The comedian may be down a couple—or a couple hundred—tattoos, but he’ll still pair a fringed leather jacket with neon socks.
Pete Davidson was already nervous to be onstage at SNL's 40th anniversary show, but then he got the surprise of a lifetime when Leonardo DiCaprio complimented him just five seconds before cameras star
Pete Davidson has learned a painful, yet valuable, lesson. During a recent appearance on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon,” the late-night host noticed that Davidson’s many tattoos appear to be disappearing.
Pete Davidson and Colin Jost bought a Staten Island Ferry, and it has since become a wacky, if slow-moving, subplot in their lives. Tabloids have reported that the ferry was sitting unused; Radar Online reported that the comedians’ “bromance” was in trouble over the endeavor.
“Maybe, like, two or three,” Davidson admitted despite “trying to clean slate it.” The “Saturday Night Live” alum shared that he had “probably, like, 200” tattoos, most of which are “almost gone” now, as he rolled up his sleeves to show his bare arms.
The daughter of Cindy Crawford and Rande Gerber dated model Wellington Grant before moving on with actors Pete Davidson, Jacob Elordi and Austin Butler.
I was a sad boy,” the “Saturday Night Live” star said of previously getting so many tattoos. “Yeah, it was a weird time.”
Comedian Pete Davidson and “Dog Man” author Dav Pilkey join TODAY to discuss their exciting new movie adaptation of Pilkey’s bestselling book. The pair share insights into the creative direction of the film,
Super Bowl LIX is already proving to offer serious star power, with ad spots led by Chris Pratt, Eugene Levy, Michelle Rodriguez and even a When Harry Met Sally reunion with Meg Ryan and Billy Crystal.
Davidson appeared on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon ahead of the Saturday Night Live 50th anniversary celebration, a show where he spent eight years, and the topic of his
Ramsay also stars in HexClad’s Super Bowl ad, where he is tasked with having to prepare a meal for a newly-discovered alien species at Area 51 (HexClad pans, it turns out, are made of “top secret alien cooking technology”). The twist? The alien is actually Pete Davidson, playing himself. “All famous people are aliens,” Davidson quips.