Freddie Prinze Jr Club
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COSMOPOLITAN
All About Men
Summer 2000

Freddie Prinze, Jr. tells us who he's in pag-ibig with this summer.

Cosmo: So are you the typical Pisces, you can't make up your mind?

Freddie Prinze, Jr.: No, I'm very laid back. I'm just cooled out. Pretty much everything is cool with me. If somebody says, 'You want to eat Japanese pagkain now?' I'm like, 'Yeah, sure.' And I really want to. Somebody says, 'You want steak?' I'm like, 'Oh, that's cool.' I go with the flow and pretty much remain cool.

C: Do you like food?

FPJ: I pag-ibig food. My paborito thing to do in the world is eat. Absolutely.

C: What foods do you like?

FPJ: Everything. If it doesn't eat me first, I'll eat it. Japanese pagkain is my favorite, and steak. I pag-ibig taking a woman to dinner, and I pag-ibig watching her enjoy her food. And I pag-ibig the way girls look in restaurants — lighting and candles, and the way women hold their silverware and the way they chew their food. It's just a very sexy thing to me, and I've always liked it. I pag-ibig going out. Me and my girlfriend [Sarah Michelle Gellar] go out all the time. I pag-ibig it.

C: Do you get dressed up?

FPJ: No. I'll put on a nice sweater and slacks. Or if we go somewhere else I'll wear a T-shirt and jeans. It depends. It's madami about her than it is me. I'm looking at her probably a lot more. I stare way too much. I can't help it.

C: What's the most romantic thing you've ever done for someone?

FPJ: I like being romantic, but I don't know if there's a most romantic thing. Everything I do with my girl and with my other girlfriends, I try to be romantic. I like romance a lot, I like passion a lot. I like Pagsulat to them about how I feel about them and how they make me feel. And I want to let them know how special they are. And I'm not always good at verbally communicating that, so I really enjoy Pagsulat it down and then kind of being that way because it's as honest as I can possibly be.

C: What's the worst thing a girl can do on a petsa with you?

FPJ: The worst thing... not enjoy the restaurant. Not like what we got. 'Cause I try to go to places that I know are really good. And if we don't like the same food, then that can be a serious problem. I went on a petsa with a girl and I took her to get sushi. She wasn't gonna eat it. That was the last date. 'Cause that's my paborito food.

C: What would a girl have to do to get your attention?

FPJ: They'd just have to be special. There are some women that just shine when you look at 'em and make your eyes kind of well up, and you get so filled with so many different thoughts and emotions you don't know what to do. You don't know if you're gonna cry or you're gonna laugh or vomit.

C: What's the craziest thing you ever did to get a girl's attention?

FPJ: When I was a little kid, we played boys chase girls and girls chase boys, and I was really, really fast, so it was easy for me to catch 'em. The girls were really slow. And all the guys, for some reason — cause they're idiots in the third grade — they ran away as fast as they could to ipakita who's the quickest. And I would just like walk. I'd say, 'Where are you going, you idiots?' And I would get, like, 50 kisses, cause all the other guys were on the other side of the field. So it wasn't like the craziest thing, but I thought they were crazy, cause I was like, 'What are you doing? Okay, you're really fast, and I just kissed your girl.'

C: What happens when you're attracted to a friend? Have you ever had a friend, then one araw you look at her and realize...

FPJ: Absolutely. It's scary, cause you don't want to disrespect her; you don't want her to feel like you're violating a trust that you have. So you either have to stifle those feelings, or you have to be brutally honest and hope she doesn't feel offended sa pamamagitan ng it. And it's a really scary thing.

C: Do you think good relationships come out of that?

FPJ: I mean the way things are going right now for me, I think it definitely helps to have a wonderful friendship before.

C: What do you think about settling down?

FPJ: I'm pretty much the domesticated male.

C: Do you want children?

