Nick Rogers

Contributing Writer
Nick Rogers - Angela Smith
Nick Rogers - Angela Smith

Nick Rogers has been an editor and writer in the fields of arts & entertainment and features for the past 13 years. This isn't surprising for someone who, at age 8, stole his brothers' Cure, Poison and Genesis albums not for spite but for personal enjoyment and had parents cool enough to immediately rewind, and re-watch, "Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan" at his whim.

An Illinois native and award-winner both for features and opinion writing, Rogers began his professional career in 1995, at age 16 as a sports stringer for The Journal-Standard - a 20,000-plus-circulation daily in Freeport, Illinois. That progressed into: reviews of theatrical and home-video films; daily page design; and helping create the Community page - a compilation of news from surrounding small towns much like the one Rogers grew up in. (Lanark. Population: 1,500. Closest movie theater: 20 miles away. Number of stoplights in the county: One, and that took quite some time.) Rogers continued to write for The Journal-Standard until 2000.

In 1997, Rogers began studying journalism at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. After a year devoted to playing trumpet with the Marching Illini, his extracurricular activities reverted to entertainment writing. Starting as a film reviewer for buzz magazine - a weekly entertainment supplement to student newspaper The Daily Illini - Rogers eventually became the movies section editor, executive editor and, in his senior year, editor-in-chief of the magazine. He also reviewed everything from local restaurants to bad "Blair Witch" book spinoffs, and wrote about such trailblazing rock bands as Self, which recorded an entire album using children's instruments and toys.

After graduating with a bachelor's degree in 2001, Rogers freelanced for the Chicago Tribune (separate stories about new blood-donation technology and the Illinois Railway Museum) and the Herald & Review in Decatur, Illinois (covering Champaign-Urbana's entertainment scene, including an early interview with Noam Pikelny, who is now part of the Punch Brothers with Chris Thile of Nickel Creek). He then became communications director for Forster Products, a gunsmith-tool parts plant in Lanark. There, he supervised the redesign of all marketing and instructional materials.

Just when he was about to seriously pursue a job in the particularly barren portion of Alaska - where DVDs would have to be delivered via air every six months - Rogers was hired as the arts & entertainment writer at The State Journal-Register, a 55,000-plus-circulation daily newspaper in Springfield, Illinois.

In July 2002, Rogers took over an award-winning section in the state capital, where he directed, edited and wrote coverage of film, popular and classical music, theater, visual arts, dance and electronic entertainment. Getting only five minutes on the phone with Cyndi Lauper, fielding a personally returned phone call from reality TV impresario, detailing Hal Holbrook's eloquently informed rants about politics, and reviewing local theater productions where the fog machine got a little crazy - all of that, and then some. His work was nationally syndicated through Copley News Service and, later, GateHouse News Service, and his film reviews are archived at www.rottentomatoes.com/author/author-8719/

While there, he spearheaded a radical redesign to the section (from broadsheet size to tabloid size) and, after a promotion to editor, began a blog (blogs.sj-r.com/unpaintedhuffhines) and earned first-place honors from the Illinois Press Association for Best A&E Section and from the American Association of Sunday and Feature Editors for Best A&E Commentary. After almost six years on that beat, Rogers was promoted to become the newspaper's features editor, where he oversaw the weekly production of 11 sections ranging from teen issues to outdoors activities. Rogers left the newspaper in September 2008.

As comfortable as defending "Deep Rising" as he is blasting "Babel," Rogers has opinions and knowledge on entertainment that have generated plenty of feedback in his wake. It's his hope that he'll be able to do the same on Suite101.

Latest Articles

Year One Film Review
When in doubt, the man who gave us "Groundhog Day" makes Jack Black eat feces and Michael Cera pee in his own mouth. Yes, we're at the level of a YouTube monkey video.
Dec 3, 2009 - Nick Rogers
Moon Film Review
The narrative possibilities wane more than they wax, but "Moon" is a modestly engrossing puzzle-box thriller anchored by a multifaceted performance from Sam Rockwell.
Dec 3, 2009 - Nick Rogers
Monsters vs. Aliens Movie Review
Exhaustive with its rapid-fire references, but if this works as a shiny primer to one day introduce kids to classic sci-fi, fantasy and anime, well, more power to it.
Dec 3, 2009 - Nick Rogers
Land of the Lost Movie Review
Land of the Lost is marginally better than Bewitched, if only because it's a fairly straightforward springboard from the original, but the film is depressingly unfunny.
Dec 3, 2009 - Nick Rogers
The Men Who Stare at Goats Movie Review
In celebration of all the pithy talk about Jedi warriors in "The Men Who Stare at Goats," let's put it this way: This is not the political satire you're looking for.
Dec 3, 2009 - Nick Rogers
The Blind Side Film Review
It's blandly calculated, safe, invulnerable and cute. Michael Oher winds up a supporting player in his own biopic, although Sandra Bullock is a surprisingly strong lead.
Dec 3, 2009 - Nick Rogers
An Education Film Review
An Education depicts how pie-in-the-sky predictions for our futures can sock even the most sensible among us and represents the major arrival of actress Carey Mulligan.
Dec 3, 2009 - Nick Rogers
2012 Starring John Cusack - Movie Review
Roland Emmerich might not get 12-camera coverage on a single explosion like Michael Bay, but he'll always be a better overall director of canonical cornball action.
Dec 3, 2009 - Nick Rogers
A Serious Man Film Review
A Serious Man is an existential Hitchcock movie crossed with Jewish spirituality, a dab of mysticism and an idea that, for the Coens, morality and mortality are entwined.
Dec 3, 2009 - Nick Rogers
The Invention of Lying Movie Review
What could have been Ricky Gervais' magnum opus is instead a rickety romantic comedy that collapses under the weight of its concept. Still, the religious satire is sharp.
Oct 27, 2009 - Nick Rogers