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thanks I watched it all and came back to upvote. I remember seeing Max on Pepsi commercials, never knew he came from this show.



Max Headroom also hooked up with The Art of Noise, to perform Paranoimia! (extended remix:)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WTN1WsUCyQc

Matt Frewer, the guy who played Max Headroom, also played Carnage in Altered Carbon:

https://altered-carbon.fandom.com/wiki/Carnage

And a really obnoxious time traveler in Star Trek: TNG:

https://memory-alpha.fandom.com/wiki/Matt_Frewer

He appeared as guest on David Letterman frequently:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pd2DztHiSiY

The Screen Savers interviewed him on Tech TV in 2002:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6vhjTeUCy54

He never made the cover of The Rolling Stone, but he did make the cover of Mad Magazine and Newsweek:

https://www.maxheadroom.com/index.php?title=Max:_Parodies#MA...

And who can forget him reciting the alphabet on Sesame Street, and blonde cleft-chinned Link Hogthrob as Max Hogroom in Muppet Magazine:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_KlfcpUfQCk

https://muppet.fandom.com/wiki/Max_Headroom

And honestly, who hasn't gotten stoned and binged out on a whole box of delicious Max Headroom candy from Topps:

https://www.toplessrobot.com/2012/08/the_5_best_and_5_worst_...

And of course his digital visage also appeared in Doonsbury as Ron Headrest, a parody of Ronald Reagan:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ron_Headrest

>Ron Headrest is a fictional character in the comic strip Doonesbury.

>During the 1980s, Garry Trudeau thought it would be fun to do a political parody of the television program Max Headroom (of which he was a fan). He combined the concept with then-president Ronald Reagan, to produce Ron Headrest, the world's first electronically simulated politician. (The name "Headrest" was a humorous allusion to the frequent and lengthy naps that Reagan was notorious for.)

>The idea was that Ron had been created to serve as a backup president during the long periods Reagan spent on vacation. He appeared as a stylized version of Reagan’s head and shoulders on a television screen, complete with sunglasses. Because he was electronic, he would have no memory troubles, and his sense of humor and attitude were designed to appeal to young voters.

>It ends up being a disaster: Headrest is stuttering and incompetent, and openly mocks the administration he is designed to serve, and causes nothing but trouble. During the first week of his appearance he flashes the White House's phone number on his screen and tells children to call if they wanted "rock-solid information on safe sex." (Because the number printed was accurate, the real world White House got calls which jammed their switchboards. Eventually they got revenge by giving callers the number of Trudeau’s editor.)

>In the continuity of the comic strip the White House staff is less creative, and simply try to turn Headrest off. But like his televised counterpart, Ron escapes into the airwaves and begins causing trouble wherever he can find a television and someone to listen to him. He takes particular delight in tormenting Mike Doonesbury, whom he calls "Y-Person" (meaning yuppie). Headrest also seeks the 1988 Republican Party presidential nomination in his own right, but withdraws from the race, promising to go into reruns instead.

>Ron appeared regularly throughout the Reagan and Bush presidencies and then began to show up less frequently. He only appeared a few times during the Clinton administration, and then disappeared entirely. The real Ronald Reagan had retired and left the public view, and Max Headroom's program was long gone, making the character far less topical than he had once been. Although Doonesbury characters rarely disappear, as of May 18, 2019, Ron Headrest hasn't been seen since November 6, 1994.


The same effect was used in the "80s Café" scene in Back to the Future II with Reagan, Michael Jackson and Ayatollah Khomeini:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vAEU-Lf60LA


I most recently spotted him on the show The Magicians. https://themagicians.fandom.com/wiki/Matt_Frewer


Frewer also played a CSIS officer in the underrated series Intelligence, which had an interesting take on Canada vs US CIA/DEA and Chinese spying/geopolitics.

https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0845746/?ref_=fn_al_tt_1




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