PRESS KIT

Bio

Rosalynne Jamie Delfina Montoya, better known as Rose is a Latina, bisexual, nonbinary transgender woman. Rose’s pronouns are she/her/hers and they/them/their/theirs. She works as a professional educator, public speaker, content creator, model, and actor. Rose graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in Film with a Minor in Women and Gender Studies from Seattle University when she was 19. She tirelessly uses her platform to advocate for the transgender community, body acceptance, and mental wellness. She educates people online every day by answering people’s questions, clearing up misconceptions, sharing action items to fight injustice and anti-trans laws, and sharing her story. Rose is the creator of the viral series Trans 101 and the educational resource website of the same name. Rose offers a unique intersectional lens across trans, queer, and Latine inclusion in workspaces, healthcare, and education. From Capital Hill to Fortune 500 companies, to prestigious universities, Rose has led many safe, open discussions on intersectional identity, diversity, equity, self-love, transitioning, leaning into gender euphoria, being an ally, relationships, boundaries, sex education, and being a survivor of domestic violence and sexual assault. Her work has been featured in TIME Magazine, Washington Post, CNN, LATV Network, Revry TV, Time Square, and more. OUT Magazine honored her as one of 18 educators to be featured in their 2021 OUT 100 issue, was nominated by Queerty for favorite TikToker of the Year in 2022, and nominated by The Los Angeles Blade as Favorite Influencer in their Best of LA 2024. Her goal is to spread love and education about her community as she shares her story.


Pronunciations

Rosalynne: ROSE-uh-lin
Montoya: Moan-toy-ah


Language Matters

  • Rose’s real name (and legal name) is Rosalynne Montoya. She is most commonly referred to as Rose. Feel free to refer to her as Rosalynne, Rose, Rosa, or Rosie.

  • Rose does not identify as bi/nonbinary/trans, she is bi/nonbinary/trans.

  • Rose does not prefer she/her and they/them pronouns. Her pronouns are she/her and they/them. Their pronouns are mandatory, not preferred.

  • When referring to Rose’s past—even before transitioning—please use the name Rose/Rosalynne and she/her and/or they/them pronouns.

  • For more understanding of terms, definitions, and how to be an ally visit Rose’s Trans 101 Resource Website.


Images

Photo By Liam Woods

Photo By Kane Candrade

Photo by Davide Laffe

Photo by Crystal Maldonado

Photo by Crystal Maldonado


*All text, documents, images, and media on this site are copyrighted to Rose Montoya LLC and are intended to be used in accordance with the terms of your agreement with Rose.