Early Life

Paul Marcarelli was born in North Haven, Connecticut on May 24, 1970. He earned a bachelor’s degree in English from Fairfield University in 1992. At school he was a member of the Theater Fairfield, the local theater production company. He is a founding member of New York’s Mobius Group Productions, through which he produced and starred in many plays.

Verizon Guy

Paul first appeared as the “Test Man” character in Verizon commercials in 2002. He held the role until 2011 when he was informed via email that he would no longer appear in Verizon’s commercials, but would remain under contract. During his 9-year-run as the Verizon Guy, Paul appeared in hundreds of commercials. He became worldwide famous for the catchphrase “Can you hear me now?”.

How much did Paul Marcarelli make as the Verizon guy?

At his peak, Paul earned $2-3 million per year working for Verizon. Typically when an actor portrays a character for a long time, they end up negotiating a direct deal with the brand outside of the typical SAG-AFTRA union pay scales. They also get a pay bump for being the official spokesperson, residuals for current commercial airings and an exclusivity buyout which precludes them for taking other jobs. When you add it all up, someone like Paul likely earned over $20 million during his career through his commercial and voice acting roles. Other good examples of commercial actors who are earning millions as brand characters are Milana Vayntrub, aka the AT&T girl, and Stephanie Courtney, aka “Flo” from Progressive.

Sprint

In 2016, very soon after his Verizon non-compete contract expired, Paul was signed by rival company Sprint to be their spokesman. He often references his “switch to Sprint” message with a double meaning in the commercials.

Personal Life

Paul has been married to his husband Ryan Brown since 2014.

Real Estate

In 2006 Paul bought a two-bedroom condo in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village for $1.19 million. He sold this apartment in April 2010 for $1.255 million. In September 2016 Paul paid $825,000 for a 14-acre farm in Litchfield, Connecticut. He owns a second home in nearby Guilford, Connecticut.