Miles Fisher

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born
James Leslie Miles Fisher

(1983-06-23) June 23, 1983 (age 42)
Occupations
  • Actor
  • musician
  • comedian
  • entrepreneur
Yearsactive1997–present
Miles Fisher
Fisher in 2009
Born
James Leslie Miles Fisher

(1983-06-23) June 23, 1983 (age 42)
Alma materHarvard University
Occupations
  • Actor
  • musician
  • comedian
  • entrepreneur
Years active1997–present
Spouse
Lucette Blodgett
(m. 2014)
Children1
FatherRichard W. Fisher
RelativesJames M. Collins (grandfather)
Michael Blodgett (father-in-law)
WebsiteOfficial website

James Leslie Miles Fisher (born June 23, 1983) is an American actor, comedian, entrepreneur and musician. He made his debut in the CBS adaptation of the book True Women and starred in the 2000 film Lone Star Struck. In 2001, for his role in his short film Head Shot, Fisher won Best Actor at the International Teen Movie Festival.

Fisher appeared in the 2003 Civil War film Gods and Generals, and parodied actor Tom Cruise in the 2008 film Superhero Movie. He had a recurring role as a rookie police officer in 2008 on the television series The Cleaner, and appeared on Gossip Girl in 2009. On the third season of the television series Mad Men, Fisher portrayed a friend of character Paul Kinsey. In 2011, he played Peter Friedkin in Final Destination 5.

Outside of acting, Fisher has co-founded Metaphysic and Bixby Roasting Co, which was acquired in 2023.

Fisher[1] is the son of Richard W. Fisher, who was formerly the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas.[2] His mother, Nancy, served on the national board of the American Film Institute (AFI).[2] His maternal grandfather was Representative James Collins.[1] He was raised in Dallas, Texas, where he attended the St. Mark's School of Texas.[2] After his family moved to Washington, D.C., he attended the St. Albans School.[1]

Fisher graduated from Harvard University, where he was an English major.[3] At Harvard, he was a member of the Porcellian Club, the Hasty Pudding Club and the a cappella singing group the Krokodiloes.[4] Fisher served as the Krokodiloes tour manager, and planned events for the group in 24 countries.[5] He was one of the two students chosen to deliver a Harvard Oration at the 2006 Harvard graduation ceremony.[6][7] His undergraduate thesis, which won the LeBaron Russell Briggs prize at Harvard, was a "screenplay about a Harvard graduate who avoided the Vietnam draft by teaching in a military prep school".[8]

Career

Fisher appeared in the 1997 CBS television movie adaptation of the book True Women as "Travis",[9] and had a starring role in the 2000 film Lone Star Struck.[5] He received the Best Actor award at the 2001 International Teen Movie Festival (ITMF) in Vaughan, Ontario, Canada,[10] for his own short film titled: Head Shot, which was among 10,000 other entries at the festival.[11]

2000s

In a 2001 article in Newsday titled: "Miles Fisher, 'It' Boy", columnist Liz Smith referred to Fisher as "wunderkind" and "the next Tom Cruise".[11] Smith's comparison of Fisher to Tom Cruise led to meetings with influential managers and agents, and he signed with the talent agency Endeavor Talent Agency in 2002.[12] Fisher appeared in the 2003 Civil War film Gods and Generals with Robert Duvall.[2] Director Ron Maxwell picked Fisher to portray a heroic member of the First Regiment of Virginia Volunteers in the film; Duvall played Robert E. Lee.[11]

He parodied actor Tom Cruise in the 2008 film Superhero Movie.[13] Fisher's role in the film was popularized on the Internet on sites including Defamer, as well as on television on Entertainment Tonight and the CNN program Showbiz Tonight.[14][15] The clip of Fisher was viewed on the Internet over 10 million times. A critic for The Baltimore Sun commented that Fisher's appearance in Superhero Movie was the highlight of the film, and wrote: "Actor Miles Fisher replicates Tom Cruise's 'I am the Way, the Thetan, the Light' Scientology recruiting video of last year to hilarious effect."[16] He had a recurring role on A&E Network's television series The Cleaner, portraying a rookie police officer named Kenneth Herman.[2][13]

Fisher wrote and produced a short film called Heatshot in 2009 with Evan Nichols; the film was selected to be screened at the AFI Dallas International Film Festival. Alan Peppard of The Dallas Morning News reported in March 2009 that Fisher had been cast in the pilot of a television show set in 1983 in Southern California; a spinoff of Gossip Girl. He portrayed a "sleazy" coke dealer on the television series of the same name.[17]

In July 2009, Fisher released an independently produced self-titled EP, Miles Fisher, as well as a music video for his cover of the Talking Heads song "This Must Be The Place."[17][18] The video is an homage to the 2000 film American Psycho, with Fisher imitating Christian Bale's performance as Patrick Bateman.[17] Students from the American Film Institute helped film the video, which was shot in Los Angeles.[18] The video was posted on YouTube and various other web sites, and received 200,000 hits on Break.com alone within the first 24 hours.[17] Darrell Hartman of Interview called the usage of the Talking Heads song with the American Psycho theme "a brilliant combo", and noted that Fisher "created a viral hit".[18]

