What We Loved About Dan McQuade

Today is Dan McQuade’s funeral. To celebrate our friend, we wanted to give the people he worked with a place to explain what they loved so much about him.

If you would like to support Dan’s widow Jan, and his son Simon, you can do so here.


David Roth, Defector Editor

Dan was always into something, in the work he was doing and more broadly as a way of being in the world. Long before I became his editor at Defector, I knew that the ideas he pitched were not like everyone else’s, and that he was not like everyone else. At the old site, he would come up with video concepts and message me things like “Hey, do you want to look at some Ryan Klesko cards with me for a thing?” or “Can you bring in some of your jerseys for a video so Dom Cosentino can make fun of them?” and I would say yes. (Sadly, the “Antiques Shitshow” video archive is lost to the ages.) 

At Defector, where we don’t have a dedicated studio to turn those passing ideas into short-form video but were otherwise free of the constraints that came with the old site, Dan dreamed bigger and weirder, and I kept saying yes. The ideas he had were so clearly the result of his own specific obsessions that there was no reason to say anything else. He’d already worked that new T-shirt idea all the way out in his head; there just needed to be a blog tying it all to the 1995 film Hackers, and that would be along in a little bit. Or a little bit longer than that, because Dan was reading contemporaneous reviews of the film on Newspapers.com, or wanted to call Matthew Lillard for a quote, or whatever. When Dan had started on something, he would simply go on investigating it further, turning it over until he’d cracked it to his satisfaction, and made it shine.

This sometimes meant waiting a little while longer for a draft, but it was the extra bit needed to make an idea into a proper Dan McQuade post. When he was into something, he needed to know as much as he could possibly know about it, and find the thing in it that made him care so much. He would hook into something and stay on the line while it pulled him toward the horizon, on serious stories but especially on silly ones, and only when he was ready would he reel it in. He wore his talent so lightly, and did that work with such high spirits, that it was easy to miss just how much he put into everything he did. It was how he could be so serious about silly stuff, and so funny about things that were infuriating or sad. He waited until he could see all of it, and then he would describe it. He’d take all the work he put into understanding this stuff and have it come out in his voice, like a story he’d tell, with all the switchbacks, jokes and sudden parenthetical asides.

Everything I loved about Dan came from that combination of enthusiasm and craft, from that inexhaustible appetite for new things to be into and bottomless passion for describing his experience of being into it. He was like this with his family, his cat, his friends and his city, and with what seems in retrospect to have been a world-historic number of group chats. He saw things that reminded him of people in his life and he told them as much, or just got that thing for that person and sent it to them. Dan cared so much about so many things and so many people. That care is part of what made him such a magnetic person to be around, but it is also at the center of what made him who he was. He loved good things and bad things just about equally, as far as I could tell. He seemed to get a lot out of all of it.

But that satisfaction came, I always thought, from how much he put into it, and how much he really meant it. It’s why no one wrote the way he did. It’s what I admired most about him, and what I am going to miss the most about him. The last time we talked, I got to tell him how lucky I felt to get to do all the dumb shit we got to do together, and that I loved him. For all the awful and infuriating unfinished business, I’m at least grateful I got to say that. What I did not say then, but will say here, is how much I aspire to be the way he was—to have the generosity and energy to care in the way he cared, to love that much and that freely, and to be as sincere in my desire to learn and as capable of finding delight in sharing that knowledge. I can’t think of any better way to be than that.

Sabrina Imbler, Defector Staff Writer

When I joined Defector, I realized I’d never met anyone like Dan McQuade. We first bonded over our cats, which is when Dan told me about his plan to base a Defector shirt off a cat shirt that appeared in the 1995 film Hackers, which I thought was pretty cool. I really like the 1995 film Hackers, but I didn’t remember the pivotal cat shirt. So I watched Hackers again, thinking I must not have paid enough attention to it the first time around. That’s how I learned that the cat shirt in Hackers is not a huge part of that movie; it’s worn by a supporting character in a small number of scenes.

Don’t get me wrong—it’s a really cool shirt. But I think this was the first moment when I understood the passions of Dan, a man who knew himself so deeply that he could look at any sliver of the world and find something so attuned to his sensibility that it brought him joy. Dan cared about so many things in his life so deeply, the big things like his wife Jan, his son Simon, and his cat Detective, and also things like New Jersey rest stops, bootleg boardwalk T-shirts, the fleet of neighborhood cats that visited him in Philadelphia, and the Romanian Eurovision song “Yodel It.” 

