Brandon Stanton is known for Humans of New York: The Series (2017), The Bobby Love Story and Ya no estoy aquí (2019).
Born and raised in the small town of Cooper in deep East Texas, Brandon knew from an early age he wanted to entertain. He told his mother at the age of 5 he wanted to "act in the movies," and his parents supported him every step of the way. His mother, Brenda, would even let him stay home from school once every year - the day after the Academy Awards, as he stayed up late to watch. He participated in his high school One Act Play for 3 of his 4 years there, which was when he really started to fall in love with the craft. He formed a close bond with his One Act Play coach and credits her for being a crucial factor to why he started to believe that he, an average small town kid, could truly make this dream a reality, if he was only willing to work for it. At 19, he put that work into motion. Moving to LA on his own. A big step for the small town kid, but a necessary one that would teach invaluable lessons. He studied at Playhouse West, the same studio the likes of James Franco, Jeff Goldblum, Scott Caan and many others had trained before him. He was introduced to the Meisner technique and a new obsession began to take hold. Studying in the same class as Brandon was McCaul Lombardi(Sollers Point, American Honey) and the two struck up conversation and began rehearsing outside of class together, even working on a short film in their free time to stay busy. Eventually, Texas called back to him and he returned. He was picked up quickly by The Campbell Agency in Dallas, where he has been steadily working and building his resume.
Brandon Stewart was born May 24th in Louisville, Kentucky. He is the son of Mike Stewart, a Plant Supervisor at North American Stainless and Melanie Tomlinson Stewart, the President's Executive Assistant at North American Stainless. He has two brothers, Ryan Stewart and Tyler Stewart. Stewart was raised in Carrollton, Kentucky and attended Carroll County Public Schools. Stewart appeared on-stage throughout his time in school, then landed on American Idol: The Search for a Superstar (2002) during Season 12, after appearing as an opening act for George Jones' Farewell Tour. He graduated Carroll County High School in May of 2013. Stewart attended college at Bellarmine University before transferring to the New York Film Academy. He now resides in Los Angeles, California. His first recurring role on television was in MBC's Cut (2017) that became the #1 comedy on the air in the Middle East. He then worked on Lionsgate's Future World (2018) alongside James Franco, Snoop Dogg, Lucy Liu and Milla Jovovich. Quickly after, he launched the first slate of his own projects including This Is Me (2018) (2018), A Christmas Dinner (2018) and Mamma Mia! (2018) and signed with Awesomeness TV. In 2020, soon after ViacomCBS acquired Awesomeness TV, Stewart launched his digital production and distribution company, Brandon TV (BTV). His company produces network pilots, incubators and fingertip entertainment across 90+ OTT and social networking mediums. Stewart's most recent role on film was in the musical, Moondance (2020), while his recent television role was in the mockumentary, Rusty Camel (2020). He is the showrunner and a judge on the Grammy affiliated panel for Shine (2017), that has become the #1 competition short form series in America. At his company, Stewart is producing further seasons of Summer Lane Drive (2020) and Now That's Sketch (2020), and slated to appear in Drylands (2021), Crestmore and Getaway (2021). Stewart's favorite sport is basketball. His favorite teams are the University of Kentucky and the Los Angeles Lakers. He also enjoys Soccer, Tennis and Baseball, after playing during his time in high school. Stewart can play the piano and the trumpet.
Brandon Stone is known for Tales of a 5th Grade Robin Hood (2021).
Brandon Sullivan has been married to Nicole Sullivan since 27 June 2017.
Brandon Sutton is known for Ordinary Joe (2021), SEAL Team (2017) and The Crossover (2023).
Brandon Swartz is known for Not Your Romeo & Juliet, Stealing the Show (2021) and Fragment: Oblivion.
