Current:Home > StocksBrian Jordan Alvarez dissects FX's subversive school comedy 'English Teacher' -Blueprint Money Mastery
Brian Jordan Alvarez dissects FX's subversive school comedy 'English Teacher'
View
Date:2025-04-12 23:27:52
PASADENA, Calif. − Brian Jordan Alvarez won viral fame on TikTok with face filters. Now he's unveiling a raucous new comedy series as a creator, writer and star, and hoping he won't get schooled.
Alvarez spent his 37th birthday in July promoting "English Teacher," his new FX comedy series (Mondays, 10 EDT/PDT, and streaming next day on Hulu) as Evan Marquez, a gay high school English teacher in Austin, Texas, who lands in hot water with his principal (Enrico Colantoni, "Veronica Mars") after an outraged parent spots him kissing his boyfriend in the school parking lot. In later episodes, we meet the meddlesome mom, learn from an especially perceptive gym teacher (Sean Patton), and watch Evan grapple with entitled students, faculty headaches and imagined illnesses like "asymptomatic Tourette's syndrome." Think a more subversive, edgier and foul-mouthed version of ABC's hit "Abbott Elementary."
The actor and comedian achieved early notoriety with a 2016 YouTube series, "The Gay and Wondrous Life of Caleb Gallo," with Stephanie Koenig, a writer on "Teacher" who plays history teacher Gwen Sanders. He has nearly 700,000 followers of those TikTok videos, played Estefan Gloria, the fiance (and eventually husband) of Sean Hayes' Jack, in 13 episodes of NBC's "Will & Grace" reboot, and played Cole, who helped create the creepy robot in campy 2022 horror film "M3gan." (He's filming a sequel in New Zealand.) He chats with USA TODAY about his latest project and how he learned to run his own show. (The interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.)
Question: The question posed by the tagline of the show is, “Can you really be your whole self at work?" Is it valid to describe it that way?
Brian Jordan Alvarez: It's a complicated answer, and the show rides that line, it thrives in that question, really.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
Was "English Teacher” informed by other classroom comedies that you've seen? People might say, “Oh, it's just like Abbott Elementary.”
That's a brilliant show. And (creator) Quinta (Brunson) is such a genius. No, this show just exists in its own universe. It's a very specific voice.
Which is...
Really, you know, this is a hard comedy. (Executive producer) Paul Simms was always great about making sure this is a comedy. We want people laughing from start to finish.
So, not like "The Bear," then.
(Laughs). There's a lot of amazing dramedy TV shows. There's just this feeling like, "Hey, let's really go joke, joke, joke here," and it's one of the things I love so much because still, the show affords itself a lot of heart.
How do you research the stuff you write about the students?
I'm very online. I spend a lot of time scrolling TikTok, scrolling Instagram, and I feel relatively up to date with where things are, the vibe of how people talk now. And what you see a lot on Twitter is how young people feel about old people, how older people feel about young people. People blaming this generation for this. The show really thrives in different people doing what they think is good, but they disagree with what’s good. And sometimes characters try to do something good but do something bad in the process.
You don't dwell on the kids much, but was it difficult to cast them?
We have so many funny kids; two of them came pretty much directly through TikTok. There's this guy Ben Bondurant, and he's the kid in the pilot (episode) who goes, “If they're gonna get you, they're gonna get you.” Somebody had tagged me in his video on TikTok being like, "This guy reminds me of you.” We started watching his videos. He's so funny. He'll just be in his car and texts me like, "Y'all changed my life around." And our set is very open to ideas, open to people improvising, and so they're telling us sometimes what's cool, or I would say "How would you say that really, or make that feel real for yourself?" We've cast maybe 70% to 80% of the kids like that.
How important is it that Evan is gay, and how does that inform the way you approach the show?
What I love about that is it allows us to write from this insider perspective, and we get to make jokes that really only make sense from that angle. So people can sense authenticity.
What did you learn from appearing in other TV shows like "Will & Grace" and "Jane the Virgin"?
Being on "Will and Grace" was a really amazing learning experience. On our show there is this real clarity about an energy that we're trying to get: people talking over each other and the fast pace. So just seeing (co-creator) Max Mutchnick, (director) Jim Burrows and the actors, too, like Sean Hayes, with such a clarity and confidence and really going for it, going all the way. And Max, when he would be very certain about what he wanted, it propelled me to be very clear about what I wanted when we were making this, and to speak freely.
And are you done with your face filters?
No, I'm just getting started. Four thousand of them, you got to do more.
veryGood! (61)
Related
- Paige Bueckers vs. Hannah Hidalgo highlights women's basketball games to watch
- Florence Pugh Is Hit in the Face by a Thrown Object at Dune: Part Two Event
- French foreign minister says she is open to South Pacific resettlement requests due to rising seas
- White House warns Congress the US is out of money, nearly out of time to avoid ‘kneecap’ to Ukraine
- From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
- College Football Playoff picked Alabama over Florida State for final spot. Why?
- How to strengthen your immune system for better health, fewer sick days this winter
- Watchdog: Western arms companies failed to ramp up production capacity in 2022 due to Ukraine war
- The Grammy nominee you need to hear: Esperanza Spalding
- Ryan Reynolds Didn't Fumble This Opportunity to Troll Blake Lively and Taylor Swift
Ranking
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- 'I did not write it to titillate a reader': Authors of books banned in Iowa speak out
- Ahead of 2024 elections, officials hope to recruit younger, more diverse poll workers
- Bowl projections: Texas, Alabama knock Florida State out of College Football Playoff
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Alabama star lineman Tyler Booker sends David Pollack a message after SEC Championship
- A toaster placed under a car to heat up the battery likely sparked a fire in Denmark, police say
- Paris stabbing attack which leaves 1 dead investigated as terrorism; suspect arrested
Recommendation
Senate begins final push to expand Social Security benefits for millions of people
Fire blamed on e-bike battery kills 1, injures 6 in Bronx apartment building
Why some investors avoid these 2 stocks
DeSantis reaches Iowa campaign milestone as Trump turns his focus to Biden
The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
Heavy snowfall hits Moscow as Russian media report disruption on roads and at airports
Harris dashed to Dubai to tackle climate change and war. Each carries high political risks at home
Spotify axes 17% of workforce in third round of layoffs this year