Sam Lansky

Sam Lansky

Sam Lansky is a culture editor at TIME magazine. He has written for New York magazine, The Atlantic, Esquire, Out, and Grantland.

Early life

He came out at the age of 11.[1] After his parents divorced, he lived with his father in Manhattan and attended the Dwight School.[1] Having already tried cocaine, his drug use deepened.[1] According to his memoir, his father gave him access to money with little supervision, and he spent many nights on drug benders with a close friend.[1] As "street drugs" became harder to get a hold of, he expanded to prescription drugs, particularly amphetamines.[1] He also partied with Manhattan socialites and celebrities, and engaged in casual sex with older men, on the condition that they must have nice apartments and cocaine.[1] After overdosing at 17 years old, his father had him forcibly entered into a wilderness drug rehabilitation program in Utah.[1] However, unable to enter a post-rehab program due to his age, he quickly relapsed.[1] His battle with substance of abuse brought him to the point of becoming a paid escort and a two-month binge of drugs and casual sex.[1] He flew to where his father had moved in San Francisco, California, and entered a 12-step program that began his sobriety in earnest.[1]

Career

He enrolled in the New School and got a degree in creative writing.[1] He became a freelance music critic, before joining the editorial staff of Time (magazine) magazine.[1]

Books

References

Footnotes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 CONNELLY, SHERRYL (January 14, 2016), "Time magazine culture editor Sam Lansky reveals his wild days in new memoir 'The Gilded Razor'". NEW YORK DAILY NEWS. Retrieved April 6, 2017.

Works cited

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