Sophie Turner Sophie Turner was an unknown when she was cast as the naive Sansa Stark on HBO’s blockbuster fantasy adaptation Game of Thrones, but she parlayed her work on the popular series into international stardom. Her dramatic range has led to an assortment of leading roles in indie films like Another Me and Barely Lethal, while she demonstrated a continued commitment to genre work in 2016’s X-Men: Apocalypse. Inspired by the ordeals faced by her Thrones character, Turner has become a vocal advocate for women’s rights. Trevor Noah Before his breakout role as Jon Stewart’s replacement on Comedy Central’s The Daily Show, Trevor Noah was a bit of a renaissance man in his native South Africa, with an impressive variety of professional gigs including a guest spot on television soap Isidingo, a radio show on popular local station YFM, and even a turn as a Latin dancer on Dancing With the Stars. Noah dropped these pursuits to focus on his stand-up comedy career, and in 2012 he performed on The Tonight Show—the first South African comic in history to do so. In 2016, Noah published the award-winning Born a Crime, a memoir of his childhood in post-Apartheid South Africa. Billy Eichner A comic from an early age, Billy Eichner’s signature exuberance has led to a successful career spanning stage, television, and perhaps his most well-known role as host of the riotous Billy on the Street, where he quizzed celebrities and unassuming New Yorkers alike on their pop culture knowledge. After getting an early start with a small role on Saturday Night Live, Eichner would hone his performing chops with off-Broadway productions like I Sing! and Billy Eichner Goes Pop! before going viral with his interview series, and eventually finding a comfortable niche playing supporting roles on sitcoms like Parks and Recreation and Bob’s Burgers. Eichner currently plays a version of himself in the Hulu series Difficult People. Jeff Gordon Few stock car racers have had as illustrious a career as four-time NASCAR Cup champion Jeff Gordon. For more than two decades, Gordon wowed fans with unforgettable victories like his first Daytona 500 win in 1997, or his 2007 triumph at the Subway Fresh Fit 500 that earned him his 76th win—a record he shares with NASCAR legend Dale Earnhardt. In 2016, Gordon retired from the sport after 23 seasons, joining FOX Sports as a NASCAR commentator. Gordon is married to Belgian actress Ingrid Vandebosch, with whom he has two children.