If Dan cared about something, he cared about it so much so that he would find a way for you to care about it, too. Early in my time at Defector, when Dan came to the office to film a “Let’s Remember Some Guys” video with Roth and Lauren—a series that at the time I didn’t totally understand—he bought a pack of animal trading cards for us to remember. I was so touched by this gesture, by the classic McQuade gift of highly specific memorabilia, and that’s how I realized how fun it is to remember some (little) guys. The more I got to know Dan, the more I learned about the other spaces where our obsessions overlapped, like Eurovision and bad Christmas movies. We got to collaborate on some delightful roundtables, during which I got a peek inside the vast chambers of Dan’s mind. I have no idea how he stored all that information, like the fact that Bobby Darin’s son sued McDonald’s over the moon-faced crooner Mack Tonight that appeared in ads as a poor rip-off of Darin.

It sounds rote and obvious, but I’m mad that Dan didn’t have more time. I’m mad I never got a chance to visit him and Philly, so he could show me around the giant park by his house, which apparently teemed with frogs, or the Hermit Cave by his house, which, according to Dan, “is not a cave and not used by hermits but there WERE hermits in my neighborhood in the late 1600s.” That’s the thing about Dan: He saw his neighborhood as a wonderland, with a frog utopia, a hermit cave, a roving band of merry neighborhood cats. I want to see the world through those McQuade goggles, where things take on a sheen of the spectacular by virtue of how much you care about them, by how deeply you come to know the people and places around you, and how much you want to share them with the people you love. Dan taught me that life can be as wondrous as you want it to be, in part by making my world more wondrous with his presence. Dan, I miss you already. I can’t believe you’re gone. I promise I will keep sharing the wonders around me with the people I love, and caring as much as I can about everything.

Billy Haisley, Defector Editor

I am used to getting the “Wow, that’s so cool!” response when I tell people what I do for a living, but Dan was the first person to react like that after hearing about my first job: bussing tables at Texas Roadhouse in high school. It should be no shock that the mall game George Plimpton’s soft spot for kitsch extended to chain restaurants too.

After learning this fact about me, Dan would periodically hit me up about funny Roadhouse things he’d come across. Look, Lana Del Rey is also a fan of the place! Check out this subtly bizarre mural at one Roadhouse he dined at, which surprisingly does have a logical explanation! Look at this absolutely random wrestling match hosted in a Texas Roadhouse parking lot, and in my home state of Indiana at that!

Texas Roadhouse was just one of the topics we’d shoot the shit about in our DMs. Others included our shared interest in the sociology of Notre Dame and Penn State football fan cultures; our shared appreciation for streetwear; our shared belief that Banksy gets kind of a bad rap; and his love for sending people cool and/or funny college sports merch and my love for laughing at my fellow IU alums’ enduring Bobby Knight homerism. But the Roadhouse stuff is most indicative of the Dan I’d come to know after working with him for nearly a decade.

For one, the kinds of things Dan would unearth regarding Texas Roadhouse are things nobody else in the world would’ve spotted themselves. He moved through the world with uncommon curiosity, with soft eyes that were always, always alert to the notable, funny, odd or important, and anything in between. What’s more, he loved sharing with others the gems his soft eyes had discovered. Mine is merely one of dozens of similar stories people have shared since his death, all of them involving Dan going out of his way to keep up a relationship with someone via the most obscure of interests.

To know anything about Dan is to know that he was incredibly popular—the unofficial (and therefore truer) mayor of Philly. But to actually know Dan personally is to immediately understand why he was so popular, how he had met so many people and how so many of them came to consider him a friend. Dan was such a compendium of offbeat shit that he could bond with literally anyone by seeking out the one corner of his infinite knowledge base which overlapped with theirs, then grow that into a deep and lasting friendship. Dan had an insatiable passion for things and facts, but especially a passion for people, for life itself, in all of its weird, warty beauty. He knew everyone and everyone knew him, and it was because he cared so much about everything and everyone one he came across. This is, I think, a big reason why the Philadelphia he wrote about was so alluring, even to those of us who’ve never stepped foot on Broad Street. His Philly is a genuine community, the kind that modern life has done its best to eradicate but, blessedly, still endures thanks to people like Dan. His approach to life is one I’ve always been in awe of, and it’s an example I think everyone who knew him hopes to carry on in some way.

