15 Amazing Guest Appearances On Bojack Horseman

Do You Know These Hollywoo Stars & Celebrities?

BoJack Horseman Mr Peanutbutter
Netflix

In little over two months, Netflix will drop the second part to the final season of one of its best, most original and most daring series since they began commissioning their own original content.

Over the course of its six-season run, it’s never been short of an all manner of creative and original characters who have dropped in to help our five leads in their misadventures, or stayed on longer to serve in the bigger, wider, greater storylines.

For a show that deals with some pretty dark issues at times, it’s cute to think giant talking hamsters or blues-singing flies are there to spout wisdom about the deeper subject matter so profoundly.

So why not pay tribute to these characters?

For this list, we’re looking at characters who made short guest appearances on one episode or small mini-arcs throughout the show. We’re not counting side or supporting characters, so unfortunately JK Simmons’ Lenny Turtletaub and Patton Oswalt’s Pinky Penguin don’t make the cut in the list.

15. Keegan-Michael Key - Sebastian St. Clair

BoJack Horseman Mr Peanutbutter
Netflix

Kicking things off is the Season 2 philanthropist voiced by Keegan-Michael Key.

Sebastian St. Clair is a self-righteous snow leopard and slacktivist who is more concerned with getting his face in pictures at warzones and erecting statues than actually doing some good.

Keegan-Michael Key's arrival is strange to say the least because he is putting on an accent to his character. Sebastian St. Clair is a British billionaire, and while cast members have provided voice work for other characters (Alison Brie voicing the character Vincent Adultman for instance), it does seem strange that Keegan was cast in the series but chose not to use his normal voice.

One possibly theory is he personally took a look at the design and script for the character and settled on the notion that Sebastian spoke not just with an upper-crust tone, but with an accent that reeked of self-congratulations and disillusioned ideas

Whatever the reason, it works. The voice fits the character perfectly as he pontificates how brilliant he is or how badly he needs a duty free giant Toblerone.

Contributor

I overthink a lot of things. Will talk about pretty much anything for a great length of time. I'm obsessed with General Slocum from the 2002 Spider-Man film. I have questions that were never answered in that entire trilogy!