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Ben
Stein
has written and published sixteen
books, seven novels, largely about
life in Los Angeles, and nine
nonfiction books, about finance and
about ethical and social issue in
finance, and also about the
political and social content of mass
culture. He has done pioneering work
in uncovering the concealed messages
of TV and in explaining how TV and
movies get made. His titles include
A License to Steal,
Michael Milken and the Conspiracy to
Bilk the Nation, The View
From Sunset Boulevard,
Hollywood Days, Hollywood
Nights, DREEMZ,
Financial Passages, and Ludes.
His most recent book is the best
selling humor self help book, How To
Ruin Your Life. He has also been a
longtime screenwriter, writing,
among many other scripts (most of
which were unmade ) the first draft
of The Boost, a movie based
on Ludes, and the outlines of
the lengthy miniseries Amerika,
and the acclaimed Murder in
Mississippi. He was one of the
creators of the well regarded
comedy, Fernwood Tonight.
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Ben Stein for Your Event
He is also an extremely well known
actor in movies, TV, and
commercials. His part of the boring
teacher in Ferris Bueller's Day
Off was recently ranked as one
of the fifty most famous scenes in
American film. Starting in July of
1997, he has been the host of the
Comedy Central quiz show, "Win Ben
Stein's Money." The show has won
seven Emmies. He appears regularly
on the Fox News Channel talking
about finance. He is currently a
celebrity judge on the CBS hit, Star
Search.
Ben
Stein (Benjamin J. Stein) was born
November 25, 1944 in Washington,
D.C., (He is the son of the
economist and writer Herbert Stein)
grew up in Silver Spring, Maryland,
and attended Montgomery Blair High
School. He graduated from Columbia
University in 1966 with honors in
economics. He graduated from Yale
Law School in 1970 as valedictorian
of his class by election of his
classmates. He helped to found the
Journal of Law and Social Policy
while at Yale. He has worked as a
poverty lawyer in New Haven and
Washington, D.C., a trial lawyer in
the field of trade regulation at the
Federal Trade Commission in
Washington, D.C., a university
adjunct at American University in
Washington, D.C., at the University
of California at Santa Cruz, and at
Pepperdine University in Malibu, CA.
At American U. He taught about the
political and social content of mass
culture. He taught the same subject
at UCSC, as well as about political
and civil rights under the
Constitution. At Pepperdine, he has
taught about libel law and about
securities law and ethical issues
since 1986.
In 1973 and 1974, he was a speech
writer and lawyer for Richard Nixon
at The White House and then for
Gerald Ford. (He did NOT write the
line, "I am not a crook.") He has
been a columnist and editorial
writer for The Wall Street Journal,
a syndicated columnist for The Los
Angeles Herald Examiner (R.I.P.) and
King Features Syndicate, and a
frequent contributor to Barrons,
where his articles about the ethics
of management buyouts and issues of
fraud in the Milken Drexel junk bond
scheme drew major national
attention. He has been a regular
columnist for Los Angeles Magazine,
New York Magazine, E! Online, and
most of all, has written a lengthy
diary for ten years for The American
Spectator. He also writes frequently
for The Washington Post, The Wall
Street Journal, op. ed. and almost
every other imaginable magazine.
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