On the night we found out about his death, it was my wife’s turn to put our toddler to bed—becoming new dads was another one of the things Dan and I bonded over, and it’s the aspect of his death that’s most crushing to think about—but I swapped with her, needing some extra cuddle time with our little guy. When I started to sing our usual bedtime song, “Twinkle Twinkle Little Star,” he shook me off and instead requested “The Muffin Man,” the Ms. Rachel version. Though painfully corny, I was nonetheless moved while singing it, thinking that I do not in fact know any of the people around town from whom we buy muffins, pizza, and ice cream, but that I know someone who did know his.

Barry Petchesky, Defector Editor

It could have been a billion-dollar idea: Ask Dan at halftime of a 76ers game how his team was doing. If he complained about their play, called them a bunch of bums, moaned that they’re losing losers who only know how to lose, said they’re going to get blown out—bet on the Sixers to win. They’d almost always win. By, like, 20 points. I’ve never met anyone who hated his good teams more, or believed in them less. He was a true Philadelphian.

Dan was basically the mayor of Philadelphia. He knew everyone. One time, while reporting a story, a source mentioned someone named “Karate Mark.” Dan wondered if that was the same Karate Mark he knew (it was). He loved his city and the people in it, and was honest and clear-eyed about its shortcomings, but he would never have lived anywhere else. He couldn’t have. He wouldn’t have been him without that rowdy, peevish, idiosyncratic big city that felt so often like a small town. He was its greatest evangelist and proudest son.

Another Dan moneymaking opportunity: He paid attention to the tiny local college hoops teams far more than any normal person should. He told me once, before an early-season non-conference game, exactly why some shitsplat Pennsylvania Catholic school would cover the +42.5 spread against a ranked team. He had legitimate logic behind it. They only lost by 41. Dan was a genius.

It’s possible that Dan did leverage his handicapping abilities into megawealth, but then blew it all investing in malls. Malls are where he was truly happy. Or rather Mall Culture, which expands beyond the physical boundaries of mallspace: When we went to Atlantic City, the thing Dan was most excited for was eating at the Rainforest Cafe.

This is because Dan was our generation’s foremost chronicler of American camp. He was the master of giving serious treatment to things that don’t take themselves seriously, like bootleg T-shirts, Baywatch Nights, or the city of Philadelphia itself. He applied an anthropologist’s rigor and a poet’s eye for detail. He was fascinated by our artistic byroads and subcultures, and wanted to celebrate them.

I mourn for all the blogs he won’t get to write. That may sound stupid or lame to you, but I don’t think Dan would’ve thought so. He had a blogger’s heart, and writing about his interests gave him as much joy as the thing itself. 

That was Dan’s guiding light, I think: He wanted to share all the things he loved with other people. Every blog he wrote was an attempt to capture and convey the joy he felt over some new discovery or old attachment. There was an almost childlike purity in this drive of his—a thing had made him happy, so he wanted to show it to you so it could make you happy. He was so fucking good at that. Listen to his cackle and “whoo!” at the sad little La Salle smoke machine, and tell me you’re not laughing too.

That Dan’s professional interests were also his personal interests was a happy coincidence. He was my colleague of many years, yes, but more accurately he was my friend that I happened to work with. That the man got paid to write about what he loves was a blessing. But he also kept some things just for him—otherwise we’d have seen endless blogs about how much he loved his wife, his son, and his cat. OK, maybe there were a lot of blogs about his cat.

Two weeks ago, I told Dan that I was not going to go soft on hating his despicable Philly teams just because he was dying. He made me swear to stick to my promise. I think it’s the least we can all do. 

Albert Burneko, Defector Editor

In Dan’s writing and journalism, the past was less a trail behind the present than a luminous and illuminating accretion. The more history anything had, the brighter it glowed. A place was everything that ever happened there and everyone who witnessed it; a sports team was everyone who ever played for it, loved hating it, or hated loving it; an event was everything that led to it; a person was everyone who knew them, remembered them, loved them, had a story about them to tell.

Assigning Dan a blog could be hilarious: “Give me 800 words about this thing that happened yesterday,” and his next stop was Newspapers.com, where he would discover the earliest thing anybody ever wrote about any of the potential blog’s proper nouns, 93 years ago. And this would enrich the blog, because how could it not? So what if it also made the blog take a bit longer? How could that be a bad thing?

