It seems obvious, yet few know how to practice it: no content achieves impact if it doesn’t manage to connect. Knowing how to tell a story is essential—so what we say becomes meaningful, relevant, and powerful enough to turn into a narrative on its own. Julio has spent nearly three decades traveling, studying, and mastering storytelling.
He has developed political narrative strategies for Nobel Peace Prize nominee and Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado. He directed Fiction Development departments at HBO, NBC Telemundo, Sony Pictures Television (where he managed the creation of a catalog of 60 fiction and non-fiction titles), and TelevisaUnivision. He won an Emmy Award for the documentary Jhonny Ventura: Legend and Future. Julio is also a specialist in literary feature writing and has led multiple creative writing teams.
Among his published books (poetry, essays, fiction, multigenre works) is Felices bastardos, a personal yet thoroughly researched and creative testimony that has become one of the most resonant portraits of the always controversial city of Miami.
As a creative director in television, he has conceptualized campaigns and brands in Venezuela (RCTV, Televen) and the United States (Venevision Continental, NBC Telemundo). Julio applies storytelling to political discourse, corporate positioning, personal branding, and creative campaign development for commercial clients and NGOs.
He worked directly on the series Los caballeros las prefieren brutas, Señor Ávila, Luis Miguel, and Falco.
Julio holds a degree in Mass Communication from Universidad Central de Venezuela (UCV) and a Master’s degree in Film and TV Production from the University of Bristol, England.