

Considered too dark to achieve mainstream popularity and with the same time slot as the immensely popular Lost, many commentators initially pegged Criminal Minds as a losing enterprise. degrees despite being only in his mid-20s - on the Criminal Minds. Spencer Reid - a genius FBI agent who holds three Ph.D. As a reward for his hard work, Anderson cast Gubler as Intern #1 in his 2004 film The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou, starring Bill Murray and Owen Wilson.Īlmost immediately after, Gubler landed the role of Dr. In 2004, while continuing to work as a model, he took an internship with screenwriter and director Anderson. In spite of his highly successful modeling career, Gubler never gave up on making films. "I thought it would help me become a lawyer or something, help me speak in public. "My friends and I joked that our major at the academy was Acting Not As an Occupation 101," he remembered.

However, he says that he had no intention of becoming an actor - he merely thought that theater class was fun and that acting might help him develop public speaking skills that would be useful in another career. Gubler attended the Las Vegas Academy of International Studies, Performing and Visual Arts and majored in drama. His father, John Gubler, is an attorney, and his mother, Marilyn Kelch Gubler, is a rancher, political consultant, and former chair of the Nevada Republican Party. Gubler was born on March 9, 1980, in Las Vegas, Nevada. Gubler also appeared in (500 Days) of Summer. After an internship with director Wes Anderson, Gubler was cast as a genius FBI agent on the hit show Criminal Minds. Matthew Gray Gubler was discovered by a modeling agent and soon became a top male model for high-end fashion designers. Kids who enjoy some satisfying weirdness with an I-love-me sensibility will find a pal in Rumple.Matthew Gray Gubler is best known for his portrayal of an FBI agent on the hit show 'Criminal Minds.' Who Is Matthew Gray Gubler? With a lizard-like figure, skinny arms, a popping eye, and buck teeth, Rumple is indeed odd looking but charmingly so cream-colored pages provide background and lightly dappled hues lend the scenes a quiet gentleness, the wobbly linework and exaggerated figures provide the silliness, and the handwritten text and airy design bring a touch of sophistication. Sure, the message about being yourself is unsubtle, but the narration itself avoids preachiness, and there’s plenty of goofy, endearing humor. As his favorite occasion, the Pajama Jam Cotton Candy Pancake Parade, approaches, Rumple hopes to attend by using a banana peel from the trash as a disguise, but when there’s none to be found, he’s disheartened-until voices call down to him and invite him to join the parade, whereupon he discovers he’s not nearly as weird as he thinks. It’s a lonely existence, and “Candy Corn Carl,” a collection of old candy Rumple shaped into a vaguely human figure, provides only so much company. Because of his five crooked teeth, three strands of hair, green skin, and mismatched feet, Rumple Buttercup fears the public will respond to his appearance with scorn, so he’s spent his life living in a rain drain next to a garbage can, watching the comings and goings of the people in his town.
