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Rosie O'Donnell plucked 17-year-old Philip Johnson out of a Detroit restaurant to star with her in "America," a Lifetime network movie airing in February.
Rosie O’Donnell plucked 17-year-old Philip Johnson out of a Detroit restaurant to star with her in “America,” a Lifetime network movie airing in February.
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Rosie O’Donnell saw a teenager at a Detroit restaurant and thought he had a face that belonged in pictures.

Now 17-year-old Philip Johnson has the lead role in “America,” a Lifetime network movie also starring O’Donnell and Ruby Dee that is set for broadcast in February.

Johnson, a high school senior, was eating lunch at Small Plates, a popular downtown eatery, when O’Donnell spotted him and asked whether he would be interested in trying out for a film. He took a screen test the next day and won the title role.

When Johnson first saw O’Donnell in the restaurant, he didn’t believe it was she, he said.

“I thought it was just somebody who looked like her,” Johnson, who had never acted before, told the Detroit Free Press. “I didn’t think it was actually her. I mean, what’s Rosie O’Donnell doing in Detroit?”

O’Donnell was in town to work on a movie version of a young-adult novel by E.R. Frank. It’s about a teenager named America who has spent most of his life lost in the foster-care system. He confronts his troubled past with help from a therapist, played by O’Donnell.

O’Donnell told “Entertainment Tonight” that she sensed “a soulful kind of stillness” in Johnson.

During a break in shooting at a former homeless shelter in the impoverished Detroit enclave of Highland Park, Johnson said he remains shocked by his luck.

“It still hasn’t hit me,” the teen said. “I won’t even realize it until it comes on TV; then it will finally hit me, I think.”

Other TV news: Despite the ability to watch video on computers and cellphones, Americans are viewing more television than ever.

Nielsen Media Research said Monday the average American watches 142 hours of TV in a month. Last season the typical home had a television on for eight hours and 18 minutes each day. That’s up an hour per day from just 10 years ago.

And the older you are, the more TV you watch. Nielsen said Americans ages 65 and up watch more than 196 hours per month.

Americans are also watching more video on the Internet and mobile devices, although Nielsen said cellphone viewing is mostly a guy thing.

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