Ben Tousey

Ben Tousey

Certified in NLP

NY, US
Writer, speaker, comic and author!

According to the Oracle of the Bacon, Ben Tousey is 4 degrees of separation from Kevin Bacon. Ben's book, "Acting Your Dreams" was reviewed by psychiatrist, Dr. Richard Vath, who also counseled Debby Boone. Debby Boone was in 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders with Brandy Norwood--who was in the 39th Annual Grammy Awards with... Kevin Bacon!

Ben has worked as an actor, musician and standup comedian with heavy-hitters such as Grant Goodeve from Northern Exposure, Barry McGuire from the Broadway Musical "Hair" and the hit song, "Eve of Destruction," and standup comedienne Vanda Mikoloski.

He writes fiction under the name Ben Tousey, but for nonfiction and what he calls 'religious satire,' he pens under the nom de plume Benjamin David. His writings under both names tackles many of the existential questions that face us all: Who are we, and why are we here; are we alone, or is there help out there that we can turn to? While he doesn't have the answers to these questions, simply playing with the possibilities has given his writing a certain depth that critics have called a real game-changer. His exploration of life on both sides of eternity, of what it means to be human, what it means to be alive, and what it means to be dead, have given his readers a lot to talk about.

It's not everybody who can 'go within' and come back laughing.

According to the Oracle of the Bacon, Ben Tousey is 4 degrees of separation from Kevin Bacon. Ben's book, "Acting Your Dreams" was reviewed by psychiatrist, Dr. Richard Vath, who also counseled Debby Boone. Debby Boone was in 100 Greatest One Hit Wonders with Brandy Norwood--who was in the 39th Annual Grammy Awards with... Kevin Bacon!

Ben has worked as an actor, musician and standup comedian with heavy-hitters such as Grant Goodeve from Northern Exposure, Barry McGuire from the Broadway Musical "Hair" and the hit song, "Eve of Destruction," and standup comedienne Vanda Mikoloski.

He writes fiction under the name Ben Tousey, but for nonfiction and what he calls 'religious satire,' he pens under the nom de plume Benjamin David. His writings under both names tackles many of the existential questions that face us all: Who are we, and why are we here; are we alone, or is there help out there that we can turn to? While he doesn't have the answers to these questions, simply playing with the possibilities has given his writing a certain depth that critics have called a real game-changer. His exploration of life on both sides of eternity, of what it means to be human, what it means to be alive, and what it means to be dead, have given his readers a lot to talk about.

It's not everybody who can 'go within' and come back laughing.