Ant-Man actor befriends Brody Ridder of Colorado, whose classmates refused to sign his yearbook.
Brody and Paul are on texting terms now. “Dear Brody, it was great talking to you the other day. Paul Rudd is an amazing human being.
Ant-Man star Paul Rudd surprised a young fan who was being bullied. When Brody Riddler's classmates refused to sign his yearbook, the Marvel actor heard ...
what we did, the stuff we shot, the material we managed to get, I think it might be the best one yet." She added, "Film sets are already impersonal enough, there is so much that goes on and so much that has to get done in a short amount of time, and the intensity level is really, really high. It was the only one we've made during the Covid lockdowns," Lilly explained earlier this year. "We finished filming at the end of November, and I think, hands down, it was the hardest one we've made. Rudd's co-star Evangeline Lilly spoke to The DIgital Fix about how hard I was to record the follow-up to the MCU feature. I can't wait to see all the amazing things you're going to accomplish.
Cassandra Cooper's 12-year-old son Brody Ridder was feeling down when nearly none of his classmates at his school in Colorado signed his yearbook. Cooper posted ...
Brody was so excited!” I can’t wait to see all the amazing things you’re going to accomplish. “I heard about you,” he told Brody. “And I’m like, ‘I gotta talk to this kid. “It’s important to remember that even when life is tough that things get better. “My poor son,” Cooper said in her May post. Despite Brody asking all kinds of kids to sign it.
Paul Rudd, who plays Ant-Man in the Avengers franchise, got in touch following a now viral Facebook post by 12-year-old Brody Ridder's mother, ...
He wrote: "It was great talking to you the other day. "Well, I'm very excited that I get to talk to you and I get to meet you!" Two teachers and a total of two students wrote in his yearbook.
He may well be tiny as Ant-Man in Marvel's Cinematic Universe, but actor Paul Rudd sure does have a big heart, as it's been revealed he penned a letter to a ...
A letter to Brody read: “It was great talking to you the other day. “There are so many people that love you and think you’re the coolest kid there is – me being one of them! So Brody took it upon himself to write to himself.
Not only did he treat him to a FaceTime call, he also sent him a handwritten note and a signed helmet belonging to his Marvel alter-ego.
“It’s important to remember that even when life is tough that things get better. He also wrote on his Ant-Man helmet: “To my good friend Brody for when he takes on the world!” I can’t wait to see all the amazing things you’re going to accomplish.”
A bullied 6th grader caught the attention of one of Hollywood's most likeable actors, Paul Rudd.
And he also is founder of The Big Slick charity, which sponsors an annual sporting event to raise money for Kansas City’s Children’s Mercy Hospital. and in true Rudd style, he simple answered: “And you’re mine.” I can’t wait to see all the amazing things you’re going to accomplish. Thankfully, older students in Brody’s school also decided to take action and sign the youngster’s book. There are so many people that love you and think you’re the coolest kid there is ― me being one of them! After all, the way kids are bullied comes in so many different forms, and being excluded can be so painful.
'Ant-Man' star Paul Rudd befriended a 12-year-old boy from Colorado after finding out that the little one's classmates refused to sign his yearbook.
"He cries to me pretty much every day," she added. According to ET, Brody's mom told TODAY Parents that her kid was 'brought to tears' after finding out that only two teachers wrote a message in his yearbook, while two other students signed it. The kid named Brody was reportedly bullied by other children at school, with nobody even agreeing to sign his yearbook as well.
Brody Ridder, 12, came home with a nearly empty yearbook. His mom's Facebook post about the experience caught the attention of other students — and one ...
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Hollywood star Paul Rudd changed one young boy's school experience after the bullied youngster had only two signatures in his yearbook.
In the touching message, Paul wrote: "Dear Brody, it was great talking to you the other day. The text message got me." I'm like, 'I gotta talk to this kid because this kid sounds like my kind of guy'."