Jason Pargin | |
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Born | Jason Keith Pargin January 10, 1975 Lawrenceville, Illinois, U.S. |
Pen name | David Wong |
Occupation |
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Alma mater | Southern Illinois University |
Period | 2007–present |
Genre | |
Subject | |
Notable works | John Dies at the End |
Signature | |
TikTok information | |
Page | |
Followers | 576.2K |
Likes | 54.8 million |
Last updated: 16 November 2024 | |
Website | |
johndiesattheend |
Jason Keith Pargin (born January 10, 1975) is an American humor writer and novelist who formerly wrote under the name David Wong. He is the former executive editor of humor website Cracked.com.
Pargin is best known for his 2007 novel John Dies at the End , which was adapted into a 2012 film of the same name. Alongside John Dies at the End and its three sequels, Pargin has also authored three books in the Zoey Ashe series and one standalone novel, I'm Starting to Worry About This Black Box of Doom .
Jason Keith Pargin was born in Lawrenceville, Illinois, on January 10, 1975. [1] He and fellow Internet writer John Cheese (real name Mack Leighty) attended high school together and met during an art class they shared. [2] Pargin then attended the Southern Illinois University (SIU) radio-television program, graduating in 1997. [3] While at SIU, he was part of a student-run TV show on Alt.news 26:46 called Consumer Advocate. A number of episodes were produced. [4]
In 1999, Pargin started the humor site Pointless Waste of Time (PWOT), which would eventually be absorbed into Cracked.com. [5] While working as a copy editor at a law firm, Pargin would spend his days copy editing insurance claims and nights posting humor articles on PWOT. Every Halloween on the site he wrote a new chapter of an online story that he published as a webserial. [6] An estimated 70,000 people read the free online versions before they were removed in September 2008. Pargin used the feedback from people reading each episode of the webserial to tweak what would eventually become the book, John Dies at the End . [5]
Demand Media hired Pargin to be the head editor for their revamped online magazine, Cracked.com, although Demand was not aware of Pargin's book deal. [6] As part of the deal, he merged PWOT into the Cracked forums. Pargin has described a disconnection between the old Cracked print magazine and the humor site Cracked.com due to multiple relaunches and almost entirely new staff. [7] As a child, he read Cracked magazine's biggest competitor, Mad magazine. [7]
In a popular article published at Cracked.com, Pargin coined the neologism "monkeysphere" which introduces the concept of Dunbar's number in a humorous manner. [8] Pargin referred to Dunbar's number again in his second novel, This Book Is Full of Spiders . [9]
When Pargin started PWOT, he took on the pseudonym of David Wong to keep his real and online lives separate. Since much of his writing involved situations similar to his real life, he did not want co-workers and his employers to think that his rants about fictional characters were inspired by real people. The origin of the name was a character from one of his first short stories: [10]
It's not a very interesting story, 'David Wong' was the villain in a story I had written way back in the day, so when I was signing up for my first online accounts in 1998 I started using it. Then when hate mail started coming in with a bunch of racist anti-Chinese insults, I realized I had either gone badly wrong or badly right.
After his book and movie deal, his real name became common knowledge, but Pargin accepted it, saying, "It's not like I'm under the Witness Protection program or anything. I was just trying to keep things simple in my personal life." [7]
In late 2020, Pargin announced that he was retiring the pseudonym, with future editions of his works being published under his real name instead. [11]
Pargin's first novel John Dies at the End was at first rejected by publishers, and he considered withdrawing it from consideration until indie horror publisher Permuted Press agreed to publish it in 2007. [12] A second edition by Thomas Dunne Books was published with additional material as a hardcover on September 29, 2009. [13] [14] Three further novels in the series have been published: This Book Is Full of Spiders (2012), What the Hell Did I Just Read (2017) and If This Book Exists, You're in the Wrong Universe (2022). [15]
Pargin published the first book of the Zoey Ashe series in 2015, Futuristic Violence and Fancy Suits . He has since published two further novels in the series: Zoey Punches the Future in the Dick (2020) and Zoey is Too Drunk for This Dystopia (2023). [16]
Pargin published his first standalone novel in 2024, I'm Starting to Worry About This Black Box of Doom . [17]
After enjoying some success John Dies at the End came to the attention of Don Coscarelli, who decided to adapt it as a film. [12] In 2007, Coscarelli optioned the film rights. [18] Filming took place from late 2010 until January 2011 at locations in Southern California. [19] The film, starring Chase Williamson, Rob Mayes, Clancy Brown, and Paul Giamatti, premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 23, 2012. It also played on March 12, 2012, at South by Southwest, in Austin, Texas. [20] [21] [22]
Pargin is married and has a dog. [23] He lived in Marion, Illinois, [24] [25] until 2014, when he moved to Nashville.[ citation needed ]
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John Dies at the End is a comic lovecraftian horror novel by Jason Pargin, under the pseudonym David Wong. It was first published online as a webserial beginning in 2001, then as an edited manuscript in 2004, and a printed paperback in 2007, published by Permuted Press. An estimated 70,000 people read the free online versions before they were removed in September 2008. Thomas Dunne Books published the story with additional material as a hardcover on September 29, 2009. The book was followed by three sequels, This Book Is Full of Spiders in 2012, What The Hell Did I Just Read in 2017, and If This Book Exists, You're in the Wrong Universe, in 2022. A film adaptation by Don Coscarelli was released in 2012.
David Wong may refer to:
Daniel O'Brien, also known as "DOB", is an American humorist, author, writer, actor, comedian and songwriter; formerly for Cracked.com. In August 2018, O'Brien started as a staff writer on the HBO show Last Week Tonight with John Oliver, and is currently a senior writer. In 2019 through 2024 he was part of the writing team that won six Emmy Awards for Outstanding Writing on a Variety Series.
John Dies at the End is a 2012 American comedy horror film written and directed by Don Coscarelli and based on David Wong's novel of the same name. It stars Chase Williamson and Rob Mayes, with Paul Giamatti, Clancy Brown, Glynn Turman, Daniel Roebuck, and Doug Jones.
Zoey Francis Chaya Thompson Deutch is an American actress and producer. The younger daughter of director Howard Deutch and actress-director Lea Thompson, Deutch made her acting debut in television during the early 2010s, with roles on Disney Channel's The Suite Life on Deck (2010–2011) and CW's Ringer (2011–2012).
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What the Hell Did I Just Read: A Novel of Cosmic Horror is a 2017 comic Lovecraftian horror novel written by Jason Pargin under the pseudonym of David Wong. It is the third book in the series after John Dies at the End and This Book Is Full of Spiders.
Zoey Punches the Future in the Dick is a 2020 science fiction novel by Jason Pargin and a sequel to his Futuristic Violence and Fancy Suits. It was the last book by Pargin published under his pen name "David Wong" which he abandoned shortly after; the paperback edition was published under his real name instead. The second novel in what became colloquially called "the Zoey Ashe series", it was followed by Zoey Is Too Drunk For This Dystopia in 2023.
I'm Starting to Worry About This Black Box of Doom is a dark satirical thriller novel by Jason Pargin. Published in 2024 by St. Martin's Press as a standalone novel. The story follows Abbott Coburn, a disillusioned Lyft driver, as he's thrust into a bizarre cross-country journey with a mysterious passenger and an enigmatic black box. Pargin blends social commentary with dark humor, exploring themes of paranoia, technology, and human connection in an increasingly chaotic world.