FPJ: Absolutely, of course. I would pag-ibig to have babies. I definitely want to have children before I'm 30. Absolutely. I want to be able to be young and play with my kids and be able to relate to them. I feel if I'm older than that, I would kind of lose something. I want to be alive as long as I can for my kids and for their kids.

C: You have a good heart, you aren't self-destructive. You're just a novelty in this business.

FPJ: No, no, I just know what I want. I know what I like. So I have an easier time than some other people who might have grown up differently. I just have a different outlook. I like to do things for me, for myself. I like being happy, so I'm not going to do things that aren't gonna make me happy. Bottom line. I'm living out my dream. I have the greatest family, and the greatest friends, and the best girlfriend, and the coolest job, and a great house with two dogs. That is the dream. And I am idealistic. I strongly believe that if you follow your puso you can accomplish what you want, and not to quit on those dreams, because it's hard as hell, of course it is. But when you make it, it's like, so worth it.


Copyright © 2000 Cosmopolitan Magazine. All Rights Reserved.
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USA WEEKEND
Interview: Freddie Prinze Jr. on his dad, Mel Gibson and violent video games
January 2000

Freddie Prinze Jr. has the same handsome looks as the famous father he Nawawala to suicide when Freddie was an infant. Prinze, 23, who stars in the new big-screen comedy Down to You, also has something his dad (of TV's Chico and the Man) seemed destined for: a successful movie career.

USA Weekend: Your Down to You character struggles to find meaning in life. Can you relate?

Freddie: "It's kind of close to the last few years of my life. He's always messing up with his girlfriend. Every time he thinks...
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PREMIERE
"I would pag-ibig to be a superhero"
February 1999


"I would pag-ibig to be a superhero," Freddie Prinze, Jr. says, not joking. "That's my main dream." At 22, the smooth and soulful bituin of I Still Know What You Did Last Summer and its $72 million-grossing predecessor dreams of many things. "I'd pag-ibig to be a cowboy; I'd pag-ibig to be a husband, a big brother, a little brother - there are so many roles out there that I haven't even gotten to touch."

Hollywood has always been in Prinze's blood - his father, the late Freddie Prinze, was the bituin of television's Chico and the Man - but a career in front...
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MOVIELINE
March 1999
By Stephen Rebello

Among Hollywood's under-30 crowd, where attitude is often everything, how supremely cool it is to run across a guy so openhearted and endearingly odd around the edges as Freddie Prinze, Jr. "There's nothing you can't ask me because I'm not ashamed of anything I say," says the 23-year-old, who looks like he could play Keanu Reeve's sadder-eyed, madami soulful younger brother. So how, having become increasingly "money" since starring in two I Know What You Did Last Summers is he managing to stay so beatific and unguarded? "My mom raised me in New Mexico at the...
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PEOPLE
50 Most Beautiful People
April 2000

Oh, the pain, the pain! "It only takes 30 segundos to pluck my eyebrows, but it hurts," says Freddie Prinze Jr. "I have to tweeze 'em in the middle once a week. Otherwise, I look like Bert from Sesame Street. I've been doing it for 11 years!" And you thought it was easy being a teen idol. Still, the 24-year-old Prinze doesn't have to do much other grooming to draw young females to the box office. His routine? "I shower, throw some goop in my hair, get dressed, head out." But it's his manner, not his matter, that impresses. "He's the kindest person, and...
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PEOPLE
The Real Prinze
June 2000
By Andy Coulpepper
Additional Reporting sa pamamagitan ng Sef McDonald

Freddie Prinze Jr. settles back in his chair at a Los Angeles hotel where he's talking to a reporter about his new film, Boys and Girls.

This turns out to be the last interview for Prinze in what has been a very long day. But as the clock nears 5 p.m., Prinze shows no sign of wearing down. The 24-year-old Albuquerque, N.M., native is all personality, a display that would put the Energizer Bunny to shame.

It's vintage Prinze, almost a carbon copy of the guy he plays in this romp about figuring out romance the...
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