This has a lot to recommend as a way of writing about things, but much more importantly as a way of encountering the world. The thrill of reading Dan, for me, was in the quality of depth in that approach, which I chalk up to his essential Dan-ness, imparted to his work. Profundity, sure, but here I mean “depth” more in dimensional terms. Philadelphia’s soon-to-close flagship Macy’s isn’t just Macy’s, the store closing here in the present. It is also Wanamaker’s, the store it was 30 years ago, and Hecht’s, Strawbridge’s, and Lord & Taylor, cohabitating in one place, aglow. When the Macy’s closes, all of them close; all those memories lose something that anchored them in the world. The loss pierces to a depth it might otherwise not, and that is the loveliest and truest justice that can be done at a parting. The most painful, too.

The last time I saw Dan was at Defector’s August 2025 staff retreat in Ocean City, Maryland. He and I shared a table with a few others in the banquet room where we held our meetings. Dan—that great gravelly voice, the fabulous Philly accent, the way he always sounded like he was smiling and seemingly always was—had so much enthusiasm for the work of sorting out all our visions for the company’s future, for dreaming of what it could be and all the fun we could have with it. All of his many ideas came bubbling up out of delight at what we had made and were making. They were all, at heart, celebratory.

To me, that was Dan McQuade. He loved this place so much. It glows with him.

Megan Greenwell, Former Deadspin Editor-In-Chief

I can’t remember exactly why the Wildwood Boardwalk T-shirt recap was so late that year, but it was late enough that I gently suggested to Dan that his energy might be better spent on anything other than just one more research trip to the beach. This did not go over well. The next morning, I got a text, sent from the Wildwood Boardwalk, with a picture of a T-shirt depicting the cartoon character Arthur holding a Hennessy bottle. “You would stop us from publishing THIS?” the message said.

A minute or two later, another picture with another T-shirt, but the same message. Then another, and another. He must have sent me three dozen individual photos. Every one made me laugh harder than the one before, not even because of the T-shirts but because of his commitment to the bit. “You would stop us from publishing THIS?” ran through my head for weeks. The recap ran, obviously. It was perfect.

Nobody committed to a bit like Dan. Nobody brought as much childlike enthusiasm—genuine wonder!—to their reporting. Nobody loved sharing what they’d learned, from the profound to the deeply stupid, as much as he did. What a gift to have gotten to learn from him. What a heartbreaking, infuriating, essential reminder to be more like him.

Drew Magary, Defector Columnist

When I first started popping gummies, I thought the dosage listed on the bag was per piece, not for the whole bag. So I once told Roth I’d had 200mg, and he was like HOLY SHIT DREW WHAT THE FUCK, and I was like Damn, maybe I went too hard. So I went to Dan, because he was the most informed stoner I knew, and asked if 200mg was too much. And in that very loud, very Dan voice, he was like “Nah, that should be fine.” And I was like, “Oh OK, Roth is just being a tightass. Phew!” If I ever actually ate 200mg of THC, I would probably hallucinate a bear eating my face off.

Samer Kalaf, Defector Editor

Dan was a master of the specific, and he demonstrated it every day. When he’d share an article written by someone else online, it would typically be accompanied by a no-context line from the piece, indicating that it struck him in some way. He loved to turn over a sentence in his head, examining it for a particular word or phrase that could spark a thought or a chain reaction of jokes. For instance, he was endlessly amused by an almost certainly bogus Michael Jordan quote displayed at an NCAA Tournament game in 2016; you might say it indirectly set the stage for him to report out, years later, that Ed Harris did not say “Acting is like scoring a touchdown.”

Dan paid attention to the details because they would tickle or vex him, sometimes both. His curiosity regularly led him to incredible, unique pieces of writing. To this day, I remember the way in which he introduced a national audience to the existence of “Karate Mark,” but not before first confirming the information with “Classic Jeff.” As he once said, he was “forged in the fires of 1990s internet irony,” and it influenced his work in the best way possible.

Beyond his writing, as a person, Dan was always thinking of others. He retained an astounding memory not just for fake quotes or Philadelphia-area celebrities, but the interests of those around him: his family, his friends, his colleagues. He would mentally note what you liked, then text you every now and again to show you something in that genre, so you could enjoy it together: a bootleg Bart Simpson T-shirt, an old wrestling magazine, a Mr. Bean meme whose humor would be excruciating and nearly impossible to explain to a wider audience.

