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Artist
Kurt Andersen (born August 22, 1954) is an American novelist who is currently a columnist for New York Magazine (“The Imperial City”), and host of the Peabody-winning public radio program Studio 360, a co-production between Public Radio International and WNYC. In 1986 with E. Graydon Carter he co-founded Spy magazine, which they sold in 1991; it continued publishing until 1998. Previously he was a columnist for The New Yorker (“The Culture Industry”) and Time (“Spectator”). In 1999 he co-founded with Michael Hirschorn and Deanna Brown an online media news web site called Inside.com, which they sold to Primedia; Primedia closed the site in October 2001. Andersen was born in Omaha, Nebraska and now lives in Brooklyn, New York City, New York with his wife Anne Kreamer and his two daughters, Kate and Lucy. kurtandersen.com Literary works Andersen is the author of two novels, Turn of the Century (Random House, 1999), which was a national bestseller, and the New York Times bestseller Heyday (Random House, 2007). He has also published a book of humorous essays, The Real Thing (Doubleday, 1980; Holt, 1982), about quintessentialism. Along with Carter and George Kalogerakis he assembled a history and greatest-hits anthology of Spy called Spy: The Funny Years, published in 2006 by Miramax Books. In addition, he has co-authored two humor books, Tools of Power (Viking, 1980), a parody of self-help books on becoming successful, and Loose Lips (Simon & Schuster, 1995), an anthology of
Studio 360
PRI's Studio360
Studio 360: Introducing Nikola Tesla
Studio 360 - American Icons
Fantasyland
Studio 360: American Icons: The Great Gatsby
Studio 360 American Icons
Studio 360: Tesla (Abridged)
Stories: All-New Tales
Studio 360: Warhol (Unabridged Nonfiction)
Fantasyland: How America Went Haywire: A 500-Year History
Andersen, K: Fantasyland—How America Went Haywire