So the last few months have been a little crazy, from my True Believers reading in New York through our million-dollar fundraiser gala at the Huntington and our receiving the regional Tony Award and OH YEAH horrible attacks on Boston and in my response to Amanda Palmer's narcissistic response to that event getting picked up on BuzzFeed and my latest comic book getting published with my story on the cover and also writing/recording some music for the world premiere of John King's From Denmark With Love and then occasionally sleeping and then now I'm in Alaska for the Last Frontier Theatre Conference and another workshop reading of True Believers and then we have our production of Rapture, Blister, Burn starting previews at the Huntington this Friday and then it's Alumni Weekend at Emerson plus I have a wedding to attend that I still need to write some things for and then there's the Tony Awards themselves where I plan on armwrestling Alec Baldwin and so basically I'm sorry that I've been neglecting this website but I really really swear that I will try to be better about it going forward so that I'm not either back-dating blogposts en masse to pretend that I'm sharing everything in a timely manner or giving off the impression to all 3 of my loyal readers that my constant doing of things has come to a grinding halt or that I am dead or somehow disappeared or maybe that The Doctor has come and stolen me away in his TARDIS and I know this is getting pretty ramble-y right now but I'm kind of enjoying seeing how much I can vomit from my brain without stopping or using any commas but I should probably get back to the theatre conference because holy crap a bald eagle just flew past my window so I'm gonna go okay bye.
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Thom Dunn is a Boston-based writer, musician, and utterly terrible dancer. He is the singer/guitarist for the indie rock/power-pop the Roland High Life, as well as a staff writer for the New York Times’ Wirecutter and a regular contributor at BoingBoing.net. Thom enjoys Oxford commas, metaphysics, and romantic clichés (especially when they involve whiskey), and he firmly believes that Journey's "Don't Stop Believing" is the single greatest atrocity committed against mankind. He is a graduate of Clarion Writer's Workshop at UCSD ('13) & Emerson College ('08).