
Age: 55
male
Nicholas David Offerman (born June 26, 1970) is an American actor. He became widely known for his role as Ron Swanson in the NBC sitcom Parks and Recreation (2009–2015), for which he received the Television Critics Association Award for Individual Achievement in Comedy and was twice nominated for the Critics' Choice Television Award for Best Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series. Offerman has also appeared in the second season of the FX series Fargo (2015), for which he received a nomination for the Critics' Choice Television Award, as well as the FX on Huluseries Pam & Tommy (2022) and the HBO series The Last of Us (2023), for which he won the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Guest Actor in a Drama Series. He has acted in numerous independent films, including The Kings of Summer (2013), Me and Earl and the Dying Girl (2015), The Founder (2016), and Hearts Beat Loud (2018). Offerman's other work includes executive producing and starring in the film The House of Tomorrow (2017). He also played the President of the United States in the movie Civil War(2024), directed by Alex Garland. He voiced Agent Powers on Gravity Falls (2012–2016) and has provided voice acting work for The Lego Movie franchise (2014–2019), Hotel Transylvania 2 (2015), Ice Age: Collision Course (2016), and the Sing film franchise (2016–present). He hosted Have a Good Trip: Adventures in Psychedelics (2020). He began co-hosting the NBC reality competition series Making It (2018–2021) with Parks and Recreation co-star Amy Poehler; the duo received three nominations for the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Host for a Reality or Competition Program. Description above from the Wikipedia article about Nick Offerman, licensed under CC-BY-SA, full list of contributors on Wikipedia.

Nick Offerman

Green Lantern 3
for Green Lantern 3 in The Light of Green Lantern
Suggested by dippy2

Set one year after the death of Hal Jordan, the film opens with the Guardians of the Universe struggling to maintain authority over Oa while facing mounting interplanetary pressure from worlds like Earth and other sectors that believe Oa is weakened without its greatest champion; though the Guardians project calm omniscience, their rule is strained as political factions question whether the Green Lantern Corps can still protect the universe without Hal’s legacy guiding them. Meanwhile, brilliant MIT prodigy Natasha Irons—reimagined as the niece of John Henry Irons—accidentally creates a deep-space energy-mapping device that detects emotional-spectrum concentrations, unknowingly alerting Larfleeze, the sole wielder of the Orange Light of Avarice and self-proclaimed ruler of Okaara; paranoid that Oa or Earth might uncover the secrets of his hoarded power, Larfleeze demands Natasha be handed over, confronting Jessica Cruz and the Guardians in a tense standoff where he proposes a ruthless alliance against the rest of the universe—an offer the Guardians refuse, knowing Larfleeze’s creed is simple: he wants everything, and he will never share the Orange Lantern power with another living soul. Determined to protect Natasha, Jessica leads a Green Lantern extraction mission to the United States, but the team is ambushed mid-evacuation by Larfleeze’s orange constructs in a spectacular bridge battle that ends with Jessica and Natasha captured and taken to Okaara; there, Jessica witnesses the eerie majesty of the Orange domain and learns the terrifying truth of the Orange Corps—every construct soldier is a stolen identity, a being consumed and replicated by Larfleeze’s insatiable greed, leaving him eternally alone yet infinitely surrounded by what he has taken. Back on Oa, the Guardians blame Kilowog for failing to protect Jessica and strip him of command authority, fracturing Corps morale, while Carol Ferris returns wielding the power of the Star Sapphire Corps; infiltrating Okaara with the violet light of love, Carol frees Jessica and Natasha, but the act provokes Larfleeze into launching a devastating assault on Oa, engulfing the planet in orange flame and construct armies, during which several Guardians sacrifice themselves to preserve the Central Power Battery, leaving Jessica shattered by loss and consumed by anger. In her grief, Jessica attempts to reconnect with the emotional spectrum through the remnants of Hal’s ring, entering a metaphysical plane where she encounters Sinestro, who tempts her to abandon willpower for fear and rule through domination rather than hope; rejecting his philosophy, Jessica reforges her resolve and emerges with an evolved Green Lantern suit—sleeker, brighter, symbolizing not inherited legacy but self-defined courage—and declares war on Larfleeze. The climactic battle erupts in orbit and across Oa’s surface as the Green Lantern Corps fight alongside John Stewart wielder of the Ultraviolet Spectrum, while Natasha dons her first armored “Starlight” suit powered by will-infused tech; amid explosive close-quarters combat against legions of orange constructs, Jessica lures Larfleeze into an arid wasteland formed from a shattered moon fragment, weakening him away from his hoarded energy reserves, and in their brutal duel she ultimately gains the upper hand but recalls Hal’s belief that willpower must inspire rather than dominate, choosing mercy over vengeance and offering Larfleeze coexistence instead of annihilation. Humbled but pragmatic, Larfleeze yields and forges a tense alliance with Oa against external threats seeking to exploit the emotional spectrum, stabilizing cosmic politics as John Stewart resumes a leadership role within the Corps; in the aftermath, Jessica retreats to Haiti to mourn Hal in solitude, finally burning her black funeral garments in a quiet act of release, and in a mid-credits scene Carol introduces Jessica to her young son, Hal Jr., the hidden child of Hal Jordan, revealing that the Emerald legacy will endure in ways no Guardian could ever predict.