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Sam Lansky

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Sam Lansky (born September 23, 1988)[1] is an American journalist, author and screenwriter.

Key Information

Early life

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Lansky was born and raised in Portland, Oregon. After his parents divorced, he lived with his father in Manhattan and attended the Dwight School.[1] Lansky was forcibly entered into a wilderness rehabilitation in Utah at the age of seventeen.[2]

Career

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Lansky studied at Vassar College and The New School, where he graduated with a degree in creative writing. Subsequently he worked as a freelance music critic, contributing to New York magazine, The Atlantic, Esquire, and Out, among others. Lansky joined the editorial staff of Time[1] in 2014 and became their West Coast editor in 2018. He interviewed and profiled Taylor Swift for Time after she was picked as the Person of the Year in 2023.[3]

In 2016, he released his first book The Gilded Razor, a memoir of his troubled teenage years.[4] Lansky's debut novel, Broken People, was published by Hanover Square Press in 2020.[5] In 2023, it was reported that he was the ghostwriter of Britney Spears' memoir, The Woman in Me.[6]

Lansky was an executive producer of Tommy Dorfman’s directorial debut I Wish You All the Best (2024) and was a co-writer of the sequel I Know What You Did Last Summer (2025).[7]

Personal life

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As of 2018, Lansky lives in Los Angeles.[8]

Bibliography

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Filmography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Sam Lansky is an American journalist, author, and screenwriter recognized for his memoir detailing adolescent addiction and his editorial role at Time magazine.[1][2] Lansky, who grew up in Portland, Oregon, and spent his teenage years in New York City, chronicled his struggles with substance abuse and recovery in The Gilded Razor (2016), a work praised for its candid exploration of a privileged youth's descent into dependency.[1][3] His debut novel, Broken People (2020), examines themes of self-doubt and hallucinogenic retreats through a queer protagonist's journey.[4] Lansky joined Time's editorial staff in 2014, advancing to West Coast editor in 2018, where he contributed profiles including one of Taylor Swift following her designation as Time's 2017 Person of the Year.[5][6] His journalism has appeared in outlets such as The Atlantic, Esquire, and Grantland.[2] In screenwriting, he co-wrote the sequel to I Know What You Did Last Summer and served as executive producer on I Wish You All the Best (2024).[7] Reports indicate he assisted in shaping Britney Spears' memoir The Woman in Me, though official credits remain unconfirmed.[8][9]

Early life and education

Upbringing in Portland and family influences

Lansky was born in 1988 and raised in Portland, Oregon, in a fervently religious household that emphasized traditional values, which later contributed to internal conflicts over his sexuality.[10][11] His early childhood unfolded in a stable family environment where he felt nurtured within his parents' marriage, fostering a sense of security amid the city's progressive, alternative "crunchy" culture.[12][13] At age 11, during sixth grade at a Portland arts school, Lansky came out as gay, navigating the tension between his religious upbringing and emerging identity without adequate emotional resources at the time.[13][10] This period also saw the onset of substance experimentation, with drug use emerging as a concern before his family's relocation.[12][14] The announcement of his parents' divorce in Portland disrupted this foundation, profoundly affecting Lansky by shattering the familial stability he had known and precipitating his move to New York City with his father.[15][12] This event amplified existing struggles, as the religious framework of his upbringing clashed with personal turmoil, setting the stage for deeper addictive patterns in adolescence.[16][10]

