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November 18, 2010

Famous post-academics

Famous post-academics

Thousands of people have successfully made the transition from academia — whether as graduate students, postdocs, adjuncts, tenure-line faculty, or tenured faculty — to lives and careers outside the ivory tower.

Because we all need models

I thought it might be fun to call to mind all of the famous people who were once academics. Now, this isn’t to say that we can all become famous if we leave academia, but hey, it’s nice to see some success stories, you know?

David Duchovny started a PhD in English at Yale, but dropped out to act.

On-air personality Rachel Maddow has a DPhil in Politics from Oxford University.

Colm Tóibín, the award-winning Irish novelist and critic, left a master’s program for a career in journalism.

Robert Siegal, host of NPR’s “All Things Considered,” left a masters program in journalism after one year.

Marie Brennan, a published fantasy novelist, left a graduate program in folklore and anthropology at Indiana University to write full time.

Debbie Stoller, founder of Bust Magazine and the Bitch N Stitch books, earned a PhD in Psychology from Yale. (h/t  to Leaving Academia)

Miucca Prada, head of the Prada fashion house, has a PhD in political science. (h/t  to Leaving Academia)

Brian May, guitarist from Queen, has a PhD in astronomy for research on zodiacal dust clouds?

Bill Cosby has a Doctorate in Education from the University of Massachusetts.

Robert Vaughn, the Man from U.N.C.L.E., has a PhD in Communications from the University of Southern California.

Greg Graffin, lead singer and songwriter for the band bad religion, has a PhD in Zoology from Cornell.

Bryan Holland, singer for the band The Offspring, left a PhD program in microbiology at USC.

Monty Python’s Graham Chapman earned an MD, but didn’t practice for long.

Founding Velvet Underground member Sterling Morrison earned a PhD in Medieval Studies from the University of Texas at Austin.

Milo Aukerman, lead singer of early punk band The Descendents, earned a PhD in biochemistry from the University of Wisconsin at Madison.

Swedish actor Dolph Lundgren has a masters in chemical engineering.

Kevin Grevioux, who co-starred in Underworld with super-brainy Kate Beckinsale, was doing a master’s program in genetic engineering when he decided he’d rather act.

Actor James Franco has been accepted in Yale’s PhD program in English — arguably he’s doing the whole PhD / fame thing the other way around.

Elif Batuman parlayed a PhD in Comparative Lit from Stanford into the best-selling The Possessed: Adventures with Russian Books and the People Who Read Them.

Food writer Molly Wizenberg, otherwise known as Orangette, dropped out of a PhD program in anthropology.

Michael Ignatieff, former Harvard professor of history and current opposition party leader in Canada.

And I didn’t even dip very far into the scores and scores of CEOs and politicians with PhDs! Know of any others? I’d love to hear about them!

A few comments about comments

I’d love leads on any other post-academics who’ve been successful out there in the wide world. If you know of any, drop me a line!

The whole question of being unhappy in academia — no matter what stage you’re in — can feel fraught. If you’d like to comment but are feeling shy about “being out there,” feel free to make up a persona or comment anonymously. You can also email me directly.

First-time commenters are always moderated (because you wouldn’t believe the spam I get), so if your comment doesn’t show up immediately, hang tight! Chances are, I’m not right on my email.

And most of all, let’s all practice compassion for ourselves and others in this difficult time and space.

Filed Under: Post-Academic Profiles 6 Comments

November 15, 2010

Monday roundup

Monday roundup

A weekly collection of interesting things I find around the Internet. Find something I didn’t? I’d love to hear about it the comments!

What’s interesting this week

How to spot your enemies: Tenure-track version.

Arizona State University and the National Science Foundation have teamed up to help women scientists make it through the particularly rough seas they face.

How people are described in letters of recommendation — in gendered terms — may explain the “leaky pipeline” that seems to disproportionately drop women at every stage.

An academic finds a surprisingly obscure book — Critical Intellectuals on Writing — to help jump-start his own writing process when it’s stalled.

British students protest proposed tuition hikes.

Grant-writing tips for graduate students.

A few comments about comments

The whole question of being unhappy in academia — no matter what stage you’re in — can feel fraught. If you’d like to comment but are feeling shy about “being out there,” feel free to make up a persona or comment anonymously. You can also email me directly.

First-time commenters are always moderated (because you wouldn’t believe the spam I get), so if your comment doesn’t show up immediately, hang tight! Chances are, I’m not right on my email.

And most of all, let’s all practice compassion for ourselves and others in this difficult time and space.

Filed Under: Monday Roundup Leave a Comment

November 8, 2010

Monday roundup

Monday roundup

A weekly collection of interesting things I find around the Internet. Find something I didn’t? I’d love to hear about it the comments!

Interesting things around the Internet this week

Mary Churchill and Michael Brown have a fascinating conversation about what faculty can — and can’t — decide, and how that affects our experience as professionals and colleagues.

It was a strangely light week. Maybe the academic internetosphere is hitting semester overload. I can’t say I blame them!

A few comments about comments

The whole question of being unhappy in academia — no matter what stage you’re in — can feel fraught. If you’d like to comment but are feeling shy about “being out there,” feel free to make up a persona or comment anonymously. You can also email me directly.

First-time commenters are always moderated (because you wouldn’t believe the spam I get), so if your comment doesn’t show up immediately, hang tight! Chances are, I’m not right on my email.

And most of all, let’s all practice compassion for ourselves and others in this difficult time and space.

Filed Under: Monday Roundup Leave a Comment

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