Tom Teicholz
Santa Monica, CA tomteicholz.contently.com

Tom Teicholz is an award winning journalist and producer who has created print, video and social media content for Intel, The Museum of Tolerance and The Milken Family Foundation; and whose work has appeared on The Huffington Post, Newsweek.com, The NY Times Magazine, and The LA Times Op-Ed page. He also has ghostwritten, edited and published essays, treatises and books for private clients.

37K Words | 865 Followers
  • 757
    Shares
  • 408
    Tweets
  • 341
    Likes
41
clips for
7
publications

Tom Teicholz's articles for

Show all

Put down your “Da Vinci Code.” Set aside your “South Beach Diet.” Let your kaballah red string drop off your wrist. I’m here to alert you to the next pop cultural phenom: a 12th-century philosopher popularly known as the Rambam. Just a few weeks ago, I attended the “Aloud” reading series at the Los Angeles […]

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2004 Tommywood
  • 0
    Shares
  • 0
    Tweets
  • 0
    Likes

Tommywood was expecting a Hollywood moment. Publicity guru extraordinaire Michael Levine had arranged for me to meet legendary Producer Robert Evans at his longtime lair, Woodland, the former home of Greta Garbo. I turned north of Sunset Boulevard and, like William Holden, wondered what I was getting myself into. It’s not that I didn’t appreciate […]

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2004 Tommywood
  • 0
    Shares
  • 0
    Tweets
  • 0
    Likes

It’s Sunday night and a half-dozen people are onstage at McCabe’s Guitar Shop in Santa Monica. Jumpin’ Jim Beloff and his wife, Leapin’ Liz, are leading the sold-out crowd as they strum their ukuleles and sing “Farewell.” This is the climax to Uketopia, Beloff’s annual celebration of that four-stringed wonder: the ukulele. It is an […]

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2004 Tommywood
  • 0
    Shares
  • 0
    Tweets
  • 0
    Likes

Among the allergens being released this June is a remake of “Around the World in 80 Days,” the Jules Verne novel that launched a thousand travel articles. Perhaps Jackie Chan will inhabit the role of Passepartout in a fashion that surpasses the achievements of Cantinflas, “the world’s greatest comedian,” according to Charlie Chaplin, a person […]

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2004 Tommywood
  • 0
    Shares
  • 0
    Tweets
  • 0
    Likes

Earlier this month I attended the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation research benefit for stem-cell research. Although James Taylor’s five-song set and Nancy Reagan’s acceptance speech were each memorable and moving, what I found myself thinking about most that evening was Eric Lax’s new book “The Mold in Dr. Florey’s Coat” (Henry Holt & Company, $25), […]

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2004 Tommywood
  • 0
    Shares
  • 0
    Tweets
  • 0
    Likes

The last episode of “Friends” airs May 6, and while we may all express a collective sigh of relief at the end of more than a year of shameless hype and exploitation, it doesn’t mean that we can’t stop to reflect on this moment in American cultural history. Or that we don’t care about whether […]

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2004 Tommywood
  • 0
    Shares
  • 0
    Tweets
  • 0
    Likes

Jewish history has tradition of escaping and escapism It’s Sunday and I’m rushing over to my local comic book store, Hi De Ho, in Santa Monica to buy issue No. 1 of “The Amazing Adventures of the Escapist.” If the name is familiar, it’s not because you used to collect “The Escapist” in your youth, […]

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2004 Tommywood
  • 0
    Shares
  • 0
    Tweets
  • 0
    Likes

I’ve been thinking a lot recently about French philosopher, journalist and filmmaker Bernard-Henri Levy (only in France can philosopher hyphenate with filmmaker). We had lunch about six months ago. At the time, Levy’s English-language edition of “Who Killed Daniel Pearl?”(Melville House), had just been published. The book had received a mixed response for its controversial […]

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2004 Tommywood
  • 0
    Shares
  • 0
    Tweets
  • 0
    Likes

I remember, as a child, trying in vain to stay up to see the ball fall on New Year’s Eve. In later years, high school brought concerts that went past midnight and college introduced all-nighters of the studying and partying kind. In the midnight hour came inspiration and revelation and dreams of new worlds to […]

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2004 Tommywood
  • 0
    Shares
  • 0
    Tweets
  • 0
    Likes

As winter chill gives way to spring sun, it’s not too early to start planning a summer trip to Budapest. Budapest, Hungary’s capital, straddles the Danube, with historic old Buda on the hill, and Pest with its atmospheric 19th century and Art Nouveau architecture. In recent years, many of the Budapest’s historic sites have been […]

Click here for reuse options!
Copyright 2004 Tommywood
  • 0
    Shares
  • 0
    Tweets
  • 0
    Likes