Andrew Keegan is sharing details of his unreliable residual checks from movies and TV shows.
âI think itâs really funny because Iâll get different shows obviously, but Iâll get one cent checks and it costs like 40 cents to send,â the actor, now 47, said during a recent episode of The McBride Rewind, adding, âOne cent is not worth my time.â
Keegan is best known for his role in 1999 romcom â10 Things I Hate About Youâ opposite Heath Ledger and Julia Stiles.
He noted that heâs probably seen the highest amount in residuals from the iconic teen comedy.
âI think â10 Thingsâ is the biggest residuals,â he divulged. âThere are still residuals that come from all those shows, like $10, $20, $50, $80, right?â
At the height of his fame, Keegan appeared in a number of high profile TV series and movies.
He appeared on â7th Heavenâ from 1997 to 2002, as well as âParty of Fiveâ from 1997 to 1998. In more recent years, he appeared in âCSI: New Yorkâ in 2010 and âRelatedâ from 2005 to 2006.
Keegan also had roles in âIndependence Dayâ (1996) and âThe Broken Hearts Clubâ (2000), among many others.
Celebrity residuals can indeed be unpredictable â while some stars havenât pulled in much due to various factors, others boast millions.
Forbes revealed back in 2013 that Ray Romano rakes in $18 million per year for his sitcom âEverybody Loves Raymond,â which ran from 1996 to 2005.
But a number of celebrities have more recently shared their shocking residuals stories, divulging they donât earn much at all for their past work on various memorable TV shows.
âWhoâs the Bossâ alum Danny Pintauro, now 50, shared insight on why he now works as an Amazon Flex delivery driver in between acting auditions.
âPretty much everyone misunderstands what residuals mean,â he said during an interview with Fox News earlier this month.
âItâs crazy to me. People always assume that if they recognize you, you must be financially set for your life, and thatâs just not how it works.â
Pintauro explained that heâs âgetting five to six cents per episode,â of the 1984 to 1992 sitcom, adding that âthey can air it as many times as they want and I donât get paid anymore.â
Jodie Sweetin of âFull House,â meanwhile, shared last month on the âMcBride Rewindâ that she âgot a one-cent check the other day.â
Sweetin, 44, added, âThereâs no syndication anymore because itâs all in streaming. Who gets paid for that? Nobody gets paid for that.â
And âBrady Bunchâ star Eve Plum, 68, wrote in her newly released memoir âHappiness Included: Jan Brady and Beyondâ that if she âhad a dime for every rerun episode of the â70s hit, Iâd pay off the national deficit. I donât.â
Lisa Kudrow, however â whose mega-hit âFriendsâ ran from 1994 to 2004 â continues to receive handsome amounts in residuals.
The actress, 62, told the Times of London last month that she and her famous co-stars from the NBC comedy still make $20 million per year in residuals.
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