who is moses storm

Moses Storm is an American comedian , actor, writer, and director best known for his HBO Max stand-up special “Trash White” and his role in the horror film “Unfriended.”
Quick bio
- Full name: Moses Jacob Storm, born May 6, 1990, in Kalamazoo, Michigan, USA.
- Works across stand-up, TV, film, and performance art, often mixing dark personal history with sharp, self-aware humor.
- Frequently associated with Conan O’Brien, who produced his special and has featured him repeatedly as a guest and performer.
Early life and background
- Grew up one of five children, raised largely on a converted Greyhound bus while his family traveled the U.S. as part of a small religious sect run by his uncle.
- Spent most of his youth on the road with missionary-style preaching and homeschooling, an experience he later mines for storytelling-heavy comedy.
- Briefly attended community college for video production before dropping out and moving to Los Angeles to pursue performing full time.
Comedy career
- Regular at Upright Citizens Brigade (UCB) Theatre, where he developed as a stand-up and host of the live show “Trifecta.”
- His HBO Max hour “Trash White” (2022) blends poverty, cult-like religion, and class issues into a stylized, highly visual stand-up show produced by Team Coco.
- Known for interactive, high-concept live shows that involve audience participation and immersive or performative elements, rather than traditional straight stand-up.
Acting and on-screen work
- Broke out to wider audiences as Mitch Roussel in the 2014 desktop-horror film “Unfriended.”
- Has appeared in TV series including “This Is Us,” “Sunnyside,” “Players,” “Arrested Development,” and multiple sketches and segments on “Conan.”
- Starred in the Universal feature “Half Baked: Totally High” (often referred to as “Half Baked 2”), playing the lead character Miles.
Performance art and other projects
- Created “The Modern Millennial,” an immersive performance piece where audiences watched him live and work in a loft, crowdfunded via Kickstarter.
- Won a Moth GrandSLAM with his storytelling piece “It Pays to Be Poor,” highlighting his knack for turning personal hardship into narrative-driven comedy.
- Continues to tour clubs and theaters, developing new audience-participation shows that explore themes of cults, belief, and community, building off his unconventional upbringing.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.