Brandon Timothy Jackson was born and raised in Detroit, Michigan, the son of Beverly Yvonne (Bozeman) and Wayne Timothy Jackson. His parents are both pastors, and his maternal grandfather was a Pentecostal child preacher. He credits his sense of humor to both his father and his life straddling the fence between suburbia and the inner city. Brandon held the title of "class clown" and grew his passion for comedy and acting by doing talent shows and performing at youth nights at his father's church. By age 14, Brandon's career as a stand-up comic evolved from local school shows and community projects, such as the "Motor City Youth Festival", to an appearance in Marc Cayce's film, Nikita Blues (2001). Brandon took an internship at local Detroit radio station 93.1 FM and soon found himself as a guest host at 105.9 FM. Brandon's drive took him to Hollywood where, in 2001, he was cast as an extra in major movies such as Ali (2001), Bowling for Columbine (2002) and 8 Mile (2002). He began to get calls to open up and work with comedians, such as Chris Tucker and Wayne Brady. After Brandon's performances at New York City's "Showtime at the Apollo" and BET's Comicview (1992), the 19-year-old actor/comedian was cast in his first major movie role as Shad Moss's (X) best friend, "Junior", in Roll Bounce (2005). He won Black Reel's 2006 Best Breakthrough Performance award for his performance. Jackson starred opposite NBA basketball superstar Kevin Durant in Thunderstruck (2012) and'Martin Lawrence (I)' in the third incarnation of the highly profitable Big Mommas: Like Father, Like Son (2011) franchise released by Fox in 2011. He played Lawrence's son and the two went undercover to solve a murder. Jackson is perhaps best known as Alpha Chino from the high- concept runaway hit Tropic Thunder (2008). Jackson received rave reviews for his role as the satyr Grover Underwood, the best friend and protector of Percy Jackson & the Olympians: The Lightning Thief (2010), opposite Logan Lerman and Alexandra Daddario. Brandon co-starred in both Hulu's original series Deadbeat(2014) and Showtimes's _Californication (2008) (V)_. He lives in Los Angeles.
Brandon Tabb (born on July 13, 1994) is an African American actor and screenwriter. Brandon is from Willingboro New Jersey and he lived there with his grandmother until he was 6 years old. During his childhood there, he watched a lot of movies and played outside with his friends. Growing up with his grandmother, she was very really big on watching movies. She had every movie you can possible think of and they watched movies all day everyday. He immediately fell deeply in love with story telling. His grandmother didn't have cable so they never watched television, in fact Brandon didn't watch television until he moved to Pennsauken New Jersey in the year 2000's which was the first time he discovered cable. When he moved to Pennsauken, he became a very shy kid because it was a different environment for him, away from all his friends back in Willingboro. It took him until freshman year in high school to break out of his shyness. Brandon has an identical twin and he is a father of two beautiful children. Brandon always wanted to play in the NFL but he always had a passion for acting. He played in a private junior college football program where he started running back but he never got a scholarship to go play at a division one program. He later played semi pro where he got scouted for a college football team who came to watch him play but that didn't work out as well. He decided to go play football at Rowan University but his transcripts kept getting screwed up during the transfer and the opportunity never happened. He got injured and gave up football and that's when his acting career began. Brandon took at a couple acting classes in Philadelphia but he was looking for a continuing acting school. He came across an acting school called Playhouse West Philadelphia. He began training professionally under Tony Savant learning the Meisner technique. Sanford Meisner taught Tony Savant and decided to make Tony a teacher at the school. Brandon landed his first lead role in a short film when he was just starting out in the school. From that day on, Brandon has been apart of many films from the school, helping out on set, and he didn't mind being an extra in a film to help his classmates out. He also wrote his first film called High School Games where he played the lead in. To this day, he still writes his own films, creating opportunities for himself. Brandon was so determined to be the best actor he can be that he rehearsed everyday after class and days where there were no class. His goal was to be the hardest working person in class and to never be out work by anyone. He became head of his class in less than a year of training. After Brandon finished his training at Playhouse West Philadelphia, he started getting cast in more films and getting recognized for his talent. Brandon Tabb is the actor everyone wish to work with and he's always looking to add more to his craft.
Brandon Tartikoff was a graduate of Yale University, and started his career out at WLS-TV in Chicago. He switched jobs to ABC in New York in the mid-1970s, and moved to NBC in 1977 where he became a programming executive hired by Dick Ebersol. Tartikoff took over programming duties from Fred Silverman in 1980. In 1982, Tartikoff had a second recurrence of Hodgkin's disease, which he was first diagnosed with and beat in the 1970s. Tartikoff was responsible for many programming hits during his years at the helm of NBC. In 1985, he finally got NBC back up to number one. He left NBC in 1991, and moved over to Paramount Pictures and became its chairman. Tartikoff left Paramount eighteen months later to help care for his daughter, injured in a 1991 car accident. He formed his own production company in 1995, and died of a third recurrance of Hodgkin's disease in 1997.