Brian Berrebbi was born May 17, 1978 in Brooklyn, New York.
Brian is a writer and actor. He has written for The Andy Milonakis Show and is a frequent performer at The Upright Citizens Brigade Theatre. He has appeared in numerous commercials, including commercials for Nabisco/Triscuits, Spike TV, and Advance Internet. He is most recognizable for appearing in a commercial for T-Mobile entitled "Busted", but more commonly known as "the 'Secret Lovers' commercial", which began to air in October 2006, which were followed up by another series of three more commercials depicting the same character a year later.
Brian Berrebbi was born and raised in Canarsie, Brooklyn. He attended Edward R. Murrow High School. Other notable alum are Marissa Tomei, Jean-Michel Basquiat and Mike D of the Beastie Boys. Brian attended NYU for Drama and while there got involved with a sketch comedy group. Shortly thereafter he began to take classes at the Upright Citizens Brigade Theater. Since then he's been in over 30 unique sketch and improv shows at the UCB, including long running shows Real Real World, Anydayvukke, and Liquid Courage. He is a founding member offensively named improv groups Shit-Storm and UCB Harold Team Monkeydick. He is the creator of improv shows The Mosh, the 70s cop show parody "Loose Cannons" and the Star Trek homage "Spaceship Fantastica." TV credits include As The World Turns, Guiding Light, Jimmy Kimmel Live and several appearances on Late Night with Conan O'Brien. In November 2005 he had a leading role in A/V Club, a pilot from creators of "The 25th Annual Putnam County Spelling Bee." In November 2004 Brian co-wrote and starred in the nine month run of "Buy, Beg, Borrow or Steal: The Dark Side of the Moon Show", a sketch comedy show that synced up perfectly with Pink Floyd's classic album. The show was a TimeOut NY Critics Pick, Gothamist Crtics Pick, Flavorpill Pick and L Magazine Reccomended. In September, 2005 Brian co-wrote and starred in "Ross Meets the Wizard", also a TimeOut NY Critics Pick. In November 2005 Brian was hired as a writer for MTV's "The Andy Milonakis Show." However Brian's proudest achievement was having created the phrase "Cole Slawesome", which did not catch on at all.