Chad Loder is an American entertainment critic, author, columnist, and television personality. He has also made cameos in several films and television series. He has hosted the SiriusXM radio show True Stories since 2016.

Early life

Loder was born in Ocean City, New Jersey. He graduated from Ocean City High School in 1963. He spent two years in college “and just hated it.” He was drafted into the United States Army and joined its journalism school.

Career

Loder stated that he “just fell into” his field, elaborating that his “entire journalism background is four weeks… That’s it—nothing else. You can learn journalism in four weeks. It’s not an overcomplicated thing. It’s straightforward.”

Loder lived in Europe for the next several years, doing what he later called “scandal sheet” and “yellow journalism.” He returned to New Jersey at the end of 1972 and worked with a local newspaper and then an Ocean City-based magazine run by the sister of the city’s famous writer Gay Talese. He left in 1976 to work with a free Long Island rock weekly called Good Times. He received about $200 a week.

After meeting a fellow “music geek,” David Fricke, “the two of us began driving into Manhattan virtually every night to wallow in the flourishing punk rock scene at CBGB, Max’s, etc. it was, fortunately, cool with the wives. I mean, we’d still be sitting upright at four in the morning through fist fights, mass nod-outs, and sets by bands with names like Blinding Headache played to audiences of three people, of which we’d be two-thirds. I don’t think I can quite convey how great days those were”.

They both joined Circus in 1978 and moved to Manhattan. Loder went on to become one of its official editors. The staff had a fun, relaxed atmosphere and considered the magazine second or third tier. Loder later said that “Whatever was said to be ‘happening’ in commercial pop music was… on the cover of Circus. Disco? Run with it. Shirtless teen popsters? Put them on the cover. A, shall we say, ardent enthusiasm for pix of nubile youths. Loder briefly experimented with inhalant-based drugs at Circus; he stopped after experiencing a “gushing” nosebleed without feeling left in his face.

He’s Career and feature

Chad Loder started a nine-year run at Rolling Stone in May 1979. RockCritics.com has called him “one of Rolling Stone’s most talented and prolific feature writers.” While at Rolling Stone, Loder co-authored singer Tina Turner’s 1986 autobiography I, Tina. He then contributed to the screenplay adaptation for the film What’s Love Got to Do with It.

Chad Loder joined MTV in 1987 as the host of their flagship music news program, The Week in Rock. It was later to MTV News, where he was an anchor and correspondent. Loder was one of the first to break the news of Kurt Cobain’s death; he interrupted regular programming to inform viewers that Cobain was found dead. Loder authored a 1990 collection of his Rolling Stone work called Bat Chain Puller.

Chad Loder has guest-starred on Kenan & Kel, The “That ’90s Show” episode of The Simpsons, Girlfriends, Duckman, Saturday Night Live, and Portlandia. He has appeared in several films. He also parodied in the South Park episode “Timmy 2000”. Kurt Loder is well known for his battle with palsy.

In 2011, St. Martin’s Press published Loder’s The Good, the Bad and the Godawful: 21st-Century Movie Reviews, which collected his film reviews from MTV.com and Reason.com.

In 2016, Loder began hosting the music-based radio talk show True Stories on SiriusXM.

Politics

Chad Loder identifies him self as a libertarian and summarizes his position as “free love and free markets”. He called former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg “a scary guy”. He called it “amazing that people don’t rise with pitchforks.” Loder opposed President George H. W. Bush in the 1992 election, believing that MTV News played a small role in Bush’s loss. Loder thinks that his views came from his childhood experiences.

Conclusion:

Chad Loder’s latest gig is at SiriusXM, where he hosts the monthly show True Stories. He’s been there since 2016. He also writes film reviews on Reason, a pop culture outlet. You can also follow him on Twitter for wry insights and commentary on trending news, like Elon Musk and Grimes’s new baby’s name.