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Samuel J. "Sam" Slovick (born June 23, 1958) is an American actor, musician, and writer. ==Life and career== Slovick grew up in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.〔Bollier, Jeff (March 24, 2007). Oshkosh native nominated for Pulitzer Prize. ''Oshkosh Northwestern''〕 He currently lives in Topanga, California.〔Walker, Alissa (March 28, 2011). (A Video Series Giving a "Voice to the Voiceless" in L.A. ) GOOD〕 As an actor, he appeared in the movies ''Red Dawn'' (1984) and ''Home for the Holidays'' (1995), and the TV series ''Fame''. As a singer-songwriter, he was part of the group Louie Says. Slovick has written for ''Whole Life Times,'' ''LA Yoga'' magazine, and ''Good Magazine''. His work on Skid Row, Los Angeles for ''LA Weekly'' won a 2007 prize at The Magazine Awards of Western Publishing, was submitted for a Pulitzer Prize, and was made into a documentary.〔(Sam Slovick. ) ''LA Weekly''〕 In 2008, Slovick wrote a sexually graphic review of immigrant LGBT bar The Silver Platter near MacArthur Park.〔Slovick, Sam (October 2, 2008). (Best Tranny Bar: The Silver Platter. ) ''LA Weekly''〕 The review led to protests; it was later removed and Slovick apologized.〔Linthicum, Kate (July 13, 2012). (Outfest: Wu Tsang's 'Wildness' documents the Silver Platter scene. ) ''Los Angeles Times''〕〔Onion, Rebecca (March 10, 2012). (Capsule review: ‘Wildness.’ ) ''Austin American-Statesman''〕 His recent work for Mission and State includes (The People vs. Brian Tacadena ) and (Sacred Monsters ). He also recently released a documentary series for Participant Media's Take Part, (Scenes From The New Revolution ) and an essay on political resistance for SLAKE literary journal.〔(Big Tent Theory ), SLAKE LA〕 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Sam Slovick」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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