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The latter film earned over $100 million in the United States.
“You get sucked onto a sort of conveyer belt,” he toldGQin 2015.

“It’s the cliche, but it’s true.
I started doing what I would now call assembly-line comedies.”
Here are the other factors that affected his career.

In 2008, the actor parted ways with both his manager Eric Gold and the United Talent agency.
Vaughn revealed toGQthat tension between his agency and Gold led to both parties not speaking for months.
“There was a ton of bad blood between my manager and my agent,” he said.

This seemingly caused Vaughn to look elsewhere, with the actor landing at Creative Artists.
However, this move did not give Vaughn the results he was looking for.
“This tweak can affect your output, especially if you’re not communicating brilliantly.”

In October 2020, Vaughn also signed with the management company Range Media Partners.
However, the transitional period seemingly led Vaughn to explore new ventures behind the camera.
“The machine can make you idle.

Like anything in life, you’re either growing or you’re dying,” he said.
“When you get too comfortable, you start to decline.
I’m not blaming anyone else but myself here.”
Vaughn has kept up with acting, too.
But he believes that he’s become much more choosy with projects because of his focus on parenting.
“I definitely got more selective,” he said.
In addition, Vaughn and his wife, Kyla Weber, are raising two kids, Locklyn and Vernon.
However, the center of his universe is undoubtedly his family.
Vaughn shares daughter Locklyn and son Vernon with his wife, Kayla Vaughn.
“We laugh a lot.
My wife’s very funny and my kids are terrific,” he said.
They didn’t micromanage," he said.
“We were on the sets changing lines and trying to make each other laugh.”
Now the game has changed.
According to Vaughn, people are too scared to push the limits.
Many blame wokeness for depreciating the genre of film for which Vaughn is most widely known.