(Big, Healthy, Husky, Fluffy, and
DAAAAAAAMN!)

Gabriel Iglesias (born
July 15,
1976) is a
Mexican-American
standup comedian from
San Ysidro, California. He is best known for
making fun of his
obesity and his ability for impressions. His
opening joke is "The 5 kinds of fat": Big, Healthy,
Husky, Fluffy (which he says he is) and "DAAAAAAAMN!"
He has made several guest appearances on such
television shows as
The Tonight Show,
My Wife and Kids and in his own half hour
special on
Comedy Central. He was a series regular for one
season of
All That on
Nickelodeon where his most notable role was
portraying
Bill Clinton.
Iglesias was a finalist in the
fourth season of the
reality television series,
Last Comic Standing. In the
July 11,
2006 episode, which depicted the series' regular
roast segment, Iglesias was chosen as the roast
subject. He was evicted before that episode's
elimination round, however, after it was discovered
that he had violated the terms of the contestants'
contract several times, having not only broken
curfew, but having violated the rules against
unauthorized outside communication more than once.
Whereas the contestants are allowed one phone call
every two days on the residence's house phone, on
which conversations are monitored by the producers,
Iglesias was discovered having smuggled a
BlackBerry into the contestants' residence, and
then, after the BlackBerry was confiscated, having
used a payphone to call his girlfriend at
approximately 3 or 4am, during which he revealed
some of the contents of the roast competition.
Gabriel "Picachu" Iglesias' style of comedy is a mixture of story
telling with characters and sound effects that bring all his
personal issues to life. His amazing ability to cross over with a
clean animated style of comedy has put him in big demand throughout
the stand-up comedy circuit. Ask anyone who has seen him in concert
and you will probably hear the same thing, "He was so funny!"
Gabriel, one of the rising stars in the recent boom of Latino
comedians, was put on the map by the Galavision TV show, "Que
Locos!". This highly successful television comedy hour quickly
spawned into a nationwide tour of sold-out performances across the
country. The experience not only helped to develop Gabriel's loyal
fan base, but also led to additional film and television roles. He
has guest-starred on ABC's "My Wife & Kids," Showtime's
"Resurrection Boulevard" and was involved in the WB pilot for "Deez
Nuts". His stand-up has been featured on "Jimmy Kimmel Live," "The
Tonight Show with Jay Leno," "Good Morning America," "Showtime at
the Apollo" and BET's "Comic View" to name a few. On the big screen,
he has been seen in the independent film "El Matador," and coming in
2005, Gabriel will star in "The Surfer King," where he will play the
role of Aokee, the manager of a water park Surf and Snack Shack.
Known as the "fluffy" comic in the Hawaiian shirt, the 27-year old
funny man often riffs about his girthy middle - whether it's talking
about how little dancing it takes for him to work up a sweat at the
nightclub, or how hearing his girlfriend coo the words "chocolate
cake" over the telephone works for him like phone sex.
Gabriel performs stand-up nightly while spreading his positive
message of laughter by day at high schools. He includes in his punch
lines messages about the hazards of alcohol and the importance of
voting. In 2000, Gabriel won a Kid's Choice Award for the
Nickelodean TV show "All That." He then won the Comedy Central &
Comcast Cable's Comedy Special of the year in 2003 and in 2004 &
2005 was voted into the Top 25 of Comedy Central's Standup Showdown.
The youngest of six children, Gabriel spent his first five years
living on the eastside of Chula Vista. By the age of eight Gabriel
and his mother were on their own and making a fresh start in the
city of Long Beach. One night Gabriel's mother took him to the local
video store where he rented a comedy tape starring Eddie Murphy. Two
weeks later he was motivated to audition for his 5th grade talent
show and to his suprise he was the hit of the show. Gabriel's silly
voices and characters left the audience in stitches and his dream of
becoming a comedian was born. Eleven years later a friend of his
pushed a very scared Gabriel Iglesias back onto a stage for the
first time in over a decade. April 10th of 2005 will mark the
eight-year anniversary of the day Gabriel made his dream of becoming
a comedian a reality.
"I get my material from things that happen every day," he says,
using his 10-year high school reunion as an example. "I had too much
to drink and I made an ass of myself. When they asked 'Who has been
on TV?,' one of the girls handed me a mic. I said, 'I see three or
four girls who turned me down in high school. But you know what? You
girls got fat and now I drive a Hummer.' One of the girls tells me,
'You're fat too!' And I said, 'I was always fat. I kept my figure,
why couldn't you?' It was the conversation of the night. I don't use
writers. I use real life."
In his debut CD entitled, "Picachu… I See You," Gabriel talks about
hanging out with his buddies. He does not want to be labeled as a
'Latino Comedian.' "It's just going to be funny. It won't have an
all-Latino audience. It's going to be modern. I want to show people
that Latinos are here, but we don't have to be stereotypical." Web Links
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