Adolescence in New York City

Following his parents' divorce, Lansky relocated from Portland, Oregon, to Manhattan in 2004 at age 16 to live with his father, the executive director of a nonprofit organization housed at Rockefeller Center.[12] The family resided in a sublet apartment, where his father granted him a credit card and cash allowances, resulting in minimal supervision amid the fast-paced urban environment.[12] Lansky enrolled as a high school junior at the Dwight School, an exclusive preparatory institution on Manhattan's Upper West Side known for its rigorous academics and affluent student body.[12] He pursued Ivy League admission with strong academic performance, positioning himself as an exemplary student by his senior year at age 17.[1] The school's competitive atmosphere, coupled with the privileges of upper-class New York City youth—including financial support from hands-off divorced parents—provided Lansky with considerable autonomy and access to the city's nightlife and social circles.[17] Openly gay since age 11, Lansky engaged with Manhattan's adult-oriented scenes, forming connections with older men encountered online, in bars, or at clubs, which exposed him to a hedonistic lifestyle beyond typical teenage experiences.[12] [17] This period of relative freedom and immersion in elite urban culture laid the groundwork for his later challenges, as he began experimenting with substances such as cocaine—initially encountered prior to the move—and prescription drugs like Adderall and Xanax, sourced through a physician recommended by the school.[12]

Addiction struggles and path to recovery

Lansky's struggles with addiction began during his mid-teens while attending an elite Manhattan prep school, where he initially experimented with prescription painkillers obtained illicitly.[18] By age 17, in his final year of high school, his substance use had escalated into a severe dependency, involving the freebasing of crystal methamphetamine and other hard drugs, which he financed through prostitution and other risky behaviors.[12] [14] This period marked a profound duality in his life: outward success as an all-star student with Ivy League aspirations contrasted sharply with private chaos, including repeated cycles of bingeing, withdrawal, and near-fatal incidents that eroded his physical and mental health.[19] The depths of his addiction culminated around 2008, when, at age 19, Lansky experienced a breaking point during a drug-fueled episode in San Francisco, waking up sober for the first time in years and committing to abstinence.[20] [21] Prior attempts at moderation had failed, underscoring the compulsive nature of his dependency, which he later attributed to underlying psychological vulnerabilities rather than mere environmental influences.[22] His path to recovery involved abrupt cessation without formal inpatient treatment detailed publicly, followed by sustained sobriety achieved through personal resolve and lifestyle restructuring; by January 2016, he had maintained over seven years of abstinence, crediting it as foundational to his subsequent professional achievements.[10] In reflections published a decade into recovery, Lansky described sobriety not as a linear triumph but as an ongoing process of confronting residual impulses and rebuilding intimacy, having entered college and early career milestones without substances.[20] [23] By 2020, with 12 years sober, he noted the challenges of maintaining recovery amid isolation, such as during the COVID-19 quarantine, yet emphasized its causal role in enabling clarity and productivity absent during active addiction.[21] [24] These accounts, drawn primarily from his memoir The Gilded Razor and personal essays, highlight recovery's empirical demands—abstinence yielding measurable gains in stability—over narratives romanticizing relapse or harm reduction.[22]

Journalistic career

Early writing and contributions to publications

Lansky initiated his professional writing endeavors while pursuing a Bachelor of Arts in literary studies at The New School, graduating in 2012, where he maintained a personal blog dedicated to music criticism that attracted attention from industry contacts and paved the way for freelance opportunities.[5] Post-graduation, he established himself as a freelance music and culture journalist, with one of his earliest documented contributions appearing in Grantland on September 10, 2012, titled "The Unstoppable (and Terrifying) Rise of K-Pop Fandom," which analyzed the intense organizational dynamics and global expansion of K-pop enthusiast communities.[25] He also contributed pieces to MTV's Buzzworthy blog, focusing on entertainment trends.[25] Throughout the early 2010s, Lansky broadened his portfolio with freelance articles on pop culture, music, and celebrity commentary for outlets including New York magazine, The Atlantic, Rolling Stone, Esquire, Out, and Cosmopolitan, often exploring themes in contemporary media and fandom.[4] These contributions highlighted his emerging voice in cultural criticism, predating his staff positions and emphasizing empirical observations of audience behaviors over speculative narratives.[25]

