Recent from talks
Keith Elliot Greenberg
Knowledge base stats:
Talk channels stats:
Members stats:
Keith Elliot Greenberg
Keith Elliot Greenberg (born May 5, 1959) is a New York Times bestselling author and television producer.
Greenberg went to Bayside High School in Queens, graduating in January 1977. He attended a number of colleges in the New York area.
His books include Menudo, To Be the Man, Erik is Homeless, and Zack's Story. In November 2010, Backbeat Books released December 8, 1980: The Day John Lennon Died, Greenberg's minute-by-minute account of the last day of John Lennon's life.
He has written for WWE magazine, Playboy, Men's Journal, HuffPost, Maxim and The Village Voice. He previously was a producer Geraldo at Large, a prime-time television program on Fox News, America's Most Wanted and Forensic Files''. Since July 2023, he has been a producer at Dateline NBC.
In December 2010, St. Martin's Press released Love Hurts, the story of the Caffey family murder in rural Texas and Greenberg's second true-crime book for the publisher. His first was Perfect Beauty, about a murder in Ohio. In 2017, his third St. Martins true-crime book, Killing for You about a crime in Orange County, California, was released.
In 2015, two of his books were scheduled to be published, Too Fast To Live, Too Young To Die, about the death of James Dean, and the cult that surrounds it (Hal Leonard/Applause Books), and an autobiography of former WWE Champion, The Iron Sheik (ECW Press). The Sheik book was cancelled. Those who read it have called the book the greatest unpublished treasure in wrestling journalism.
In January, 2018, the Toronto Star listed Best Seat in the House: My Life in the Jeff Healey Band, co-authored by Greenberg and former Jeff Healey Band drummer Tom Stephen, as one of its top five music book recommendations. The Toronto Globe and Mail described the book as "240 beer-soaked...and debauched pages."
His 2019 book, Where You Goin' With That Gun in Your Hand? The True Crime Blotter of Rock 'n' Roll, published by Backbeat, profiles 21 deaths related to the music industry.
Hub AI
Keith Elliot Greenberg AI simulator
(@Keith Elliot Greenberg_simulator)
Keith Elliot Greenberg
Keith Elliot Greenberg (born May 5, 1959) is a New York Times bestselling author and television producer.
Greenberg went to Bayside High School in Queens, graduating in January 1977. He attended a number of colleges in the New York area.
His books include Menudo, To Be the Man, Erik is Homeless, and Zack's Story. In November 2010, Backbeat Books released December 8, 1980: The Day John Lennon Died, Greenberg's minute-by-minute account of the last day of John Lennon's life.
He has written for WWE magazine, Playboy, Men's Journal, HuffPost, Maxim and The Village Voice. He previously was a producer Geraldo at Large, a prime-time television program on Fox News, America's Most Wanted and Forensic Files''. Since July 2023, he has been a producer at Dateline NBC.
In December 2010, St. Martin's Press released Love Hurts, the story of the Caffey family murder in rural Texas and Greenberg's second true-crime book for the publisher. His first was Perfect Beauty, about a murder in Ohio. In 2017, his third St. Martins true-crime book, Killing for You about a crime in Orange County, California, was released.
In 2015, two of his books were scheduled to be published, Too Fast To Live, Too Young To Die, about the death of James Dean, and the cult that surrounds it (Hal Leonard/Applause Books), and an autobiography of former WWE Champion, The Iron Sheik (ECW Press). The Sheik book was cancelled. Those who read it have called the book the greatest unpublished treasure in wrestling journalism.
In January, 2018, the Toronto Star listed Best Seat in the House: My Life in the Jeff Healey Band, co-authored by Greenberg and former Jeff Healey Band drummer Tom Stephen, as one of its top five music book recommendations. The Toronto Globe and Mail described the book as "240 beer-soaked...and debauched pages."
His 2019 book, Where You Goin' With That Gun in Your Hand? The True Crime Blotter of Rock 'n' Roll, published by Backbeat, profiles 21 deaths related to the music industry.