

It garnered a following among the local college community, and by the time he was 18, Moore was offered a deal by Pax-TV (now Ion Television). Career 1990s įrom 1997 to 1998, his show The Trevor Moore Show ran on public-access television in Charlottesville, Virginia. Moore, like his future Whitest Kids U' Know companions Sam Brown and Zach Cregger, studied at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan, where he majored in film with a BFA and graduated cum laude. Moore started out as a broadcasting major at Virginia Commonwealth University, and while he originally wanted to study journalism and political science, he chose film in the end. Moore attended high school at the Covenant School in Charlottesville, and by the time he was 18 he graduated while also developing personal projects. At 16, Moore created the comic strip Cuddy for the now-defunct newspaper The Charlottesville Observer in Charlottesville, Virginia. By the age of 15, he became a published cartoonist after compiling his early work in a book called Scraps.

Because he traveled a lot on tour with his family, he changed schools constantly, going to about five different schools. His parents are former Christian folk-rock singers Mickey and Becki Moore who were successful in the 1980s, their single "Love Song for Number Two" having reached No.
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He was known for being one of the founding members-alongside Sam Brown and Zach Cregger-of the New York City-based comedy troupe the Whitest Kids U' Know (WKUK), who had their own sketch comedy series on IFC that ran for five seasons. Trevor Paul Moore (Ap– August 7, 2021) was an American comedian, actor, writer, director, and producer.
