Gaby Dunn
Gaby Dunn | |
---|---|
Dunn appearing in a 2016 Vlogbrothers video | |
Born |
Gabrielle Teresa Dunn June 1, 1988 Florida, U.S. |
Other names | Gaby |
Occupation | Comedian, Journalist, Blogger |
Years active | 2010–present |
Gaby Dunn (born June 1, 1988) is an American actor, comedian, scriptwriter, activist, journalist, blogger and YouTuber who lives in Los Angeles. She was a part-time writer/director for BuzzFeed Video, but has since left to focus on her weekly YouTube comedy show called Just Between Us with fellow comedian and best friend, Allison Raskin.[1]
Her writing has appeared in The New York Times, The Boston Globe, Playboy, Vice, The Huffington Post, Cosmopolitan, Salon, and Slate. She currently hosts the acclaimed Bad with Money podcast.[2][3] She also leads the Peoples Improv Theater house team BIRDS, and is a producer of the independent community radio station WFMU. Her web project, 100interviews.com, was named "Best Blog" by The Village Voice in 2010.[4]
Early life and education
Dunn was born on June 1, 1988. She attended Emerson College, where she majored in Multimedia Journalism, graduating in 2009.[5]
Dunn began performing during her freshman year at Emerson, with the sketch comedy troupe Chocolate Cake City (CCC). Dunn had wanted to audition for CCC, but was too scared to do so until she was urged to take the audition slot of a former boyfriend who had become sick the day before and could not perform. Her audition was successful and she became a member of the troupe. At the time she considered herself a better writer than actor, and working in CCC allowed her to do both, since members were expected to write and perform their own sketches.[5]
During her sophomore year, Dunn began a two-year stint as a crime reporter for The Boston Globe. She worked the 6:30pm – 2:30am shift, using a police scanner to monitor potential news items, and then driving to the scene of the crime to write about it. After her junior year, Dunn worked as an intern at The Daily Show with Jon Stewart.[6]
Career
100 Interviews
In October 2010, Dunn created 100interviews.com, a Tumblr blog in which she intended to publish transcripts of 100 interviews, given over the course of a single year, with a variety of different people. Interview subjects included a transgender person, a rocket scientist, an Abraham Lincoln expert, and Stephen Colbert.[7] Her initial inspiration for the project stemmed from her own personal desire to meet different people and hear their stories. However, Dunn also wanted to offer readers the opportunity to "vicariously meet people" whose lives were different from their own. "That's something I don't think journalism does anymore." Dunn explained in an interview with Yeshiva University's The Commentator, "If you're liberal, you'll watch certain news channels and if you're conservative you'll watch different channels. Journalism used to present one truth that each side could interpret. Now it panders to one side or the other."[6]
Because 100 Interviews was an independent project, Dunn sometimes solicited interviews with her candidates in non-traditional unexpected ways. Children's horror author R. L. Stine agreed to sit for an interview after Dunn "cold-tweeted" him on Twitter.[8] After trying and failing to interview Colbert by crashing a $2,000 a plate dinner gala,[9] Dunn settled for asking him questions during a pre-show Q&A for The Colbert Report.[10] She also used Help a Reporter Out, an online service that connects journalists with expert sources.
Dunn's attempts to gain wider exposure for what she called her "diary journalism"[11] initially met with rejection.[12] Dunn has been recognized as a success case of the use of social media for self-promotion,[8] particularly Twitter and Tumblr, the micro-blogging service and web application platform through which she initially self-published her interviews.[13] The success of 100 Interviews caused Dunn's work to be noticed by the Village Voice and New York Times culture editor Adam Sternbergh.[14]
Just Between Us
In 2014, Dunn created a YouTube channel with her best friend Allison Raskin called Just Between Us (JBU). The two play characters based on themselves, which they describe as an odd couple. Dunn plays a sex-positive, bisexual, feminist in contrast to Raskin's uptight, straight, single character. They began with giving love advice, and then added sketches. The advice show sometimes features guest stars, which in the past have included family members and close friends. They temporarily had a series replacing their advice show called "Is This What You Want?" where they tried different types of videos from various areas of YouTube. Just Between Us now has more than 750,000 subscribers.
Bad with Money with Gaby Dunn
In August 2016, Gaby Dunn began a podcast with the intent of exposing and analyzing money problems that most people face yet no one talks about. The podcast was called Bad with Money with Gaby Dunn and is part of the Panoply podcast network.[15] On her podcast she discusses her financial experiences in regards to her debt,[16] career, and also systematic financial systems in place that make earning money difficult. Her guests have ranged from financial psychologist Dr. Brad Klontz[16] to feminist scholar and writer Roxane Gay.[17]
This podcast stems from a long conversation Dunn has had around money and the internet. After an article she wrote for Fusion went viral in December 2015, Dunn became one of the leading spokespeople for the intersection of being famous online and making a living.[18] Many YouTubers, while "internet famous", cannot profit off of their celebrity for fear of being seen as disingenuous, as Dunn describes in the documentary Vlogumentary (2016), in which she shows one of the jobs as a courier and also the fans she runs into as she's working.[19] During the early weeks of Bad with Money, Dunn also hosted the Finale Rally podcast, which is no longer active.[20]
I Hate Everyone But You
Dunn's debut novel, written with Allison Raskin, will publish in September 2017.
