
Age: 44
male
Benjamin Joseph Schwartz (born September 15, 1981) is an American actor and comedian. He is best known for his recurring role as Jean-Ralphio Saperstein on the NBC sitcom Parks and Recreation, his starring role as Clyde Oberholt on the Showtime series House of Lies, and his voice roles as Randy Cunningham in Randy Cunningham: 9th Grade Ninja, Dewey Duck in DuckTales, and Leonardo in Rise of the Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and Sonic the Hedgehog in the eponymous film series and its spin-off miniseries Knuckles. He also appeared many times in the CollegeHumor web series Jake and Amir. His film career also includes roles in Peep World: Everybody's Fine, The Other Guys; Transformers: Age of Extinction; The Walk; This Is Where I Leave You; Standing Up, Falling Down; and Flora & Ulysses. On television, he has starred in the Netflix comedy series Space Force (2020–2022) and the Apple TV+ murder mystery comedy series The Afterparty (2022–2023). He also voiced in the Netflix interactive special We Lost Our Human as Pud. Description above from the Wikipedia article Ben Schwartz, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Ben Schwartz

Delivery Guy Zipp
for Delivery Guy Zipp in Kick the Buddy: Breakpoint
Suggested by roma_007

In the neon-coded chaos of the ToyVerse—a hyperactive digital universe where slapstick violence is entertainment—lives Buddy, a cheerful ragdoll programmed to be beaten, blown up, and bounced back again and again. But when a mysterious glitch shows him a glimpse beyond the game, Buddy begins to question everything he knows. Realizing he's just a disposable character in a stress-relief app controlled by humans, Buddy refuses to accept his fate. With the help of a band of eccentric NPCs—including a chainsaw-wielding queen, a sheep with electric powers, and a half-deleted madman—he launches a digital rebellion against deletion. As the game update approaches, Buddy must rise from comic relief to unlikely hero, rewriting the rules of the system itself. Explosive, hilarious, and surprisingly heartfelt, Kick the Buddy: Breakpoint is a wild ride through pixels, purpose, and punching back.