

- #EDDIE HASKELL PERSONALITY TYPE MOVIE#
- #EDDIE HASKELL PERSONALITY TYPE PRO#
- #EDDIE HASKELL PERSONALITY TYPE PROFESSIONAL#
- #EDDIE HASKELL PERSONALITY TYPE TV#

Ken Osmond and his co-author do a wonderful job of hooking you right off with one of the most dramatic events of his life, and then allow the rest of his life to unfold.

Drugs? Sex addiction? Closet case? What was his dark secret?" But the question you will get asked the most is, "Hey, is that any good?" And the answer is, "Yep." I read it in one sitting. So big Eddie Haskell fan? Okkaaayy.?" Or "Tell me. People will ask you questions like, "Huh. So word to the wise.This book is a bit of a conversations starter.
#EDDIE HASKELL PERSONALITY TYPE PRO#
Lynch coud have gifted his fans with, both pro and con. The book is one of the best and most honest celebrity biographies that Osmond and his co-writer, Christopher J. The final chapter offers insight into Ken's own character as a fierce patriot and gentleman of principle. In reality, Ken's true charater is revealed as a man who personofies the best of America, its compassion, and generosity.
#EDDIE HASKELL PERSONALITY TYPE TV#
The book never flags, bringing to life the many decades of a TV star who lived with his on-camera role as a pest, schemer, con artist, and troublemaker. The writers capture the era in fascinating detail and in reader-friendly style. The in-depth remembrences vivdly chronicle America during the Depression and describe his parents' desperate flight West to escape poverty.
#EDDIE HASKELL PERSONALITY TYPE MOVIE#
His roller-coater ride from famous television child actor to Los Angeles police officer and being the inspiration for "The New Leave It To Beaver" show reads like a movie script. What a greeat read! Ken Osmond tells his life story in as compelling and riveting a way as any top-notch drama. He’s a member of Sisters in Crime Los Angeles chapter, as well as Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators. A documentary film is being made of the adventure and you can view a trailer at: He counts as one of his greatest accomplishments the successful training and leading of nine blind hikers to the summit of 10,000 foot Mount Baldy, the highest point in Los Angeles County and the third highest peak in Southern California. He is also an avid cyclist and a mountain climber with successful summits of Mount Whitney, Mount Shasta, Mount Kilimanjaro in Africa, Mount Kalapatar in Nepal, and has recently completed a trek to Mount Everest Base Camp.
#EDDIE HASKELL PERSONALITY TYPE PROFESSIONAL#
His debut novel, One Eyed Jack, a hard-boiled crime thriller about a professional blackmailer, is a 2013 Shamus Award finalist. A man who, as co-star Jerry Mathers said, “Was the best actor on the program, because he was so diametrically opposed to the character he played.” A devoted husband, father and patriot, he’s a man who’s been forever shadowed by Eddie Haskell, but whose own life, was even more amazing than the character he portrayed.Ĭhristopher Lynch is a Southern California native and a freelance writer living in Los Angeles. Now it’s time to meet Ken Osmond, the man behind America’s preeminent bad boy. Political foes from both sides of the ideological spectrum love to accuse their opponents of, “acting like Eddie Haskell,” and when Kobi Bryant argues a referee’s call, tweets go out labeling him as an “Eddie Haskell.” Psychology Today Magazine has published articles about recognizing and treating “Eddie Haskell Syndrome” and Matt Groening created Bart Simpson as his own version of “the son of Eddie Haskell.” Even today, the name Eddie Haskell remains firmly entrenched in the American lexicon. The amazing phenomenon of Ken Osmond’s character is still going strong, over half a century after the show’s cancellation. And everyone in America knew an Eddie Haskell at some point in his or her lives. The poster child for sneaky, rotten kids everywhere, he was the reference point for cautious mothers to warn their children about. When child actor Ken Osmond stepped onto the set of Leave it to Beaver in 1957, he not only entered our living rooms, he homesteaded a permanent place in the American pop culture. Eddie Haskel was the bad kid who never went away.
