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Louis Black is an American journalist and businessman who is the co-founder of The Austin Chronicle, an alternative weekly newspaper published in Austin, Texas, and was the newspaper's editor from its inception until his retirement on August 8, 2017.[1][2] He has written over 600 articles in his column in that newspaper.[3] Black is also the co-founder of the South by Southwest Festival,[4] also located in Austin, although the festival operates separately from the Chronicle. He also is a founding partner in Toronto's North by Northeast music and film festival.[citation needed]

Louis Black
Louis Black at the 69th Annual Peabody Awards
Louis Black at the 69th Annual Peabody Awards
BornTeaneck, New Jersey, U.S.
OccupationFounder, editor

Black was born in Teaneck, New Jersey where he was childhood friends with film critic Leonard Maltin and singer Phoebe Snow.[5] Maltin and Black attended Teaneck High School and regularly prowled the rep cinemas of Manhattan as teens before graduating in 1968.[6] He moved to Austin to study film at The University of Texas where he received a BFA in 1980,[7] and became knowledgeable about B-movies, including the work of Russ Meyer. Black helped run film nights at the university before starting the Chronicle with film friend Nick Barbaro.

Black was an original board member of the Austin Film Society and is a past president of that organization. In 2000, Texas Monthly Editor Evan Smith and Black working with AFS established the Texas Film Hall of Fame.[8]

He was executive producer of a documentary on Texan songwriter Townes Van Zandt.[9] In addition to serving as executive producer, he also directed a documentary about Austin director Richard Linklater which premiered on PBS's American Masters.[10] He appeared in the film The Devil and Daniel Johnston as Black was an early supporter of the singer.[11]

In October 2023 Black and the Austin Chronicle were sued for alleged harassment, abuse, and "sexual servitude."[12]

References

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  1. ^ Printing the Legend A brief history of Austin's improbable weekly, 28 years on
  2. ^ "Louis Black Announces Chronicle Retirement". August 8, 2017.
  3. ^ "Austin News, Events, Restaurants, Music - The Austin Chronicle".
  4. ^ Louis Black in Musicians Off the Record
  5. ^ Menconi, David. "SxSW @ 25: Texas Ex Louis Black reflects on the little festival he almost didn't start", The Alcalde, March / April 2011, pp. 38-43. Accessed September 14, 2011. "Black's career is idiosyncratic and it should be inspirational to anyone who doesn't quite fit in. His early years in Teaneck, N.J., were distinguished mostly by dyslexia, attention-deficit issues, tone-deafness, poor math skills, and poorer handwriting.... Before long, Black and [Leonard] Maltin were skipping after-school studies to go watch movies. 'I wasn't going to do any better in school, and Leonard wasn't going to do any worse,' Black says."
  6. ^ Black, Louis. "Page Two", The Austin Chronicle, October 4, 1996. Accessed February 12, 2020. "(Maltin had sold the first edition our senior year in high school).... Back in the summer of 1964, when Leonard and I were 13, we lived in Teaneck, New Jersey, just a short drive from New York City."
  7. ^ "Independent Lens . THE ORDER OF MYTHS . The Filmmakers - PBS". PBS.
  8. ^ "Louis Black". IMDb.
  9. ^ Be Here to Love Me: A Film about Townes Van Zandt Archived 2009-12-28 at the Wayback Machine
  10. ^ "Linklater Doc". 2016.
  11. ^ "The Devil and Daniel Johnston". 5 May 2006 – via IMDb.
  12. ^ "Austin Chronicle Co-Founder Louis Black Sued for Alleged Harassment, Abuse, and "Sexual Servitude"".
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Archival materials

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