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Megan Boyle
Megan Boyle
from Wikipedia

Megan Boyle (born October 15, 1985) is an American writer and filmmaker.

Key Information

Boyle grew up in Baltimore, Maryland, and rose to prominence among the Alt Lit and internet community after writing popular articles for Thought Catalog[1] and marrying writer Tao Lin.[2] Together, Boyle and Lin created several movies for their company MDMAfilms, which they began in 2010.[3] In 2011, Lin published Boyle's poetry collection, selected unpublished blog posts of a mexican panda express employee, which garnered favorable reviews.[4][5][6]

From 2011 to 2013, Boyle wrote a column for Vice Magazine called Boyle's Brains.[7] From March to September 2013,[8] she "liveblogged", documenting her daily activities on Tumblr; the liveblog reached 350,000 words and was called a "painfully honest and raw record of a person’s life."[9] Tyrant Books released a print edition, Liveblog, on September 27, 2018.[10][11]

Reviewing Liveblog for Bookforum, Lauren Oyler wrote, "In subject matter, Liveblog also resembles recent novels depicting female disillusionment—among them Ottessa Moshfegh's My Year of Rest and Relaxation, Catherine Lacey's The Answers, and Jade Sharma's Problems. But while the narrators of these tight, polished novels speak in steady tones of sly nihilism or emptied resignation, as if their authors have dressed them in large sunglasses and T-shirts that say “Nothing Matters,” Megan desperately wants to believe something does."[12]

In a review for the Lancaster, Pennsylvania, newspaper LNP titled "'Liveblog' is a masterpiece for the social media age," Mike Andrelczyk wrote: "Boyle has written perhaps the most realistic novel ever. 'Liveblog' is a journal, a joke book, a massive playlist, a meditation on the passing of time, a book about depression, loss, love, parents, friends . . . It is a celebration of life—good, bad and boring."[13]

In The Philadelphia Inquirer in 2019, Pete Tosiello wrote: "Megan Boyle’s long-simmering autofiction experiment Liveblog left readers captivated and cowering with its lengthy portrayal of the author’s everyday exploits."[14]

Boyle has been profiled by magazines such as Nylon and Elle.[15] Critic Jacob Appel has praised her work in Necessary Fiction as "a distinctive break from the past."[16]

Boyle's work has been published in places such as 3:AM Magazine, Tyrant Books (New York Tyrant Magazine), Muumuu House, Pear Noir!, and Pop Serial.

Bibliography

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References

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from Grokipedia
Megan Boyle (born October 15, 1985) is an American and filmmaker best known for her experimental, confessional works in the alt-lit movement, which blend , internet culture, and raw personal documentation. Raised in , , where she continues to reside, Boyle rose to prominence through her contributions to online literary communities, including popular articles for and Tumblr posts that captured everyday existential struggles with humor and unfiltered honesty. Boyle's breakthrough project began on March 17, 2013, when she launched a Tumblr-based liveblog to document her every thought and action in real time, aiming for public accountability to improve her life amid personal challenges like and dissatisfaction. This six-month endeavor, spanning from March 17 to , 2013, generated over 400,000 words and was later edited and published as the 707-page Liveblog in 2018 by Tyrant Books, earning critical acclaim for its radical persistence and exploration of self-representation in the digital age. Her earlier work includes the 2011 poetry collection Selected Unpublished Blog Posts of a Mexican Employee, published by Muumuu House, which established her voice in indie publishing circles through fragmented, self-indulgent yet candid blog-style entries. Boyle, who holds a self-designed degree in , , and writing, was previously married to fellow alt-lit author , with whom she collaborated extensively. In addition to writing, Boyle co-founded the short-lived MDMAfilms with Lin in 2010, directing several DIY short films shot entirely on a , including Mumblecore (2011), which records drug-influenced conversations in their daily lives, MDMA (2011), a two-hour unedited take of a drug experience, and Bebe Zeva (2011), following a teenage blogger in . These low-fi works reflect her interest in unpolished, immersive documentation, paralleling her literary output and contributing to her reputation as a pioneer in blending with multimedia experimentation.