Role at Time magazine

Lansky joined Time magazine in 2014 as deputy culture editor, where he contributed to coverage of entertainment and cultural figures.[5] In this capacity, he wrote profiles of prominent artists including Madonna, Adele, Nicki Minaj, and Ariana Grande, focusing on their careers and cultural impact.[5] By October 2018, Lansky had advanced to the role of West Coast editor, based in Los Angeles and overseeing entertainment reporting with an emphasis on Hollywood and celebrity journalism.[4] His tenure in this position, which extended through at least 2023, involved editing content and conducting in-depth interviews with A-list celebrities, contributing to Time's cultural commentary on music, film, and media.[8] [26] A highlight of his work was authoring the December 2023 profile of Taylor Swift, selected as Time's Person of the Year, in which he explored her evolution as a storyteller and the role of narrative in her public image.[27] Lansky remained a contributing editor as of October 2023, producing occasional pieces for the magazine.[8] By mid-2025, sources described him as the former West Coast editor, indicating a shift away from full-time editorial duties while maintaining affiliations through contributions.[28]

Notable articles and cultural commentary

Lansky's journalism frequently delves into pop culture, celebrity influence, and entertainment trends, often blending analysis with interviews. One of his most prominent contributions is the TIME Person of the Year profile on Taylor Swift, published December 6, 2023, which credited her with reshaping music industry economics and fan engagement through the Eras Tour, the first to exceed $1 billion in revenue.[27] In the piece, Lansky observed that Swift's cultural dominance made recounting her achievements "almost beside the point," emphasizing her narrative control over her image and discography re-recordings as a response to past industry disputes.[27] The article drew from extensive interviews, including Swift's reflections on her career trajectory and public scrutiny. Beyond profiles, Lansky has offered commentary on film and music. In a 2023 interview with Greta Gerwig, he explored the blockbuster impact of Barbie, which grossed over $1.4 billion worldwide, with Gerwig discussing its satirical take on consumerism and gender roles alongside hints at her adaptation of The Chronicles of Narnia.[29] Earlier, in a March 5, 2014, Time entertainment post, he highlighted Katy Perry's concise critique of pop music's formulaic nature during a performance, underscoring shifts in the genre toward self-aware production amid Perry's Prism era sales exceeding 4 million copies globally. These works reflect Lansky's focus on how artists navigate commercial success and authenticity in media-saturated environments.

Literary works

Memoir: The Gilded Razor (2016)

The Gilded Razor: A Memoir, Lansky's debut book, was published on January 12, 2016, by Gallery Books, an imprint of Simon & Schuster.[30] The 320-page work chronicles Lansky's adolescent struggles with addiction and identity in a privileged New York City environment, spanning roughly from age 11 to 19.[18] It details his dual existence as a high-achieving prep school student pursuing Ivy League admission while secretly engaging in heavy drug use—including prescription pills and cocaine—and anonymous sexual encounters with older men, which escalated to life-threatening risks.[18] [31] The narrative traces Lansky's descent into addiction amid family relocation and personal turmoil, followed by interventions such as a Utah boot camp and a New Orleans psychiatric ward, culminating in sobriety.[18] Central themes include the interplay of privilege and self-destruction, the formation of gay identity through risky behaviors, and the psychological toll of maintaining appearances.[30] Lansky employs a raw, confessional style marked by biting humor, unrelenting self-awareness, and vivid, sometimes semigraphic depictions of drug highs, sexual experiences, and near-fatal episodes, which propel the reader through escalating crises.[30] [18] The memoir's strongest passages reflect on moments of clarity during rehabilitation, evoking a sense of wonder amid recovery.[30] Reception praised the book's honesty and prose, with George Hodgman describing it as featuring "virtuosic" writing, Bill Clegg calling it a "powerful addition to the literature of active addiction and recovery," and Susan Cheever hailing it as "one of the best portraits about the implacable power of addiction."[18] A New York Times review of Lansky's later work characterized The Gilded Razor as possessing "searing frankness" akin to Augustinian confession, highlighting its account of prodigious substance abuse and teenage recovery.[31] Kirkus Reviews deemed it candid and eye-opening but noted its intimacy and graphic elements might overwhelm some readers.[30] The memoir received no major literary awards and did not achieve bestseller status, though it garnered attention for its unflinching portrayal of youth addiction within elite circles.[30]

