
Age: 52
female
Leslie Louise Bibb (born November 17, 1973) is an American actress and former fashion model. She transitioned into film and television in late 1990s. She appeared in television shows such as Home Improvement (1996), before she appeared in her first film, the comedy Private Parts (1997), which was followed by her first show The Big Easy. She received a role in This Space Between Us (1999). Her role as Brooke McQueen on the WB Network comedy–drama series Popular (1999–2001) brought her to the attention of a wider audience, and received a Teen Choice Award for Television Choice Actress. During the series, she also gained recognition for her roles in the thriller The Skulls (2000) and in the comedy See Spot Run (2001). She had a recurring role in the medical–drama show ER (2002–2003), Crossing Jordan, and on the sitcoms The League and American Housewife. She had a starring role on the drama GCB, the sitcom Burning Love and the fantasy series Jupiter's Legacy as well as God's Favorite Idiot. Bibb was cast as Carley Bobby, in the comedy Talladega Nights: The Ballad of Ricky Bobby (2006). She had a minor supporting role in the hit action film Iron Man (2008) and appeared in the crime-thriller Law Abiding Citizen (2009). She reprised her role in the sequel Iron Man 2 (2010). She appeared in the family–comedy Zookeeper (2011) as Miranda Davis. She also appeared in Confessions of a Shopaholic, Law Abiding Citizen, A Good Old-Fashioned Orgy, Movie 43, No Good Deed, To the Bone, and Tag, among others.

Leslie Bibb

Stacy Devine
for Stacy Devine in Rhett and Link’s Buddy System: Season 3
Suggested by Jeshisthename

A tent pole film adaptation of the life and times of Internet sensations Rhett and Link is in the works, and two actors: Reynold Loflegan (a washed up television personality) and Lake Manchester (a wannabe stand-up comedian) are tasked with playing the lead roles. As they immerse themselves in the film’s overly lavish and unstable production, Reynold and Lake begin to form a friendship of their own. Which leads them to question the very nature of the YouTubers they’re portraying and in turn the nature of their very reality.