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Stein

Joel Stein

journalistauthor

Joel Stein is an American journalist who wrote for the Los Angeles Times. In addition, he wrote a column and occasional articles for Time for 19 years until 2017. Stein grew up in Edison, New Jersey, the son of a salesman. He is Jewish. Stein attended J.P. Stevens High School, where he was a writer and entertainment editor for Hawkeye, the student newspaper. He majored in English at Stanford University and wrote a weekly column for the school's student newspaper, The Stanford Daily. He graduated in 1993 with a BA and an MA and moved to New York City and then to Los Angeles in 2005.

Stein's career began as a writer and researcher for Martha Stewart Living. He worked a year for Stewart and later quipped that she had fired him twice on the same day. After that, Stein did fact-check at various publications before becoming a sports editor and columnist for Time Out New York, where he stayed for two years. While working at Time Out New York, he was a contestant on MTV's short-lived game shows Idiot Savants. Stein joined Time in August 1997, and his last column for the magazine appeared on November 16, 2017.

In signing off, he began, "Since my first column 19 years ago, readers and co-workers have clamored to have me fired." He concluded, "There are times when society needs a punk who doesn't care. Unfortunately, there are fewer times when the community needs a 46-year-old punk who doesn't care. I've always been guilty of hanging on too long out of fear of graduating college, ending relationships, and transitioning from democracy to authoritarianism. I look forward to a future columnist who makes me laugh about that."

Stein sometimes appears as a commentator on television programs such as I Love the '80s. He also co-produced three TV pilots: an animated series for VH1 and two for ABC. The animated show, Hey Joel, aired in Canada and later in South Africa, while the other two were never picked up. In addition, he was a writer and producer for the sitcom Crumbs. Stein taught a class on humor writing at Princeton University before moving to Los Angeles in early 2005 to write for the Los Angeles Times. In 2012, he published Man Made: A Stupid Quest for Masculinity.