Nathan Kamal is a Deputy Editor at GIANT FREAKIN ROBOT. He writes and performs comedy in Chicago, and makes really good hummus.

How It Started

Nathan has had many different careers in his life but began professionally reviewing films, music, books, and live concerts for Spectrum Culture in 2008. Around the same time, he became a frequent contributor to Cracked.com and published short fiction at various sites and magazines.

Meanwhile, Nathan also pursued a career as one of the top sales associates at Umpqua Bank, one of the largest West Coast-based financial institutions in the United States. After that, he worked as a chef at various restaurants around the country, including as the Culinary Operations Manager at Steamboat Bay Fishing Club (an exclusive deep-sea fishing resort on a remote Alaskan Island) and a stint as Chef de partie at a Chicago-based Michelin-starred restaurant.

After relocating to Chicago, Nathan became a frequent contributor to popular satire websites The Onion, The Hard Times, McSweeney’s Internet Tendency, and Slackjaw.

Nathan joined GIANT FREAKIN ROBOT in 2021, first as a Contributing Writer, then rapidly being promoted to Staff Writer, Team Editor, and his current position as Deputy Editor.

How It’s Going

Now, Nathan focuses on expanding GIANT FREAKIN ROBOT’s coverage of entertainment news while writing fiction and comedy in his spare time. He lives with his beloved tuxedo cat Suits and explores the food scene of Chicago.

Nathan Kamal‘s Latest

eddie murphy
penn badgley you
tron 3
dumb and dumber 3
kevin costner westerns
rita ora
mark wahlberg dave bautista
andrew garfield frankenstein
dwayne johnson fast 11
Ben Stiller
john cleese fawlty towers
camila mendes
kevin costner yellowstone
jennifer love hewitt
zoe saldana
reese witherspoon hello sunshine
swamp thing
elizabeth hurley
ryan reynolds ben affleck deadpool 3 batman dc
anya taylor-joy
millie bobby brown
jim carrey grinch 2
brie larson gears of war
lando series
dexter
Will Smith Last of Us
james gunn dc superman
natasha lyonne
stephen king the boogeyman