Donald Glover has to be the only rapper ever to drop Tina Fey's name. And he's done it twice. The Community star, who raps under the alias Childish Gambino, idolizes Fey in verse the way most rappers enshrine their mothers. From "The Last," off his mixtape: And this next part, sounds like nonsense / But I swear to God, Tina Fey gave me confidence. Uh, his target audience? "The very large population of nerdy black kids who watch Archer," he says. Glover's fondness for Fey stems from his first real-world job as a writer on 30 Rock. He was 23 when Fey hired him, still living in NYU housing. This should be where the phrase boy wonder pops to mind. His quarter-life success—in addition to Community, he has four albums and a feature-length movie to his name—would be less eye-stabbingly enviable if he didn't play Troy, the good-natured dolt of Community's junior-college study group, with the zeal of a Lee Strasberg acolyte. The evidence: Google "Donald Glover crying." The Internet, bless its tubular heart, has paid giant homage to Glover's signature talent—comic weeping. His isn't the swallowable stuff of Adam Sandler's nasal man-child whimpering. Glover commits to chest-heaving, voice-cracking, almost gloriously unbearable sobbing fits, showcased on the Web in a video montage of his eight best crying scenes from the show. That's more breakdowns than Meryl Streep has in _Sophie's Choice. _