Salvador Santos
Salvador Eduardo Munoz de Gomez Santos was born in 1947 in the small town of Tupiza in Bolivia, the town that the infamous train robber Butch Cassidy was shot down by the Bollivian calvary. Raised on a chicken farm, Salvador spent his summers giving llama tours to American tourists through the mighty mountains of the Cordillera Occidental in the Andes peaks, and also to the famous house where the execution of Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid took place. It was during these tours that Salvador met the famous American actor Robert Redford, who was planning to make a movie about the events that took place there. Salvador was cast in a small role on the movie, from which his taste for Hollywood and American culture became an obsession. Eventually, Salvador relocated to Utah where he worked on Robert Redford's Sundance Ranch and continued acting in small roles on such films as Rubin & Ed, Napolean Dynamite, and in various films for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, mostly cast as a Nephite warrior. Most recently, Salvador was seen in the movie Nacho Libre. It wasn't until Salvador accidentally came across a Big Black record that was misfiled under the "world music" section at a used record store in Provo that he became aware of, then enamoured with, the world of independent rock. In 1992, when Nirvana topped the Billboard pop charts, Salvador decided to call Seattle his new home. Currently, Salvador lives in White Center and spends most of his day at the public library where he writes reviews for Three Imaginary Girls and hunts for day-labor jobs on Craigslist. Please contact him if you need a good painter or chicken farmer.