Novel: Broken People (2020)

Broken People is Sam Lansky's debut novel, published on June 9, 2020, by Hanover Square Press.[32][33] The 304-page work follows a first-person narrator named Sam, a sober gay writer who has relocated from New York to Los Angeles and grapples with persistent emotional turmoil despite achieving professional success and recovery from addiction.[24] Seeking radical transformation, the protagonist joins a three-day ayahuasca retreat led by a shaman, during which hallucinogenic experiences force confrontations with past traumas, failed romantic relationships with men, and insecurities related to body image, loneliness, and self-worth.[31][33] The novel explores themes of personal healing through psychedelic therapy, the lingering effects of queer identity struggles, and the limitations of self-improvement in addressing deep psychological wounds.[34] Lansky draws on autobiographical elements, including his own sobriety and experiences with intimacy in the gay community, to depict how anxiety and insecurity can manifest as paranoia and physical illness, though presented through fictional narrative.[21][35] Critics noted the book's raw examination of depression, HIV-related fears, and relational patterns, but some argued its testimonial style to ayahuasca's purported benefits—such as reliving and resolving past events—would resonate more strongly as nonfiction rather than veiled memoir.[33][36] Reception was generally positive for its emotional honesty and life-affirming tone, with reviewers praising Lansky's incisive prose on vulnerability and hope amid bleak introspection, though it drew comparisons to works by Sally Rooney and Hanya Yanagihara for its introspective queer protagonists.[31][34] The novel ends on an optimistic note, emphasizing incremental self-acceptance over total reinvention, as the protagonist emerges from the retreat physically and emotionally exhausted but with tentative insights into inescapable aspects of identity.[34] Lansky has described shifting to fiction from his prior memoir to fictionalize therapeutic processes while critiquing how self-criticism perpetuates stagnation.[35]

Ghostwriting and collaborative projects

Lansky collaborated on Britney Spears' memoir The Woman in Me, published by Simon & Schuster on October 24, 2023, under a reported $15 million deal.[8] He joined the project as one of three key writers after Ada Calhoun produced an initial draft, working with Luke Dempsey to shape the narrative from Spears' personal accounts and interviews.[37] [8] This marked Lansky's first ghostwriting effort, leveraging his prior experience as a memoirist and journalist to structure the book around themes of fame, conservatorship, and resilience.[8] Spears acknowledged the contributions of her collaborators in the book's preface without naming individuals, noting the process was "exciting, heart-wrenching, and emotional" while reliving her experiences. The memoir, narrated primarily by Michelle Williams in audiobook form, debuted at number one on the New York Times bestseller list and sold over 1.4 million copies in its first week across formats.[8] No other ghostwriting or major collaborative literary projects by Lansky have been publicly documented.[37]

Screenwriting career

Entry into film and television

Lansky's entry into screenwriting occurred through rewrites on the 2022 Netflix comedy Do Revenge, directed by Jennifer Kaytin Robinson from an original screenplay by Leah McKendrick.[38] This project represented his initial credited contribution to film, building on his established career in journalism and fiction writing, where he served as West Coast Editor at Time magazine and authored novels including Broken People (2020).[39] His involvement likely stemmed from industry proximity gained via entertainment coverage at Time, facilitating opportunities in Hollywood scripting amid a period of expanding his portfolio beyond print media.[26] Subsequent to Do Revenge, Lansky adapted Mason Deaver's 2019 young adult novel I Wish You All the Best into a 2024 feature film screenplay, marking his first full adaptation credit and further solidifying his transition to narrative work for screen.[7] These early efforts highlight a shift from long-form journalistic and literary prose to concise, dialogue-driven structures suited for visual media, with Lansky drawing on personal themes of identity and recovery explored in his prior memoirs.[39] By 2025, this foundation led to co-writing the reboot of I Know What You Did Last Summer with Robinson, adapting Lois Duncan's novel for a modern slasher audience.[40]