Early life and education

Early life

Megan Boyle was born on October 15, 1985, in , . She was delivered via cesarean section one week after her due date, an event her parents later joked about as evidence of her reluctance to enter the world. Boyle grew up in in a family environment centered around her parents and a family named April. Her father worked in office construction and showed an interest in , recommending resources like Dialectical Behavioral Therapy for Teens to his daughter. Childhood in the city exposed her to everyday urban rhythms and personal introspection, as reflected in her later recollections of family dynamics and mishaps, such as falling out of bed repeatedly as a toddler or provoking the dog to bite her face at age eight, requiring six stitches. These incidents, including a memorable moment at age four when she punched her mother in the nose after her father's playful remark and then cried in , highlighted the blend of humor and in her early home life. During adolescence, Boyle displayed initial creative inclinations, such as at age eleven when she improvised lines during a school drama club play, extending its runtime from ten minutes to over thirty and surprising the . This early experimentation with and foreshadowed her affinity for capturing unfiltered personal narratives, though without formal training at the time.

Education

Boyle attended the , where she earned a degree through a self-designed major that integrated , , and , graduating in approximately 2008. Her coursework in and emphasized self-analysis and existential inquiry, which shaped her autofictional approach to by fostering a practice of meticulously documenting and reflecting on personal experiences. This academic foundation provided an intellectual framework that propelled her toward experimental writing forms. Following her undergraduate studies, Boyle pursued a in Fiction Writing at the (CUNY) , where the program's focus on practical writing techniques honed her skills in narrative construction and confessional storytelling. This graduate education served as a bridge from her West Coast academic experiences to the New York literary community, immersing her in the alt-lit scene and collaborative environments that defined her early career.

Writing career

Early publications and alt-lit rise

Megan Boyle entered the literary scene in the early through her , internet-influenced writing, which aligned closely with the emerging alt-lit movement. Her debut book, Selected Unpublished Blog Posts of a Mexican Employee, published by Muumuu House in November 2011, compiled unfinished blog posts exploring themes of sex, television, pills, blogging, love, alcohol, despair, and relationships. The collection, described as a "remarkable debut," blended and with immediate honesty and everyman wit, capturing the fragmented, emotional realness of millennial online culture. Critics noted its dark, electric anxiety of being female and human, positioning Boyle as a cult voice among young writers sharing raw personal experiences online. Boyle gained initial online visibility through contributions to Thought Catalog starting around 2010, where she published humorous and introspective essays that resonated in alt-lit circles. Pieces such as "Lies I Have Told" (December 2010) and "Guide to Vague Relationships" (November 2010) exemplified her style of candid, list-based reflections on everyday absurdities and personal vulnerabilities, drawing from blogging's informal, diaristic form. These publications helped establish her within the alt-lit community, a movement coalesced in the late through blogs and , emphasizing aesthetics like lowercase text, , and digital fragmentation. From 2011 to 2013, Boyle wrote the "Boyle's Brains" column for Vice Magazine, featuring personal essays on daily absurdities that further solidified her alt-lit presence. Columns like "Future Parts of the Human Body" (November 2011) and "What Cat Food Tastes Like" (February 2013) showcased her humorous take on mundane or bizarre experiences, influenced by the movement's ties to online platforms like Vice and Thought Catalog. Her association with Muumuu House, an indie press founded in 2008 by alt-lit figure Tao Lin, amplified her emergence, as the publisher championed internet-era writing that blurred personal blogging with literary experimentation. This connection underscored alt-lit's roots in digital culture, where Boyle's work reflected the era's shift toward unfiltered, shareable self-narratives.

Liveblog project and major works

In 2013, Megan Boyle launched an ambitious experimental project on , titled "liveblog," in which she documented nearly every aspect of her daily life in real time from March 17 to September 1. The endeavor resulted in over 350,000 words across hundreds of posts, capturing mundane activities, internal monologues, and emotional fluctuations with unfiltered immediacy. This built on the style of her earlier alt-lit works but escalated to an unprecedented scale of self-exposure. Boyle's motivations stemmed from a desire for external to foster personal improvement, framing the project as a form of "negative reinforcement" to curb unhelpful behaviors by eliminating . She aimed to explore real-time self-documentation as a therapeutic tool, updating posts as events unfolded to create an ongoing, public ledger of her existence. However, the project presented significant challenges, including waning diligence that led to gaps in entries, from constant transcription, and strained interpersonal dynamics due to the invasive transparency. By mid-project, Boyle reported feelings of depression and obligation, yet persisted, amassing approximately 358,000 words by August. The Tumblr posts were later edited and published as LIVEBLOG by Tyrant Books in September 2018, a 707-page volume that condensed and refined the original material while preserving its raw essence. Editing began in 2015 but was delayed by personal struggles, including , before resuming with encouragement from collaborators, resulting in selective expansions and fictionalized elements to enhance narrative flow. The book was lauded for its and humor in portraying , with critics highlighting Boyle's humorous amid depictions of and self-destruction. Critically, LIVEBLOG emerged as a landmark in literature shaped by the era, pushing toward exhaustive granularity and voyeuristic intimacy. In interviews from 2018 onward, such as those with and The Creative Independent, Boyle reflected on its relevance to , emphasizing how the project's real-time format mirrored the performative accountability of online life and anticipated broader trends in . Discussions in literary outlets have continued to position it as a pioneering text for examining the boundaries of authenticity in the digital age, with scholarly analyses as of 2025 highlighting its exploration of and the of failure in .

