Over the course of the series, there were many hints that Kenneth was considerably older than the character's outward appearance would suggest (the actor who plays Kenneth, Jack McBrayer, was in his early thirties when this show started). These include Kenneth's recognition of television pop culture from decades before he logically would have been born, his knowledge of the laws of the Roman Republic and fluency in Latin, his anxiety in season four, episode fifteen, "Don Geiss, America and Hope",that NBC would start limiting and verifying the ages of their pages, and his concern in season four, episode five, "Problem Solvers", that people in the office have been spreading a rumor that he's "been alive forever". He states that an eight-year-old Shirley Temple taught him how to roll cigarettes, refused to tell Suze Orman his age in season six, episode five, "Today You Are a Man", in season five, episode eleven, Operation Righteous Cowboy Lightning, he says, "when I look into a mirror, all I see is a white haze," referencing that he's a Vampire, and he was identified as "Kenneth Parcell: Elderly Page" in season five, episode seventeen, "Queen of Jordan". In season seven, episode two, "Governor Dunston", Kenneth's mother (Catherine O'Hara) visits and tells Jenna that Kenneth has "always been a special boy. I remember the day he was born. He looked up at me and said, 'Momma, I am not a person. My body's just a flesh vessel for an immortal being whose name if you heard it would make you lose your mind.'" In the series finale, Kenneth looks to be exactly the same even many decades in the future, still the President of NBC, hearing a series pitch from Liz's great-granddaughter.
Scritto da il 05-03-2025 alle ore 07:42

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