Key projects and credits

Lansky co-wrote the screenplay for the 2025 slasher film I Know What You Did Last Summer, a sequel to the 1997 original, alongside director Jennifer Kaytin Robinson, based on a story by Robinson and Leah McKendrick.[41] The plot centers on five friends who inadvertently cause a fatal car accident, cover it up, and face pursuit by a hook-wielding killer a year later.[39] Released theatrically by Sony Pictures on July 18, 2025, the film marked Lansky's feature-length screenwriting debut, drawing on his background in journalism and fiction to emphasize character-driven tension over nostalgia.[40] In developing the script, Lansky contributed rewrites to an initial draft by McKendrick, focusing on authentic interpersonal dynamics among a modern ensemble cast including Madelyn Cline and Chase Sui Wonders.[28] He has described his process as agenda-free, prioritizing empathy for flawed characters to create textured narratives suitable for the genre's moral ambiguities.[39] The project originated from Sony's interest in reviving the franchise, with Lansky brought on board due to his prior production experience and narrative versatility.[42] Beyond writing, Lansky served as an executive producer on the 2024 drama I Wish You All the Best, Tommy Dorfman's directorial debut adapting Mason Deaver's novel about a nonbinary teenager navigating family rejection and self-discovery.[43] His involvement supported the film's independent production, which premiered in select theaters and on streaming platforms, though it did not involve screenwriting credits for Lansky.[7] Earlier associations, such as special thanks in the credits of the 2022 Netflix comedy Do Revenge, reflect peripheral contributions rather than core writing roles.[44]

Personal life

Sexuality and relationships

Lansky identifies as gay and came out publicly at the age of 11.[12] His early sexual experiences, beginning in high school, involved hookups with older men encountered online, in bars, and clubs, often intertwined with his contemporaneous drug addiction and abuse of substances like cocaine and prescription pills.[45] [46] These encounters, detailed in his 2016 memoir The Gilded Razor, reflected a period of self-destructive behavior amid efforts to reconcile his sexuality with a religious upbringing, though Lansky has stated that his coming out itself was not particularly difficult.[10] [14] In his writings and interviews, Lansky has explored broader themes of gay male intimacy, including body image struggles, loneliness, and the pursuit of connection within the community, as seen in his 2020 novel Broken People, which features a protagonist mirroring aspects of his own single, sober life in Los Angeles.[21] [35] He has noted the frequent erasure of explicit gay sexual experiences in mainstream culture, emphasizing raw depictions in his work to address such voids.[47] No public records detail long-term romantic partnerships or marriages for Lansky as of 2025.

Sobriety and mental health

Lansky achieved sobriety from alcohol and drugs at age 17 in 2008, following intervention by his father and treatment at a wilderness-based rehabilitation program in Utah.[17] His memoir The Gilded Razor (2016) details this period of adolescent addiction, characterized by heavy use of cocaine, ecstasy, and other substances amid a privileged Manhattan upbringing, culminating in recovery that emphasized abstinence and therapeutic structure.[18] By May 2018, he marked ten years of continuous sobriety, reflecting in a personal essay on the challenges of early recovery, including social isolation and the psychological shift from chaos to stability.[20] Despite sustained sobriety, Lansky has described persistent mental health difficulties, including chronic anxiety, self-doubt, and a pervasive inner critic that predated and outlasted his substance use.[21] In a 2020 Time essay, he recounted how the COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated these issues, evoking a familiar sense of impending crisis akin to his pre-sobriety mindset, though managed without relapse through routine and professional support.[48] His novel Broken People (2020), drawing from autobiographical elements, explores post-recovery struggles with body image dissatisfaction, loneliness, and emotional voids, portraying sobriety as a foundation that did not fully resolve underlying psychological patterns.[23] Lansky has emphasized in interviews that maintaining sobriety amid quarantine required deliberate practices like exercise and therapy to safeguard mental equilibrium, underscoring the distinction between physical abstinence and enduring emotional vulnerabilities.[24]