2010s

On the third season of the television series Mad Men, Fisher portrayed Geoff Graves, a friend of character Paul Kinsey.[19] Jessica Gelt of the Los Angeles Times described his character as a "preppy drug dealer".[20] In 2010, Fisher was cast in the film Final Destination 5.[21][22][23] In an interview with Collider.com, Fisher revealed that the film was set in a workplace environment, and was a 3-D film.[24] Fisher appeared in Clint Eastwood's J. Edgar Hoover biopic, J. Edgar, playing Agent Garrison, an FBI employee who interviews Leonardo DiCaprio's Hoover throughout the film.[25]

Fisher released the song "New Romance" in video and MP3 form on iTunes and on his personal website on July 19, 2011.[26][27][28][29][30] The video parodies the Final Destination series and Saved by the Bell.[29][30] Additionally, he appeared in the fifth film of the Final Destination franchise, playing Peter Friedkin.[31]

On May 22, 2013, a music video for "Finish What We Started" through AboveAverageNetwork on YouTube was posted. The music video featuring Lance Bass has yet to release a single for the song, and a subsequent album has been released, dubbed "Video Music." The music video has been posted to Fisher's personal website.[32]

2020s

In the early 2020s, Fisher saw a deepfake video by Chris Ume, a Belgian visual effects (VFX) artist in which Fisher's eyes were replaced with those of Tom Cruise.[33] Fisher and Ume subsequently collaborated to produce YouTube and TikTok videos of Fisher performing mundane or silly tasks while posing as Cruise, satirizing Cruise's haughty and aloof public persona. The videos quickly went viral, collecting millions of views in only a few days. Fisher has not monetized the videos and has deliberately avoided topics of a potentially personal or controversial nature, as he has not received permission from Cruise to use his likeness for profit; Fisher characterized the effort as "good-natured parody" inspired by years of being called the "Tom Cruise guy" due to his similar appearance.[34]

Business ventures

In 2017, Fisher co-founded the Bixby Roasting Company with Remington Hotchkis in Los Angeles, CA.[35] The company began with a Kickstarter campaign as CUPS, before launching Bixby.[36] In February 2023, Westrock Coffee Company acquired the Bixby brand and roasting facility, with Fisher becoming the senior vice president of Sales at Westrock.[37][38]

In 2021, Fisher co-founded Metaphysic, a technology company focusing on generative AI, alongside VFX artist and AI user Chris Ume and CEO Tom Graham on the back of the “Deep Tom Cruise” deepfake videos.[35][39]

Personal life

In 2014, Miles married Lucette Blodgett, daughter of actor and writer Michael Blodgett.[40] They were introduced by broadcaster Willow Bay.[41] They had their first child, a daughter, in October 2017.[42]

Filmography

Films

Year Title Role Notes
2000 Lone Star Struck Val
2003 Gods and Generals John Beale
2008 Superhero Movie Tom Cruise
2009 Head in the Sand SPC Henry Burch
2010 My First Claire Brad
2011 Final Destination 5 Peter Friedkin
2011 J. Edgar Agent Garrison
2011 Have a Little Faith Ricky TV movie
2012 Underneath Your Love Leon
2014 Believe Me Pierce
2016 Me Him Her Scotty
2016 Wolves at the Door Jay Sebring
2016 The Counselor Ted Short film
2017 The Truth About Lies Kevin
2018 A Christmas Arrangement Garrett Hurley Lifetime Movie
2025 Playdate Trent

Television

Year Title Role Notes
1997 True Women Young Travis McPoon TV movie
2008 The Cleaner Officer Kenneth Herman Ep. # 1.1, 1.9
2009 Gossip Girl Klemmer Ep. # 2.24
2009 Mad Men Jeffrey Graves Ep. # 3.3
2011 Psych The Mantis Ep. # 6.4
2011 Death Valley Travis Flynn Ep. # 1.7
2013 Bad Sports Chad Whipple Main role
2014 Review with Forrest MacNeil Thad Valentine Ep. # 1.7
2016 Playdates Super Dad Dave Unknown episodes
2016 Rush Hour Thomas Shea Unknown episode
2015 Man Seeking Woman[43] Graham Recurring
2016 2 Broke Girls Adam Ep. # 5.12
2017 Destiny 2 Titan Live Action Trailer
2018 The Mick Father Zach Ep. # 2.14
2025 Chicago Fire Gym Guy Ep. # 13.17

Discography

Albums

EPs

Singles

Music videos

Year Song Director Album
2009 "This Must Be the Place"[17][18][28][29][30] Dave Green[17][18][30] Miles Fisher
2011 "New Romance"[28][29][30] Dave Green[28][30]
2012 "Don't Let Go"[44] Michael Ashton

Awards and nominations

Year Award Work Category Result
2001 International Teen Movie Festival Head Shot Best Actor Won[11]
2006 LeBaron Russell Briggs prize Screenplay about Vietnam War Undergraduate thesis Won[8]

See also

References

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