Hi, you’ve found my website! Here you’ll find links to my portfolio, as well as archives of some pieces from sites that unfortunately do not exist anymore. You can also hop over to my YouTube channel muchthink, to see me talk about interesting media/entertainment topics.
So who am I? I’m an award winning screenwriter, critic, and filmmaker. My criticism runs the gamut from book reviews of fiction, children’s books, and graphic novels, to dance and film criticism, and I’ve been featured in outlets like the Philadelphia Dance Journal, WinkBooks, WinkFun, and Cracked. I’ve had screenplays and films appear in the Bucks Fever Film Fest and 72ScriptFest, while I’ve directed commercials that have aired on ABCFamily and ESPN. You can find some of those at the video link to the left!
The coolest thing I’ve ever worked on was in 2015, when I was a finalist in the Nickelodeon Script First Contest. This won me the opportunity to spend about a year developing an original animated pilot with Nickelodeon’s excellent development team. The show never aired, but that’s television! Now I work on a development team for the reality TV production company Juma Entertainment, where I get to help craft cool shows like “Pool Kings.” Check it out if you haven’t!
I graduated from DeSales University with a degree in Television/Film. Currently I live juuuust outside Philadelphia with my wife and son, in a small Pennsylvania town you’ve probably never heard of.
Thanks for stopping by! Drop me a line if you have questions or want to set up a project!


Dragon Quest II has a reputation as the one to skip if you want to experience the original games. The first Dragon Quest has its charms as the progenitor, and Dragon Quest III is remembered as a certified classic, but Dragon Quest II sits in an odd space between them. On its release it was notorious for difficulty spikes, including a penultimate dungeon that could trap you forever, and a final boss with the ability to fully heal itself at any time. If there was ever a poster child for grindfest JRPGs, it was Dragon Quest II. Except none of that is true anymore.
I made a video a while ago basically telling people not to play the original Dragon Quest if it was their first time attempting to play the series. My criticisms were that its design was incredibly archaic by today’s standards, which could potentially turn off newcomers. I recommended the Game Boy Color version for anyone really wanting to see what all the fuss was about, but also mentioned the mobile port as an option, even though I had not played it at the time. I have since played said mobile port (which is the same as the Switch port, minus touch controls) and I want to dive into the game in a bit more detail. I’m still not confident this would be a great starting point for someone totally new to the series, but with a few caveats I think it could be manageable.
If you dunked Sherlock Holmes into Dr. Seuss’s color palette and then gave him a funny noir crime to solve, you would have something approaching the tone and style of Tangle Tower. The new point and click adventure game from SFB Games (Snipperclips) is a fun little mystery with a vibrant cast of characters that will keep you guessing until the end.