Brito was born in Florida. She attended junior high school in Scotland and Hong Kong and high school in Kentucky. She is of Cuban and Icelandic descent and spoke only Spanish before kindergarten.[1] After high school, Brito moved to St. Louis to pursue a business degree at the Washington University in St. Louis.[2] Once she graduated from college, she remained in St. Louis and launched her career in comedy. Though she was politically active in college with the student and labor rightsmovement, her comedy was not explicitly political at first.[3] Eventually, she moved to Oakland specifically for the city's comedy scene and reputation for fostering progressive comics. It was in Oakland that she honed her focus on identity politics and decided to take more risks in her act, such as adopting her signature androgynous style.[2]
Shortly after moving to the Bay Area around 2008, Brito met comic W. Kamau Bell. Bell became a mentor to Brito, taking her under his wing as his "comedy daughter".[4] In 2010, she joined Bell and fellow comic Nato Green in Laughter Against the Machine, a political comedy tour that was subsequently made into a documentary set to premiere in 2014.[5] In 2012, Bell invited Brito to join the writing staff of his new FX series Totally Biased with W. Kamau Bell. In addition to writing on the series, Brito frequently appeared on air in pieces covering topics like Miss Fire Island, LGBTQ athletes, and the "war on women".
Her colleague and longtime friend W. Kamau Bell describes Brito as "a sarcastic, snarky smart bomb of comedy funk straight from the 80s".[7] Brito is often placed within the alternative comedy scene and tends to focus on issues of gender, race, and sexuality. She often derives humor from her half-Cuban background and her childhood fixation on worrying about being the Antichrist. She is also known for her sartorial choices and frequent donning of neckties. An article written by feminist website Feministing, says her comedy is "a punch in the face of convention and offers a refreshing departure from the straight, white, male narrative that usually relies on tired tropes and stereotypes."[3]
Reception
Brito won the SF Women's Comedy Competition in 2009 and the Silver Nail Award from local SF bcasting network Rooftop Comedy. She was also praised by 7×7 magazine as "one of SF's more daring voices" and as one of "the 7 funniest people in town". She was named the 2011 "Best Comedian with a Messag" by the East Bay Express.[2] At the start of the 2013 season, The A.V. Club wrote in one review of Totally Biased, "Also: more Janine Brito, please. Totally Biased needs so much more of her".[9]