Jack Marx

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Jackson Gregory Marx (born 1965), known as Jack Marx, is an Australian journalist and author. He was born in Maitland, New South Wales.

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[edit] Career

Marx received no tertiary education, moving to Sydney in his late teens to pursue a career in music with rock band, I Spartacus. By Marx's own account, the band were less than successful, Marx becoming "the type of shocking wanker that today I can't stomach...a guy who thought his destiny was to thrill the world on the rock and roll stage".[1] When I Spartacus disbanded in 1990—the dissolution due, in part, to Marx's own "spiral into drug and alcohol dependence"—he began writing reviews and articles for the free Sydney music press and was soon employed by the Sydney Morning Herald and the Australian edition of Rolling Stone as a freelance music correspondent. He become notable for reviewing albums while openly admitting he had not listened to them, choosing instead to search the packaging and liner notes for "the tell-tale signs that you're in for an hour of crap".[2]

In 1994, Marx worked as a reporter for the Melbourne tabloid newspaper The Truth, before being employed by Australian Consolidated Press as a senior writer for men's titles such as The Picture and Ralph. In 1999, he became editor of Australian Style, causing controversy when he assigned accused anti-Semite author Helen Darville to interview British Holocaust denier David Irving.

Marx is currently author of the Fairfax news blog, The Daily Truth.

[edit] The Stevie Wright biography

It was during his time as a music journalist that Marx went in search of his childhood rock and roll idol, Stevie Wright, of legendary Australian 60s band, The Easybeats. He found Wright living as a drug-addicted recluse in a small coastal town in southern New South Wales and Wright's life story, along with Marx's near-disastrous attempts to extract it from him, was documented in Sorry: The Wretched Tale of Little Stevie Wright (1999). The book was critically applauded, Australian music historian Clinton Walker calling it "gonzo journalism at its best"[3], while The Bulletin later referred to Sorry as "one of the most harrowing rock books ever written".[4] Nevertheless, Sorry earned the disdain of its subject and his many fans by focusing on the somewhat shady latter day activities of the singer.[verification needed]

[edit] Russell Crowe's "stooge"

In 2005, Marx was approached by Oscar-winning actor Russell Crowe, who sought to employ Marx as a "guerilla publicist". Their six-month relationship ended badly and, in June, 2006, Marx published an online account of the experience entitled "I Was Russell Crowe's Stooge". Though the ethically ambiguous piece instantly outraged many fans and media commentators, it made Australian media history by becoming the first story to leap from the digital arena to print, serialised over two days in both Fairfax broadsheets, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, and subsequently won Marx Australia's premier prize for journalism, the Walkley Award, for newspaper feature writing.[5]

[edit] References

  1. ^ "The Stars Who Never Were", The Age, retrieved January 6, 2007.
  2. ^ Interview on ABC Radio National, "The Conversation Hour", June 27, 2006, retrieved January 6, 2007.
  3. ^ "It's Pretty Ugly In This Head", The Sydney Morning Herald, July 24, 1999.
  4. ^ "Stevie Wright's Wrong Way", The Bulletin, April 14, 2004.
  5. ^ The Walkley Foundation. 2006 Walkley Award winners, retrieved December 5, 2006.

[edit] External links