Filmmaking career

MDMAfilms collaboration

In 2010, Megan Boyle co-founded MDMAfilms with her then-partner , establishing a short-lived company that blended experiences, personal interviews, and aesthetics to create experimental, low-budget films. The company originated on November 5, 2010, following an MDMA-influenced filming session in , where the pair began recording themselves answering questions while under the influence, drawing from their shared background in the alt-lit literary scene as a foundation for raw, authentic visual storytelling. MDMAfilms produced several key works, including the 2011 film , a two-hour unedited feature capturing Boyle and Lin ingesting the drug in , accidentally taking the subway to , and conducting interviews on a Toys R Us . Subsequent releases included the 2011 film , a low-budget, improvisational chronicle of their relationship edited from over 200 hours of footage, culminating in their Las Vegas elopement; and the 2011 film Bebe Zeva, a 90-minute confessional portrait of 17-year-old fashion blogger Bebe Zeva, filmed entirely on a in and emphasizing wild, unfiltered personal revelations. These films exemplified the company's DIY ethos, shot using a MacBook's camera for spontaneity and minimal production costs, often self-funded without external budgets. The production process centered on "question/answer MDMA" nights, where Boyle and Lin filmed candid, uninhibited interactions enhanced by the drug's effects—such as heightened energy and —to foster honest communication, influenced by alt-lit's emphasis on unpolished authenticity and internet-era over-sharing. Boyle described the approach as a form of "honest communication," prioritizing real-time experiences over scripted narratives, which aligned with mumblecore's improvisational style. MDMAfilms effectively ceased operations around 2012, with no further joint productions, though its raw, drug-fueled documentaries left a lasting impact on indie filmmaking within literary-adjacent scenes by pioneering accessible, confessional .

Other film contributions

In 2019, Megan Boyle collaborated with filmmaker Nick Toti on the installation Liveblog by Megan Boyle, a project that adapts her into an extended visual format. The centerpiece is a 25-hour movie in which Boyle reads her 2018 Liveblog—drawn from her 2013 Tumblr liveblog—in its entirety during a 48-hour performance recorded in 2018. This work emphasizes endurance and raw documentation, mirroring the unfiltered introspection of her literary output. The installation was presented at the Peach gallery in , , from November 29 to December 15, 2019, with viewing available by appointment on weekends. Toti directed and produced the , with Boyle credited as writer and performer, and it features contributions from composer Jacob Graham. The project received attention in independent and circles for its experimental length and integration of personal narrative with durational . Following this collaboration, Boyle's involvement in film has remained limited, with no additional major projects or releases documented as of 2025, reflecting a primary return to writing endeavors.

Personal life

Marriage and relationships

Megan Boyle married writer in September 2022 in . The couple met in following the death of Butler's first wife, poet , and bonded over their shared histories with —Boyle had survived an attempt in her youth. Their relationship, which progressed rapidly amid mutual grief, has been characterized by deep emotional support and respect. Boyle has described Butler as a kind and considerate partner, calling their a "miracle" that rekindled her faith in after years of personal disillusionment. In public discussions, she has highlighted the joys of this partnership, including its role in helping her navigate emotional challenges, while noting the difficulties posed by public scrutiny surrounding Butler's Molly (2023), which details his prior . As key figures in the alt-lit literary community, Boyle and Butler share overlapping circles, fostering mutual encouragement in their creative lives without formal collaborations. Boyle has participated in events with Butler, such as a 2024 reading for his work, demonstrating their supportive dynamic amid intense personal revelations. These experiences echo themes of vulnerability and openness prevalent in Boyle's own writing, such as her book Liveblog (2018), based on her 2013 liveblogging project. As of 2025, the couple has no children and no reported plans for family expansion.

