Víctor Trujillo | |
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Trujillo in 2008
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Pseudonym | Brozo |
Birth name | Víctor Alberto Trujillo Matamoros |
Born |
Mexico City, Mexico |
July 30, 1961
Medium | Television |
Nationality | Mexican |
Years active | 1987 - present |
Genres | Observational comedy, surreal humor, albur (Double Entendres) |
Subject(s) | self-deprecation, everyday life |
Spouse | Carolina Padilla (deceased) |
Relative(s) | Rubén Trujillo (brother) |
Notable works and roles |
Imevisión:Tienda y trastienda, La Caravana TV Azteca: Humorcito Corazón, El Diario de la Noche, Los Protagonistas (Olympic Games and World Cups) CNI Canal 40: Las Nueve y Sereno Televisa: El Mañanero, El Circo de Brozo, El Cristal con que se Mira, Notifiero |
Víctor Alberto Trujillo Matamoros (born July 30, 1961) is a Mexican host, comedian and political commentator. He is best known for his character Brozo el Payaso Tenebroso (Brozo the Creepy Clown), a green-haired, unkempt, obscene and aggressive clown (an anti-clown).
Trujillo was born in Mexico City. In 1987, after appearing in an Imevisión variety show called En tienda y trastienda (Front and Back of House), Trujillo created a new program called La caravana (The Caravan), alongside his Tienda y trastienda partner Ausencio Cruz. La caravana was a successful show with skits played by characters created by Trujillo and Cruz, with a comedy style calling back to the era of carpas. It featured characters such as Estetoscopio Medina Cháirez, played by Trujillo, representing a low-class Mexican guy with a funny accent, who spoke ironically of the way of life of the poor. La caravana also marked the first on-air appearance of Brozo, where he told heavily modified fairy tales in front of the camera; the modifications reflected the realities of crime and poverty in the Mexican ghetto. The success of the two programs brought advertising revenues to Imevisión, which by the early 1990s was airing steadily more foreign productions. Trujillo later had a nighttime program as another character, "La Beba Galván", this time without Cruz.
Trujillo continued with TV Azteca, Imevisión's successor, hosting programs including El Diario de la Noche until 2000. That year, he brought his act to Canal 40, where Brozo was host of his own news program called El Mañanero as an anchorman and political commentator. An obvious intelligent man behind the make-up of a clown, Victor Trujillo could criticize freely and poignantly the actors of the political scene (not very reputed among the general public), and soon his program received high ratings and featured high-profile politicians; it also began being simulcast on some Grupo ACIR radio stations.
In 2001, after 16 months, Trujillo left Canal 40 in order to sign a contract with Televisa and move his program there, which he said would allow him to take on a wider variety of projects. For instance, he appeared on programs surrounding the 2002 FIFA World Cup and hosted a season of Big Brother Mexico.
Brozo played an important role in the most damaging of the videoscandals that affected Mexico City mayor Andrés Manuel López Obrador. On El Mañanero, a video given to Trujillo by then-ALDF deputy Federico Döring Casar was publicly played, showing René Bejarano filling a briefcase with dollars given by entrepreneur Carlos Ahumada; this was followed immediately by a studio interview with an unsuspecting Bejarano, who saw the video for the first time on the spot. Trujillo would later be called on to testify in the criminal case that resulted.