
Age: 58
male
Frederick "Fred" Tatasciore (born June 13, 1968) is an American voice actor. Tatasciore was born in New York City, New York in 1968. He was a stand-up comedian before turning over to voice acting. Tatasciore has portrayed mostly secondary characters as well as monstrous-looking types. He is best known for voicing the Hulk in countless animated roles, including Ultimate Avengers, Next Avengers, Hulk Vs, Marvel Ultimate Alliance 2 and Avengers: Earth's Mightiest Heroes. In video games, he is known for voicing Saren Arterius from the critically acclaimed series Mass Effect and Damon Baird in the Gears of War video game series, and Zeratul from the game StarCraft II: Wings of Liberty. He also voices the character "8" in the Tim Burton-produced film 9 that was released September 9, 2009. His most recent roles are of that as Neftin Prog in Ratchet & Clank: Into the Nexus, Russian Nikolai Belinski in Call of Duty: World at War and Call of Duty: Black Ops, Tookit in Thundercats, and the Business Cat in the webseries "Our New Electrical Morals", with episodes posted in the Cartoon Hangover YouTube page, administered by Frederator Studios.

Fred Tatasciore

Billy Joel • Buffalo Bill• Hulk and Variants
for Billy Joel • Buffalo Bill• Hulk and Variants in Family Guy: Into the Griffinverse
Suggested by matthewfenner

When Peter Griffin’s latest drunken stunt—a nuclear-level explosion at the Pawtucket Brewery—rips a hole in the fabric of reality, the Griffin family finds themselves hurled into a chaotic multiverse war that’s part Star Wars, part Rick and Morty, and 100% Family Guy. As Quahog collapses into madness, alternate versions of Peter, Lois, and Stewie battle across universes for control of existence itself. From a dystopian Quahog ruled by Meg the Conqueror to a timeline where Brian’s a talking cop car, every world gets darker and more deranged. Amid the chaos, the Griffins must team up with their most absurd variants to undo Peter’s cosmic screw-up before the entire multiverse collapses into an endless cutaway gag. Armed with fart jokes, violent slapstick, and moments of shocking heart, Family Guy: Into the Griffinverse takes the series’ trademark irreverence to R-rated heights. As Stewie and Brian scramble through twisted realities and Lois questions her entire marriage, Peter remains obliviously destructive—believing he’s in a “really long Halloween episode.” From brutal interdimensional fights to fourth-wall-breaking chaos that skewers modern pop culture, the movie pushes every boundary imaginable. In the end, the Griffins learn that no matter how many universes there are, stupidity—especially Peter’s—might just be the one constant holding it all together.