Residence and later activities

Boyle has maintained a long-term residence in , , since the early , establishing it as her primary base while making frequent trips to for literary events throughout the 2010s and 2020s. Following the release of her 2018 book, Boyle shifted to a lower-profile routine, engaging sporadically in interviews, such as a 2022 conversation reflecting on the cultural and personal legacy of her earlier liveblogging project. She continued writing in a subdued manner via online platforms like , where she revived elements of her liveblogging style, including posts in 2024, without producing new major book-length works as of November 2025. In 2019, she discussed personal growth in interviews, highlighting achievements like sobriety that supported her evolving lifestyle. Boyle's marriage to writer since 2022 has contributed to her stable home life in . As of 2025, she remains based there, prioritizing personal pursuits amid the broader decline of the alt-lit scene that defined her earlier career.

Works

Books

Megan Boyle's debut book, selected unpublished blog posts of a mexican panda express employee, was published by Muumuu House on November 15, 2011. This collection features over 100 unfinished blog posts spanning from January 2009 to July 2010, exploring themes of mundane jobs such as working at and raw personal emotions including anxiety, isolation, and everyday introspection. Emerging from the alt-lit publishing scene, the book established Boyle as a voice in confessional, internet-influenced writing. Her second major work, LIVEBLOG, appeared in 2018 from Tyrant Books. This 707-page volume compiles edited excerpts from Boyle's 2013 posts, documenting six months of her daily life with unfiltered accounts of relationships, insecurities, substance use, and routine activities. As of 2025, Boyle has not released any new books since LIVEBLOG, marking a pause in her major publications amid continued work in essays and .

Essays and columns

Boyle contributed numerous essays to beginning in 2010, often drawing on personal anecdotes about relationships, , and everyday absurdities in a , humorous style. Her piece "Guide to Vague Relationships," published in November 2010, playfully delineates the unspoken rules of ambiguous romantic entanglements, such as friends-with-benefits dynamics that last from a few months to years and involve uncertain boundaries around . Another prominent example, "Everyone I've Had Sex With" from 2011, presents a candid, list-based recounting of past encounters that resonated widely in literary circles for its raw vulnerability. Additional essays like "How to Write 'How to Shit on '" (February 2011) explore altered states and creative processes through self-deprecating narrative, while "Can Someone Do Something Exciting So I Can Care About the Again" (April 2013) critiques the monotony of content with ironic exasperation. From 2011 to 2013, Boyle authored a regular column titled "Boyle's Brains" for Vice Magazine, producing more than 20 installments characterized by witty self-reflection on daily irritations and eccentric observations. In "What Cat Food Tastes Like" (February 2013), she recounts experimenting with pet food, blending disgust and curiosity in a lighthearted examination of impulse. Similarly, "New Ways to Have Sex" (January 2013) proposes outlandish scenarios like burrito- or butter-involved intimacy, highlighting her penchant for absurd humor rooted in personal quirks. Other columns, such as "Future Parts of the Human Body" (November 2011), imagine speculative enhancements like a "Food Brain" linked to cosmic forces, and "What's Happening with Nicolas Cage's Face" (September 2012), ponder celebrity aging with playful speculation. These pieces consistently emphasized confessional candor without delving into extended narrative depth. Beyond these outlets, Boyle's essays appeared in literary publications including 3:AM Magazine and Pop Serial, where her work continued the theme of uninhibited personal disclosure. In 3:AM, contributions like those discussed in "Megan Boyle & Embarrassability" (November 2011) underscored her writing's keynote of "embarrassability"—a willingness to expose inhibitions—as a core element of her style. Post-2013, her output became more sporadic, including a 2020 Literary Hub piece exploring memory's unreliability in relation to her writing process and life documentation. More recently, as of 2024, she has posted on her newsletter LIVEBLOG II, continuing the liveblogging style with entries documenting daily life, and co-contributed 25 items to the collaborative "50 Literary Rumors (with Megan Boyle)" on Blake Butler's Substack. Overall, these shorter works, totaling dozens across platforms, prioritized ephemeral, introspective vignettes over sustained thematic development.

References

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