Reception and influence

Critical responses to works

Lansky's 2016 memoir The Gilded Razor, detailing his teenage struggles with drug addiction and privilege, received praise for its raw honesty and vivid prose. Kirkus Reviews described it as a "candid, eye-opening memoir" that unflinchingly explores the author's descent into substance abuse while maintaining high academic performance.[30] Publishers Weekly highlighted its "searing, savagely honest" account of his "wild days," noting the work's unflinching depiction of youthful excess.[49] The memoir was positioned as a significant contribution to addiction literature, with endorsements emphasizing its compulsive readability and emotional depth.[18] Critics appreciated The Gilded Razor's balance of specificity and universality, drawing comparisons to confessional narratives in American literature. Lambda Literary Review observed its tortuous, blow-by-blow recounting of self-destructive behavior, likening it to Bret Easton Ellis's style but grounded in nonfiction reality.[50] While some reader feedback noted stylistic challenges in sustaining intensity, professional reviews focused on its therapeutic candor and appeal to audiences interested in recovery stories, without major detractors in major outlets. Lansky's 2020 novel Broken People, an autofictional exploration of a sober writer's ayahuasca retreat to confront lingering anxieties, earned acclaim for its introspective humor and psychological acuity. In a New York Times review, Dwight Garner commended Lansky's transition to fiction as that of a "talented writer... unsparingly honest, but also funny and mordant," praising how the narrative uses personal experience to illuminate broader themes of self-doubt and healing.[31] Publishers Weekly called it a "riveting novel," appreciating its portrayal of post-memoir fame's discontents and the protagonist's internal battles. The work aggregated positive ratings across outlets, with Book Marks citing seven reviews that emphasized its mesmerizing, raw descriptions of emotional turmoil.[51] Responses to Broken People underscored Lansky's evolution from memoirist, with critics valuing the shift to fiction for allowing ironic distance on sobriety's challenges. USA Today noted his "keen observations" on bodily and psychic insecurities, though it implied room for more affirmative resolution.[24] Kirkus framed it as a continuation of his autofictional vein, tracking a character's further "adventures" in self-examination amid Los Angeles media life.[33] Overall, the novel solidified Lansky's reputation for incisive, character-driven storytelling, with minimal controversy in literary circles.

Public perception and endorsements

Sam Lansky is regarded in literary and journalistic communities as a skilled chronicler of personal trauma, addiction recovery, and queer identity, with his work often praised for its emotional candor and stylistic precision. His 2016 memoir The Gilded Razor, detailing his struggles with substance abuse and suicidal ideation, was acclaimed for providing a modern perspective on addiction, with reviewers highlighting its unflinching self-examination as a vital addition to recovery narratives. Similarly, his 2020 novel Broken People, which follows a protagonist's ayahuasca retreat amid unresolved psychological wounds, earned commendations for its incisive portrayal of gay male body image issues and the limits of spiritual quick fixes, as noted in The New York Times review describing Lansky as a "piercing observer" of such dynamics.[31] Lansky's ghostwriting contributions, particularly to Britney Spears' 2023 memoir The Woman in Me, have amplified his visibility, positioning him as a collaborator capable of shaping raw personal accounts into commercially successful, if polemically charged, texts that resonated with audiences seeking insider perspectives on celebrity conservatorships. The book's release, co-authored with Lansky, topped bestseller lists and sparked widespread discussion, though some readers and critics observed its vengeful undertones as potentially amplified by editorial choices favoring narrative intensity over nuance.[52] In journalism, Lansky's authorship of Time magazine's 2023 Person of the Year feature on Taylor Swift garnered attention for its detailed exploration of her cultural dominance, yet faced scrutiny from observers who argued it exemplified access-driven reporting, prioritizing sympathetic portrayal over rigorous critique amid Swift's influence on media narratives.[27] Such perceptions underscore broader debates on journalistic independence in celebrity coverage, where Lansky's proximity to subjects has been cited as influencing output tone. Endorsements of his work remain primarily from literary peers and outlets rather than high-profile public figures, with limited evidence of direct celebrity backing beyond collaborative projects.[53]

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