
Age: 66
male
David Alan Coulier (born September 21, 1959) is an American stand-up comedian, impressionist, television and voice actor, and television host. He is best known for his role as Joey Gladstone on the ABC sitcom Full House; he reprised the role for the Full House spin-off Fuller House. He has done extensive voice work including voiced Peter Venkman on The Real Ghostbusters, and Animal and Bunsen on Muppet Babies. In the early 1990s, Coulier was married for two years to actress and model Jayne Modean. They have a son, Luc, born in 1990. After they were divorced, he dated singer Alanis Morissette for two years, but they broke up shortly before she recorded her album Jagged Little Pill. He was rumored to be the subject of Morissette's song "You Oughta Know" and, in a 2008 interview with the Calgary Herald, he indicated that he thinks the rumor is true, as there are many things about him in the song. However, in the 2021 documentary Jagged, Morissette denied the song is about him, despite the coincidental timing. He founded his own children's entertainment company, F3 Entertainment, in 2000. In 2005, he began dating photographer and producer Melissa Bring; they married on July 2, 2014. He is a private pilot who owns and flies a B35 Bonanza. In 2023, he began hosting Full House Rewind, an episode-by-episode rewatch podcast. In October 2024, he was diagnosed with stage 3 non-Hodgkin lymphoma, and began chemotherapy. From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Stan Lee[1] (born Stanley Martin Lieber /ˈliːbər/, December 28, 1922 – November 12, 2018) was an American comic-book writer, editor, producer, and publisher. He was the editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics,[2] and later its publisher[3] and chairman,[4] leading its expansion from a small division of a publishing house to a large multimedia corporation. In collaboration with several artists—particularly Jack Kirby and Steve Ditko—he co-created fictional characters including Spider-Man, the Hulk, Doctor Strange, the Fantastic Four, Daredevil, Black Panther, the X-Men, and—with co-writer Larry Lieber—the characters Ant-Man, Iron Man, and Thor. In doing so, he pioneered a more complex approach to writing superheroes in the 1960s, and in the 1970s challenged the standards of the Comics Code Authority, indirectly leading to it updating its policies.






