
Moby's career has been a story of extremes and paradoxes. This intense musician (real name: Richard Melville Hall) has been an underground New York City DJ, a punk rock drummer, and a creator of euphoric and trancelike dance music who jumps around stage like a dervish. In 1999, he took the dance clubs by storm with Play, which sold more than nine million copies. He is also a highly aware environmentalist and social commentator and a sharply astute advocate of alternative lifestyles.
Literature teachers may feel a special connection to the eclectic artist. He got his nickname after Moby Dick, which was penned by his great-great-grand-uncle Herman Melville.
Nine chart-topping albums later, he has released a compilation album called Go: The Very Best of Moby. He says of his life as a solo artist, "Working in my studio at home, I just try to make music that pulls at my heartstrings and affects me in a very profound way. If it does that to me, hopefully there is a chance it will do it to other people as well."
Ideally, a teacher should be patient, enthusiastic, ideologically and intellectually flexible, and committed to the growth and development of his or her students. Oh, and noncompetitive.
I'm a nerd -- winning the townwide spelling bee in fifth grade.
Being rejected from the choir in sixth grade. Ironic, huh?
I have no idea. I was a punk rocker and a nerd, neither of which made me terribly popular.
I've only gone to public schools.
Reading. Literature. I'm not sure what it was called at the time. Anything that involved fiction.
Somehow, make it less regimented and rote. When I was in school, we had a lot of memorization without context. History is fascinating, but not when it's reduced to decontextualized times, dates, and names.
Nothing.
Anger management, emotional self-awareness, small-business start-up skills.
That all sunblock over SPF 15 is equally effective.
Nothing as of yet.
Vegan tacos.
Name Five Successful People Who Didn't Do Well in School.
Alas, I'm currently without a prom date.