Jump to content

Tucker Max: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
BabuBhatt (talk | contribs)
Ljheidel (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Line 16: Line 16:


Max was pictured with [[Maddox (writer)|Maddox]] in "Dude, Here's My Book", a [[2006]] [[New York Times]] Sunday Style article by Warren St. John spotlighting the growing genre of "fratire". <ref>[http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F60814FA3D5B0C758DDDAD0894DE404482 "Dude, Here's My Book"], by Warren St. John, ''[[New York Times]]'', [[April 16]], [[2006]]. Reprinted as [http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/04/20/features/cads.php "Manly reading for literate dudes"], ''[[International Herald Tribune]]'', [[April 20]], [[2006]].</ref> Also in 2006, Max, Maddox and DrunkasaurusRex premiered a two-hour test show on [[Sirius Satellite Radio]]'s [[Maxim Radio]] station in which they told stories, took questions from listeners and discussed [[women]], [[sex]], [[alcohol]] and [[pop culture]]. <ref>[http://www.tuckermax.com/archives/entries/tucker_maddox_and_drunkasaurusrex_to_be_on_sirius_radio_tuesday_may_9th.phtml Tucker Max Blog: Tucker Maddox and DrunkasaurusRex to be on Sirius Radio Tuesday May 9th]</ref>Later that summer he appeared on the [[Opie and Anthony]] radio show where the hosts cast doubt on the truthfulness of his stories and led him to believe his headphones had broken. While Max's headphones were off, the audience was told Max was lying and later he was compared to [[James Frey]].<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zc27DX7qRT0 Microphones are Afraid of Tucker Max, video he doesnt......] from YouTube.com</ref>.
Max was pictured with [[Maddox (writer)|Maddox]] in "Dude, Here's My Book", a [[2006]] [[New York Times]] Sunday Style article by Warren St. John spotlighting the growing genre of "fratire". <ref>[http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F60814FA3D5B0C758DDDAD0894DE404482 "Dude, Here's My Book"], by Warren St. John, ''[[New York Times]]'', [[April 16]], [[2006]]. Reprinted as [http://www.iht.com/articles/2006/04/20/features/cads.php "Manly reading for literate dudes"], ''[[International Herald Tribune]]'', [[April 20]], [[2006]].</ref> Also in 2006, Max, Maddox and DrunkasaurusRex premiered a two-hour test show on [[Sirius Satellite Radio]]'s [[Maxim Radio]] station in which they told stories, took questions from listeners and discussed [[women]], [[sex]], [[alcohol]] and [[pop culture]]. <ref>[http://www.tuckermax.com/archives/entries/tucker_maddox_and_drunkasaurusrex_to_be_on_sirius_radio_tuesday_may_9th.phtml Tucker Max Blog: Tucker Maddox and DrunkasaurusRex to be on Sirius Radio Tuesday May 9th]</ref>Later that summer he appeared on the [[Opie and Anthony]] radio show where the hosts cast doubt on the truthfulness of his stories and led him to believe his headphones had broken. While Max's headphones were off, the audience was told Max was lying and later he was compared to [[James Frey]].<ref>[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zc27DX7qRT0 Microphones are Afraid of Tucker Max, video he doesnt......] from YouTube.com</ref>.

A website called Tucker Max is a Douchebag allows users to post their opinions on the truthfulness of Max's stories and basketball boasts. Many logical arguements have been raised about his stories, including his lack of evidence for nearly every single one. There has also been allegations that anyone who disagrees with Tucker Max on his message board is banned, and no dissenting opinions are tolerated. Anyone can voice their opinion on Tucker Max without fear of deletion.


==Bibliography==
==Bibliography==
Line 33: Line 31:
*[http://www.newsobserver.com/707/story/398008.html A trip into the weird netherworld of Tucker Max] from [[February 9]], [[2006]], ''[[News & Observer]]''
*[http://www.newsobserver.com/707/story/398008.html A trip into the weird netherworld of Tucker Max] from [[February 9]], [[2006]], ''[[News & Observer]]''
*[http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=15374081 Tucker Max MySpace site]
*[http://profile.myspace.com/index.cfm?fuseaction=user.viewprofile&friendid=15374081 Tucker Max MySpace site]
*[http://tuckermaxdoucebag.blogspot.com/ A Blog Critical of Tucker Max]


{{Persondata
{{Persondata

Revision as of 06:44, 31 December 2006

File:Tuckerpic.gif
Tucker Max

Tucker Tibor Max (b. 1975 in Atlanta, Georgia) is an author and the creator of www.tuckermax.com, which features explicit stories about his drinking and sexual encounters, a heavily-moderated messageboard and a "hook-up application" derived from the date application that was the genesis of his site. Max lives in the Flatiron District of Manhattan in New York, New York. Max runs Rudius Media, an Internet publishing company. [1]

Max grew up in Lexington, Kentucky, and graduated with a bachelor's degree in Law, Letters and Society from University of Chicago. He graduated with a J.D. from Duke University School of Law. [2] While at Duke, he posted a "date application" online and later transferred it to Tuckermax.com. In June 2003, Max appeared in "Sex2K", an episode of MTV's True Life.[3]

Max penned The Definitive Book of Pick-Up Lines (2001) and Belligerence and Debauchery: The Tucker Max Stories (2003) and self-published them. In January 2006, Citadel Press released Max's paperback, I Hope They Serve Beer In Hell[4] and it earned a place on the New York Times Bestseller supplemental list. Publishers Weekly announced in September 2006 that Simon Spotlight plans to publish a followup, Assholes Finish First, in January 2008.

Max announced a sitcom deal with Comedy Central, which bought an as-yet-unwritten pilot script from him for a television program about his life. The program would be a mixture of Web stories and the day-to-day activities of he and his friends.[5][6]

In the courtroom

In May 2003, Max's ex-girlfriend Katy Johnson, who had won pageants to become Miss Vermont 1999 and Miss Vermont USA 2001, sued him for posting the sordid details of their relationship on his website,[7] claiming it was an invasion of her privacy. As a result, Palm Beach, Fifteenth Circuit Judge Diana Lewis, issued a ruling ordering Max to immediately remove the story from his site.[8] Subsequently, after substantial legal wrangling that included an amicus curiae brief by the American Civil Liberties Union,[9] the case was dismissed.

In the mass media

Max was pictured with Maddox in "Dude, Here's My Book", a 2006 New York Times Sunday Style article by Warren St. John spotlighting the growing genre of "fratire". [10] Also in 2006, Max, Maddox and DrunkasaurusRex premiered a two-hour test show on Sirius Satellite Radio's Maxim Radio station in which they told stories, took questions from listeners and discussed women, sex, alcohol and pop culture. [11]Later that summer he appeared on the Opie and Anthony radio show where the hosts cast doubt on the truthfulness of his stories and led him to believe his headphones had broken. While Max's headphones were off, the audience was told Max was lying and later he was compared to James Frey.[12].

Bibliography

  • Assholes Finish First (2008) ISBN 1-4169-3874-5
  • I Hope They Serve Beer In Hell (2006) ISBN 0-8065-2728-5[4]
  • Belligerence and Debauchery: The Tucker Max Stories (2003) ISBN 1-4116-0062-2
  • The Definitive Book of Pick-Up Lines (2001) ISBN 0-595-17671-2

References

Template:Persondata