| |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| |
|
>Bad Mets > Famous Mets Fans: Writer
|
|
|
||||||||||
| > | Bloom, Steve | |
|
||
Heavenly smooth
like the cut of Pete Flynn's grass, Bloom's editorial skills turn
his peers green with envy. Bloom recently resigned as the Senior
Editor for High Times magazine,
but, is still the manager of the High Times softball team The Bonghitters,
unarguably the greatest softball team in New York City history.
As quoted in The
New Yorker, Bloom shares some of his coaching secrets:
Bloom's also down with CausticTruths.com
|
| > | David, Peter | |
|
||
I bet there's not a single
dead or living Yankee fan who has written metafiction in comics. I
bet you. Peter does. David's written for Marvel, (supposed enemy of Joey Q), penned a bunch of
Star Trek literature, and created Star Trek: New Frontier,
a spin-off from Star Trek: The Next Generation.
|
| > | Hanks, Stephen | ||
![]() |
|||
This year the Bronx-born, life-long Mets fan is celebrating his 30th year in magazine publishing, having served as an publisher, editor, writer and magazine doctor for various and sundry publications . . . In 1983, with his wife Beatrice, Hanks launched New York Sports Magazine, which boasted the bylines of Bad Mets "Famous Mets Fans" Steve Bloom and Roy Trakin . . . The premiere issue, which had Tom Seaver on the cover, featured a profile of then Mets' relief pitching star Neil Allen, who blasted the team and his teammates in the piece. The controversial quotes were picked up by all the New York papers and was one of the contributing (but unknown until now) factors in why Allen was traded to St. Louis for Keith Hernandez. The Mets were so pissed about the piece, Hanks was banned from Shea Stadium for a year! The magazine lasted six more issues and Darryl Strawberry and Dwight Gooden were on two of the covers . . .   Hanks' boyhood idol was Tom Seaver and he still has his scorecard from the April 1970 game during which Seaver struck out 19 San Diego Padres and the last 10 in a row. He didn't cut school that day, it was Passover vacation! . . . Hanks was also present when Seaver won his 300th game at Yankee Stadium as a member of the Chisox . . . Hanks started his magazine journalism career at Sport Magazine a few months after the famous issue in which Reggie Jackson claimed he was "the straw that stirred the drink." . . .In 1980, at the tender age of 24, Hanks became the Editor in Chief of the National Hockey League's GOAL Magazine . . . After New York Sports folded in 1985, Hanks wrote sports for the Village Voice (one of his Voice pieces was published the week Tom Seaver's number was retired and made the case for Seaver being the greatest righthanded pitcher of all time--screw you Roger Clemens) served as an editor for a number of sports and children's magazines, wrote unauthorized bios of Wayne Gretzky and Bo Jackson and wrote The Game That Changed Pro Football, the oral history of the New York Jets 1968 Super Bowl Champions . . . In 1999, Hanks created the children's archaeology magazine DIG, for the Archaeological Institute of America and the magazine was named one of the top launches of the year by the Educational Press Association, Temple University and Sumir Husni's Guide to New Magazines . . . From 2004-2006, Hanks was the Publisher and Editor of the health and nutrition magazine Energy Times and is currently serving as the Publisher and Creative Director of Rugby Magazine . . . A four-year baseball player at Lehman College in the Bronx, Hanks still plays baseball in over-40 baseball leagues in New Jersey and in tournaments held in Cooperstown, NY and Florida (see photo) . . . A multi-tasker, Hanks plays a lot of different positions, although not at the same time . . . Hanks is a member of the International Al Jolson Society and is the Creator and Producer of the Broadway Musical Fantasy Camp, a performance workshop for amateurs that produces staged readings of classic Broadway shows for friends and family of the cast . . . He currently lives in Park Slope, Brooklyn with Bea and daughter Jeannie and almost never misses a Mets game . . . Hanks thinks Johan Santana is manna from heaven!
| |||
| > | Kaplan, George | |
|
||
A blacklisted writer, Geroge Kaplan, aka "Big Daddy", enjoys bar-b-ques and baseball.
|
| > | Quesda, Joe | |
|
||
Joey Q is the editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics! He's the bloody father of Ninjak and X-O Manowar! Born and raised in Jackson Heights, Joey Q has reached mythical realms-- drawing, scripting, living with the likes of the Hulk, Spiderman, Wolverine, Batman, Daredevil, and Danger Girl.
|
| > | Trakin, Roy | ||
|
|||
Roy Trakin is a pop culture critic, pop and rock music aficionado, published author and online talk show host, not to mention diehard Mets/Knicks/Jets fan. Since 1992, this Brooklyn-born, L.I.-raised Jewish American prince has been exiled in the depths of the San Fernando Valley (north of the Boulevard, natch), paying off the SBA loan on the earthquake-damaged, still-hasn't-recovered-its-full-value house he shares with his indispensable wife of 21 years, Jill Merrill, and two auteurist theory offspring, Taylor, 15, and Tara, 13.