Activism
Dunn often speaks out on and in support of queer visibility and queer youth online. In one of her YouTube videos, "#WHYiVLOG? Bisexual Visibility Matters!", she discusses bisexual visibility online and why this empowers her to keep creating content. She states in response to why she creates videos that it's important to her, "...to show queer youth and queer teens that you can grow up and be successful and be happy and not just the character that I am on JBU which is essentially me. But me in real life, to be an example of somebody who is out, who is happy, who had friends, and relationships, and careers. It was really important for me for kids to go online and see that."[21] She continues to create content on JBU and her personal YouTube channel that openly talks about her sexuality and queer visibility.
Dunn has also used her platform to showcase the exploitation and manipulation of power male celebrities use against young and/or non-famous women. Here she used her position of power as an online celebrity to call out male celebrities who do this and also to amplify the voices of young women who have experienced these advances. Calling out actors and musicians who have reportedly solicited sexual acts from or taken advantage of young women.[22]
Personal life
Dunn is openly queer, bisexual, and polyamorous.[23] She used to date Samm Levine.[24]
References
- ↑ Allison Raskin
- ↑
- ↑
- ↑ "Village Voice Web Awards: The Winners!". Village Voice. Retrieved 2015-12-16.
- 1 2 Goodman, Elyssa (December 4, 2009). "Gaby Dunn and the Pursuit of Comedy: Featured Female Start-Up". Her Campus. Retrieved October 21, 2012.
- 1 2 Botwinick, Simeon (April 1, 2011). "From the Top 5 Cutest Maccabeats to 100 Interviews in 1 Year: 15 Questions with Gaby Dunn". The Commentator. Yeshiva University. Archived from the original on January 19, 2013. Retrieved October 21, 2012.
- ↑ Dunn, Gabby (September 20, 2010). "The Finished List". 100 Interviews. 100interviews.com. Retrieved October 21, 2012.
- 1 2 Weinmann, Karlee (April 12, 2011). "How Gaby Dunn Self-Promoted Her Way To Internet Fame". Open Forum. openforum.com. Retrieved November 5, 2012.
- ↑ Dunn, Gaby (April 12, 2011). "I crashed a $2,000/plate gala to find Stephen Colbert". Open Salon. salon.com. Archived from the original on July 27, 2013. Retrieved November 5, 2012.
- ↑ Tenore, Mallary Jean (August 30, 2011). "’100 Interviews’ project puts new twist on old adage: Everybody has a story". Poynter. poynter.org. Retrieved November 5, 2012.
- ↑ Gordon, Kyana (November 12, 2010). "100 INTERVIEWS: GABY DUNN AND THE ART OF FACE-TO-FACE MEETING". PSFK. PSFK. Retrieved November 5, 2012.
- ↑ Binder, Shaun (October 5, 2012). "No Fun, Gaby Dunn! An Interview with a Thought Catalog Editor". Uloop: Huffington Post College. Huffington Post. Retrieved November 5, 2012.
- ↑ Orsini, Lauren Rae (October 4, 2011). "100 Interviews Get People Talking". The Daily Dot. The Daily Dot, LLC. Retrieved November 5, 2012.
- ↑ Stoeffel, Kat (February 2, 2012). "New York Times Magazine Hires Thought Catalog Writer". The New York Observer. Retrieved November 5, 2012.
- ↑ "Panoply Media: A Podcast Network from Slate Magazine". www.panoply.fm. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
- 1 2 "Gaby Gets Her Head Examined (aka Plan Bay) from Bad With Money With Gaby Dunn". www.stitcher.com. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
- ↑ "Tokens For Your Tokens from Bad With Money With Gaby Dunn". www.stitcher.com. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
- ↑ "You Can Have Millions Of Subscribers On YouTube—And Still Be Flat Broke". Fusion. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
- ↑ SHAYTARDS (2016-10-26), VLOGUMENTARY, retrieved 2016-12-02
- ↑ "Finale Rally", Soundcloud, retrieved 2017-06-09
- ↑ Gaby Dunn (2016-10-28), #WHYiVLOG? Bisexual Visibility Matters!, retrieved 2016-12-02
- ↑ "Don't Fall For This Famous Guy's Flattery (with images, tweets) · amandataylor88". Storify. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
- ↑ Dunn, Gaby (2016-01-07). "Polyamorous, Pansexual, and Proud: Why I'm 'So Out and Outspoken'". Women's Health. Retrieved 2016-12-02.
- ↑ Just Between Us (2015-10-12), Which Ex Do You Hate The Most? I Just Between Us, retrieved 2016-12-02