otto Jaffe
・ Otto Jahn
・ Otto Jaksch
・ Otto Jelinek
・ Otto Jemelka
・ Otto Jensen
・ Otto Jensen (cyclist)
・ Otto Jespersen
Otto Jespersen (comedian)
・ Otto Jindra
・ Otto Joachim
・ Otto Joachim (composer)
・ Otto Joachim Løvenskiold
・ Otto Joachim Moltke
・ Otto Johan Tandefelt
・ Otto Johannessen
・ Otto John
・ Otto Julius Bierbaum
・ Otto Julius Klotz
・ Otto Julius Zobel
・ Otto Junge
・ Otto Jungtow
・ Otto Junkermann


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Otto Jespersen (comedian) : ウィキペディア英語版
Otto Jespersen (comedian)

Otto Jespersen (born 21 July 1954) is a Norwegian comedian, actor and television personality. He starred in the title role of the 2010 film ''Trollhunter''.
==Biography==
At the age of 19 Jespersen became a Marxist-Leninist, and was briefly a member of the Communist organization Red Youth. Working in a local radio station, Radio Nova in Oslo, in 1988 Jespersen and collaborators Stig Holmer and Charlo Halvorsen launched the magazine programme ''Revolvermagasinet'' on Norwegian national radio. This night-time show featured unusual interviews. In 1992, the three again teamed up for ''The Show - storbymoro for enslige i Utkant-Norge'' on national television. ''The Show'' became the Norwegian candidate for the Rose d'Or in 1993, but several judges left the theatre before the programme was over.
During the 1994 Winter Olympics, Jespersen was hired as stunt reporter for Norwegian national television. This led to the first of the four ''O.J.'' series, in which Jespersen interviewed celebrities and later created such characters as Tårnfrid, Wirrum, Den ensomme rytter, Baron Blod, Nazi-Per, and Birger as well as Friskusen. He has also made two seasons of ''Trotto Libre'' with Trond Kirkvaag.
In 2002 he joined fellow comedians Silje Stang and Thomas Gjertsen to host the weekly comedy show ''Torsdagsklubben'', gaining a reputation for his scathing closing monologue. Stang and Giertsen had formerly run the same show concept under the name ''Mandagsklubben''.
In the fall of 2002, Jespersen's closing monologue targeted the Prime Minister Kjell Magne Bondevik, ridiculing the man's medication use and his unpopularity. He finished the programme by encouraging "all good forces'" to invite Christer Pettersson, a suspect in the murder of Swedish Prime Minister Olof Palme, to Oslo. Bondevik denounced the monologue in an interview calling it cowardly and distasteful, sparking debate about the monologue in Norway. In the wake of the controversy, Jespersen received a number of death threats.〔(Comedian hit with death threats ) ''Aftenposten'' November 1, 2002〕
He burned an American flag live on television to protest the coming 2003 invasion of Iraq.〔("Comedian burns Bible as cameras roll" ), ''Aftenposten'', March 28, 2006〕
His television show ''Rikets Røst'' premiered in early 2005. Among the show's recurring contributors are and were Zahid Ali, a Norwegian-Pakistani comedian; Pia Haraldsen; and Espen Eckbo, an actor. In spring 2006, while shooting a stunt for the show in the city of Ålesund, Jespersen and Mayor Arve Tonning lit a bonfire in the centre of town and burned some Norwegian books and paper money. To the mayor's consternation, Jespersen then added several pages from the Bible's Old Testament, leading to national press coverage.〔
In 2008, when Jespersen mourned the fleas and lice on Holocaust victims, a ''Jerusalem Post'' opinion article decried Norwegian television channel TV 2's defence of this incident, using it as an example of growing anti-Semitism and anti-Israeli sentiments in Norway.〔(Norway a paradigm for anti-Semitism ) ''Jerusalem Post,'' December 13, 2008〕

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