Chad Kultgen (born June 16, 1976) is an American novelist, journalist, and podcaster. He has published the nonfiction book "How to Win the Bachelor" with podcasting co-host Lizzy Pace, along with several online pieces, including an opinion article in The Huffington Post. Kultgen was a staff writer for Hits and the Weekly World News,[citation needed] and his works have been reviewed by Maxim, Penthouse, and The New York Times. He has several writing and production credits, including The Incredible Burt Wonderstone, a 2013 film starring Steve Carell.[citation needed]

Chad Kultgen
Born (1976-06-16) June 16, 1976 (age 47)
Spokane, Washington
OccupationNovelist, Film Writer, Producer
Literary movementMaterialism, Sexual Liberation, Hedonism

Some critics have said that his male protagonists are misogynistic and trite.[1] Kultgen says he "get[s] at least a few Facebook messages every week from someone who has come across the book and enjoyed it. I also get messages from people who didn't enjoy the book. They tend to be a bit irate and usually take the time to tell me that I'm the worst living writer, the world would be a better place without me, I have no understanding of women or all of my books should be burned. So I guess I'd say the reaction to the first book was ... strong on both sides."[2] A New York Times piece in 2011 interviewed people who asserted that characters in his works were based on them.[3]

His 2011 book, Men, Women, and Children was released as a feature film in 2014, featuring Adam Sandler, Emma Thompson, Ansel Elgort, and Jennifer Garner.[4] It received poor critical and commercial success, netting only 2.2 million dollars at the box office.[5]

In 2024, Kultgen and comedian Will Sasso were sued by the estate of George Carlin after posting a comedy special to YouTube, claiming it was written by a "comedy AI" called Dudesy that had been trained on the late comedian's work. In response to the lawsuit, a spokesperson for Sasso explained that the video had not been written by AI, but by Kultgen.[6][7]

Works edit

  • The Average American Male (2007)
  • The Lie (2009)
  • Men, Women, and Children (2011)
  • The Average American Marriage (2013)
  • Darklight (2014)
  • Strange Animals (2015)
  • How to Win the Bachelor (2021)
  • Dudesy (2022)

Film credits edit

  • Inguenue (1999, Animator)
  • Sing Along Songs: Brother Bear - On My Way (2003, associate producer)
  • Disney Princess Stories Volume Two: Tales of Friendship (2005, associate producer)
  • Disney Princess Stories Volume Three: Beauty Shines from Within (2005, associate producer)
  • Ranger Bios (2007, writer)
  • Ranger Arsenal (2007, writer)
  • Ranger Vehicles (2007, writer)
  • Waiting to Die (2009, writer, executive producer)
  • Southern Discomfort (2010, writer)
  • The Incredible Burt Wonderstone (2013, writer, actor)
  • Men, Women, and Children (2014)
  • Bad Judge (2015, writer, executive producer)

References edit

  1. ^ "The Average American Male Review".
  2. ^ Baker, Jeff (9 February 2013). "Bookmarks: Q&A with Chad Kultgen, author of 'The Average American Marriage'". The Oregonian.
  3. ^ LaPorte, Nicole. "A Raw Voice of Young Manhood Makes a Bid for Literary Respect". The New York Times.
  4. ^ "Men Women Children Comes to Screens". Los Angeles Times. 20 August 2014.
  5. ^ "Jason Reitman's 'Men, Women and Children' Takes Box-Office Bellyflop". 21 October 2014.
  6. ^ Kuo, Christopher (26 January 2024). "George Carlin's Estate Sues Podcasters Over A.I. Episode". The New York Times. Retrieved 29 January 2024.
  7. ^ Orland, Kyle (25 January 2024). "Did an AI write that hour-long "George Carlin" special? I'm not convinced". Ars Technica. Retrieved 29 January 2024.