Julio torres gay

Julio Torres is established as a scribe for the sketch comedy variety show  ‘Saturday Night Live’, on top of being a talented comedian, and actor.

Torres was born on February 11, 1987 in San Salvador, El Salvador. His father is a civil engineer, while his mother is an architect and fashion designer. Not to mention, his sister is also a designer, and she has collaborated with him on his comedy projects alongside their mother.

The actor has always wanted to pursue a career in comedy writing, so he moved to New York to attend The Unused School. In 2011, he graduated with a degree in Literary Studies, and thereafter worked as a writer for ‘The Chris Gethard Show’.

From 2016 to 2019, Torres worked as a scribe for ‘Saturday Nighttime Live’, and he has since acted in a couple of films and television shows. Aside from being a talented writer, comedian and actor, he is also a director.

In fact, his directorial debut motion picture ‘Problemista’ recently had its New York City premiere after almost a year when it premiered at SXSW. The satire feature is starring writer and director Torres, together with Tilda Swinton, Isabella Rossellini, Greta Lee, RZA, and


(#1) No, I don’t know why pink; Cumming, Maddow, and Torres are notably LGBT, but not the other five in this display (maybe 3 out of 8 exceeds some tipping point, but it’s more likely that pink’s just a random color decision, devoid of meaning)

Now, which of these 8 is not like the others? Well, that’s an odd photo of singer-songwriter Sara Bareilles, but it’s an atypical one. Otherwise, Julio Torres’s photo does stand, or leap, out, and for him it’s fairly restrained; his pictures show him with a broad variety of hair colors (sometimes involving henna red or bright blue) and bodily adornments, and sometimes in performative. Meanwhile, he’s adolescent, adorable, outrageous, bright, and dead series about creating comedy in a variety of forms.

Here is as close as JT seems to have gotten to a p.r. photo:


(#2) Not your grandfather’s 8×10 glossy, but a decent character study in a face shot; plus a really big dangly earring (photo by Mega)

Briefly about JT, from Wikipedia:

Julio Torres (born February 11, 1987) is a Salvadoran-American writer, comedian, and actor. He is known as a writer for Saturday Night Live and as the co-c

Julio Torres: Life Is More Complex Than One Coming Out Speech

Pride has never looked like this before. Parades are canceled. Gatherings are a public health relate to . But that hardly means that Pride is canceled. This month, Esquire is examining what Celebration means now, beyond the pride and for the next 50 years—whether it's advocating for justice over Zoom, discovering the intersectionality too often missing from Lgbtq+ fest, or simply existing as a trans father. The protest continues.

We have asked four figures from popular culture to be Event guest editors during the month of June. This week, Julio Torres—comedian and writer of Los Espookys on HBOjoined Esquire for a discussion about the importance of individuality and how it's important to see beyond what's familiar.

In my comedy, I set things through a lens that is very specific to me. I never, never want to claim to speak for anybody else's experience. I am not here representing immigrants. I am not here representing Salvadorians or Hispanics or gay people. I can only share what's in me and that may or may not ring true with people, but I have never wanted to use any of those things as a calling card.

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Gay hamsters. A litigious elf. A cowgirl toilet. Welcome to Julio Torres' 'Fantasmas'

The Greek hero Jason famously sought the fabled Golden Fleece. His quest took him over land and sea, and forced him to confront six-armed giants, harpies, clashing rocks, a sleepless dragon, sirens, a huge bronze automaton and many other strange and thrilling perils.

Comedian Julio Torres, on the six-episode HBO series Fantasmas (which he also wrote and directed), embarks upon a similar quest. Only instead of searching the pelt of a winged ram sired by Poseidon and the nymph Theophane which was said to bestow divine command upon whomsoever possessed it, Torres goes looking for an earring he missing at a dance club.

Yet Torres' quest is no less mythic; it takes him through a colorful, dreamlike version of New York City created entirely on a soundstage. And his tale is just as discursive as Jason's, because he's forever brushing up against other New Yorkers who hijack the story for a few minutes at a time. Think of these character-focused vignettes as the series of strange Greek islands Jason visits on his travels. But instead of sirens and harpies, Torres' encoun