| He graduated from Colgate with a degree in philosophy following a senior thesis titled, "Showing the Fly The Way Out of the Fly Bottle," a comparison of Wittgensteinian language theory with the dialogic method of Freud, which brought together two sponsoring professors who hadn't spoken to one another in 10 years. He then received an MFA in Film from Columbia, where he studied under legendary film critic Andrew Sarris and made a now long-lost student feature, "Mystery Girls" (based on the New York Dolls song of the same name and starring a blow-up doll), which was praised by Hitchcock biographer Raymond Durgnat as "looking like a dog had directed it." Trakin was also briefly the lead singer in the New York-based punk-rock group The Geeks, who played at CBGBs, broke up shortly after the Sex Pistols and have influenced everyone from the Plasmatics to the Beastie Boys and Marilyn Manson. During the influential mid-to-late ‘70s in New York, he served faithfully as Minister of Information for Marty Thau’s historic Red Star Records, where he took it to the street, doing guerilla marketing and publicity for the likes of Suicide, the Fleshtones, Real Kids and others. Trakin also served as chief copywriter for the MTV Corporate Relations Dept., Director of Public Relations for the Recording Industry Association of America and Head of Promotion for AEI Music, a leading foreground music programmer now owned by Liberty Media. Since 1986, Trakin has been a Senior Editor of HITS magazine, the music industry's influential trade magazine/tip sheet/money-laundering operation. Trakin has contributed to every rock magazine that ever mattered, but no longer exist, including Musician, BAM, Creem, Details, New York Rocker, Soho Weekly News, and several distinguished dailies such as the L.A. Times, L.A. Herald Examiner, Newsday, N.Y. Daily News and USA. Today. Other publications for which he’s written—both online and traditional hard copy—include the Village Voice, Grammy magazine, React, PopSmear, Addicted to Noise and Stuff. He is a voting member of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and the MTV Video Music Awards, part of the rocksbackpages.com music critics website as well as one of the writers asked to vote on Rolling Stone’s 50 Greatest Albums of All Time. He has previously written the biographies Sting and the Police (Ballantine Books '84), Tom Hanks: Journey to Stardom (St. Martin's Press '95) and Jim Carrey Unmasked (St. Martin's Press '95). He also served as an editorial assistant on John Lennon Remembered: Strawberry Fields Forever (Bantam Books '80) with Vic Garbarini and Barbara Graustark. He penned Malcolm McLaren’s famed speech at the New Music Seminar in 1984, and has written speeches for the likes of Virgin’s Richard Branson. Trakin also hosted the world's first online interactive pop music chat show/pickup area, "Rant & Roll," for Prodigy and America Online's L.A. Digital City (which USA Today called "one of the new wave of online talk shows.”) For almost two years, he co-hosted the KLSX-FM L.A. music radio talk show, "C Notes" with E! Entertainment's David Adelson, where his guests have included everyone from Brian Wilson to Limp Bizkit, Randy Newman to Orgy, Mike Stoller and Earl Palmer to Alice Cooper and Al Martino. In his spare time, he adopts the identity of Meshugge Knight to manage L.A. Magazine's “best Jewish rap duo,” M.O.T. (Members of the Tribe), featuring MCs/tummlers extraordinaire Ice Berg and Dr. Dreidle, whose critically acclaimed Sire/Warner Bros. album, "19.99," can be ordered from Amazon.com. They (and he) are available for weddings and bar mitzvahs. He has also been quoted extensively as a music and entertainment business expert on CNN, A&E, VH1 and MTV. He also was an on-air music correspondent for E! Entertainment and covered West Coast news stories as a segment producer for MTV. As HITS Sr. Editor, he is currently responsible for putting together the Web site http://www.hitsdailydouble.com, cited as one of the most popular and influential music sites on the web and recently broke the exclusive jailhouse interview with imprisoned rap entrepreneur Suge Knight. He is equally adept at personality stories, new stories, trend stories, behind-the-scenes stories, opinion pieces, concept pieces, think pieces and just plain filler, quick with a quip, and capable of representing Star magazine in various form of media, including television, radio and online.
|
||
| > | Wayne, Michael | ||
|
|||
Michael Wayne is the author of The Knuckleball From Hell. Before writing this highly irreverent novel-which one reviewer has said "if Tom Robbins and Kurt Vonnegut teamed up to write a baseball novel, this would be it"-he was the author of a serious nonfiction book about the field of medicine. He decided to write a comedy about a fictional Mets team because he looked at how many books and novels were written about the Yankees, and he realized he had to do his share to help even things out and end the Evil Empire's grip on the minds and souls of humble baseball fans.  
| He is a Brooklyn, NY native and has been a Mets fans for as long as he can remember. His earliest childhood memory is at age three months, sitting on his grandpappy's knee while chewing tobacco and talking about the New York Mets. He considers the Marx Brothers to be the biggest influence in his life, which demonstrates his level of arrested development. In his spare time, when he is not obsessing over the Mets and baseball, Michael Wayne speaks in tongues to pigeons, races centipedes, and studies the mating habits of rocks. The book's website is is here. You can go on the site and play the weekly trivia game, along with reading a sample chapter. You can see the YouTube video
|
||
| > | Wodehouse, P.G. | |
|
||
Sir P.J. Wodehouse-- a Knight-- was
a prolific humorist, writing tons of novels, short stories, plays,
lyrics, and essays. And then he grew old. Moved to Long Island and
started to die.
|
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||