Warrior Bios
Editors in Chief
Chester comes from an immigrant Venezuelan family, and was blessed to settle in New York City only to be bum rushed to Houston, Texas. He graduated from the University of St. Thomas (he hadn’t heard of it either) where he studied communication, Spanish and philosophy, one of which he’s actually good at. Chester edited the school paper, despite its evil, liberal and anti-Catholic agenda, only to sell his soul to the Corporate devil. His work has appeared in Village Voice Media’s Houston Press and he used to manage the Even Mushroom Clouds music blog, and will always dance to The Cure’s “Close To Me” and Rod Stewart’s “Do Ya Think I’m Sexy?”
Greg grew up in Houston, TX where he avoided going to school and never really had a job to speak of. The trend continues. In addition to his work on Culture Warrior, he blogs for Wonkette and Raw Story. His work has also appeared in the Washington Post Magazine and on CNN.com. Greg lives in Brooklyn, NY and keeps his artwork and chronicles the pursuit of his dreams at gregwasserstrom.com.
Contributors
MICHELLE FRIEDRICHS
Bio coming soon.
ANNIE REBEKAH GARDNER
If there is a Wikipedia article written about Annie in the future, it will hopefully bill her as a scholar who changed the face of anthropology as we know it by knocking down Academia’s ivory towers and radically redistributing the bricks. At the very least, she hopes that Wikipedia will mention that she was consistently well-dressed, had a Protestant work ethic, and slept very little. Her research interests include but are not limited to cryptozoology, the Coptic Orthodox church, refugees and diaspora, and Egypt (the Motherland). She likes coffee and the song “Everywhere” by Fleetwood Mac.
KATHRYN HAMOUDAH
Bio coming soon.
MOLLY NORRIS
No way exists to author a bio that doesn’t reek of assholishness. This one is no exception. Molly treasures deep affection for the cities she’s dwelled in: Cleveland, Houston, Portland, Havana and DC (in this order.) She’s a broadcast journalism wannabe who adores radio documentary above all other disciplines. Her multimedia work has been featured on WorldBank.org and WashingtonPost.com. Since age 13, she has self-indulgently believed in playing the game to change the rules.







