Nathan Rabin

Nathan Rabin
Born (1976-04-24) April 24, 1976
United States
Alma mater University of Wisconsin-Madison
Occupation Writer, film critic, music critic

Nathan Rabin (/ˈnðɪn rɑːˈbn/; born April 24, 1976) is an American film and music critic.[1] A graduate of the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Rabin was the first head writer for The A.V. Club,[2] a position he held until he left the Onion organization in 2013.[3] In 2013, Rabin became a staff writer for The Dissolve, a film website operated by Pitchfork Media.[4] Two of his popular featured columns at The Dissolve were "Forgotbusters" (looking back at films that were amongst the top 25 box office earners in their release years but have not had cultural or popular endurance) and "Streaming University" (reviewing documentaries that were available through sites like Netflix and Hulu).

On April 29, 2015, Rabin announced he had parted ways with The Dissolve.[5] He has since returned to The A.V. Club as a freelance writer.[6] Most recently he has been associated with articles on the Insane Clown Posse and Sesame Street.

In April 2017, Nathan announced that The AV Club had canceled his long-running My World of Flops column, and that he was establishing his own Patreon-funded website, Nathan Rabin's Happy Place.[7]

Life and career

He coined the phrase manic pixie dream girl as a cinematic type in 2007.[8] He was a panelist on the short-lived basic cable show "Movie Club with John Ridley" on American Movie Classics. In 2007, he began My Year of Flops on The A.V. Club, where he reevaluated films that were shunned by critics, ignored by audiences, or both, at their time of release.[9] As of January 2008, the year was finished, but he continued the project as a bimonthly feature. Other ongoing features Rabin wrote for The A.V. Club include Dispatches From Direct-To-DVD Purgatory, a tongue-in-cheek look at DVD premieres; reviews for TV shows like Louie; Silly Little Show-Biz Book Club,[10] a humorous exploration of trashy books about entertainment, and Ephemereview, which offers critiques of sub-reviewable pop-culture detritus.

Rabin released his memoir in 2009, The Big Rewind: A Memoir Brought To You By Pop Culture, (2009) which was published by Scribner.[11] The Washington Post gave the book a negative review, calling it a "...failed project brought to you by pop culture."[12] while The New York Times wrote, "[Rabin] has packed [The Big Rewind] like a cannon, full of caustic wit and bruised feelings" in its more positive review.[13] The book uses novels such as The Great Gatsby, musical recordings such as The Charm of the Highway Strip by The Magnetic Fields and other pop culture items as a springboard to discuss its author's tragi-comic adolescence as a guest of a mental hospital, a foster family whose patience and generosity he jokes "knew only strict, unyielding boundaries" and the Jewish Children's Bureau group home system, as well as his career with The A.V. Club and the short-lived film review show Movie Club With John Ridley on which he appeared.[13] The book ends with a chapter about Rabin's unsuccessful audition to fill in for Roger Ebert as a guest critic on At the Movies. Scribner also published a book version of My Year of Flops (2010).[14]

On April 23, 2013, The A.V. Club announced that Rabin, Tasha Robinson, Genevieve Koski, and Noel Murray would be leaving to start a new web-based project with former staffers Scott Tobias and Keith Phipps.[3] On May 30, 2013, this project was revealed to be The Dissolve.[4] In addition to criticism for The Dissolve, Rabin also wrote the biweekly feature Forgotbusters,[15] a reexamination of now-culturally obscure Hollywood films whose box office grosses were among the top 25 of any film released in their year.

Rabin is Jewish.[16] He grew up on the north side of Chicago[17] and has described himself as "a longtime Chicago White Sox super-fan."[18]

Books

References

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