Sometimes these gifts would be tangible: He would literally mail you something he thought you’d like. He’d regularly send me Defector stickers, because we both enjoyed putting them up in the wild, and we’d let each other know when our friends spotted them. He once sent me a video of a beautiful view from the top of a trail in Hawaii, then brought the phone camera down to show a pole on which he had stuck his cat’s face and our company logo.

Dan’s generosity and enthusiasm were unparalleled. The man was constantly joking, pitching, researching, writing, helping out someone else. He lived in the present, but always with an eye on his next project in the near future, making it all the more gutting to have to use the past tense to talk about him.

Sam Woolley, Former Gawker Media Illustrator

The exact moment Dan and I first met is fuzzy, but the day he was hired is crystal clear. Someone told me, “Oh, there’s a sneakerhead coming to the site.” That was all I needed to hear. He was automatically my friend.

Back then, the art department sat next to Deadspin, at the top of a massive set of stairs. Every time Dan made the trek from his beloved Philly to the New York office, he’d pass by art on his way up. A quick hello almost never stayed quick. Thirty seconds would turn into 15 minutes of talking about whatever shoes he’d just hit on Nike, or the latest pair he’d somehow managed to snag through a raffle. He loved sharing his luck—not to brag, but because it genuinely brought him joy. Honestly, it brought me joy too.

Dan and I got to know each other better during the company’s super popular “pivot to video,” when we developed a sneaker show together. The show never saw the light of day, but the time we spent working on it revealed just how great of a dude he was. A real one. I wish I could go back and read the Slack messages from that era: two sneaker-obsessed dudes constantly one-upping each other. Competition was fun with Dan, because he made it fun.

Even after leaving GMG, the sneaker hits and occasional casual texts kept coming. That was Dan: someone who shared something special with everyone around him, whether it was enthusiasm, kindness, or just a genuine connection. If I remember correctly, I think he even got married in sneakers, which somehow feels exactly right.

Rest in peace, jawn. You’ll be missed.

Alex Sujong Laughlin, Defector Podcast Producer

Something I love about Dan is that he was a total freak about clothing. We had extremely different taste, but we shared the experience of nerding out and hunting for things on the secondhand market. When I decided to spend the day vintage shopping in Philadelphia, I asked him for recs, and he sent me hundreds of words via TEXT, listing all the stores I should hit, writing little blurbs about what to look for in each one. His encyclopedic knowledge of the things he loved was something I really admired.  

Jorge Corona, Former Deadspin Video Producer

Dan McQuade lit my world with his love. We met at Deadspin, probably when he tagged along with Hannah Keyser and I on a reporting trip to Wildwood. Through work, I was treated to the great experience of reading boardwalk T-shirts, and the people wearing them, with Dan. I’m a practitioner of the art myself now, though unlike Dan, I never sprung for any T-shirts to add to my closet.

Then there are the malls. Dan and I went to Minneapolis together, to the big one: the Mall of America. We made a video there where, while exploring the peculiarities of this particular mall, we improbably ran into actor Morris Chestnut and his son. We were shocked, but Dan didn’t miss a beat, interviewing Morris like he was just another person. Later, on that same reporting trip, he would share his love of the Philadelphia Eagles, and he would bask along with half a stadium and a whole city as the Eagles beat the Patriots and won the Super Bowl.

To read a Dan blog was to read about his adoration of a peculiarity, his love of the hilarity in banality, and to have that all filtered through his big heart. In studio videos we made in New York, Dan shared his pog collection, his thoughts on pizza (one of the foods he did eat), his wrestling proclivities (with Nick Aldis, who roasted him mercilessly), and his love of Gritty. In our off-camera conversations, he shared his love as a colleague, supporting written and video pieces with interest and curiosity. He also shared his love of his family, and the family cat.

We kept in touch, and I lent him a hand on Defector’s first few videos, which he oversaw. Only a few months ago, Dan texted me, without mention of his health, and we reminisced about our work together, mostly about our Gritty video, which still cracked us up. We agreed that we had a lot of fun, even among the tumult of union fights and private equity ownership. Dan mentioned he was going to try to get more into video editing, and I told him to keep me posted on ways that I could help.

Losing Dan sucks. My life is richer because I was lucky enough to spend time with him. I treasure the memory of the days we spent together, and I hope to one day read and watch his work, however that looks or feels like in the Great Beyond. Here on Earth, I’ll try to imagine a good boardwalk T-shirt he might have put on when he crossed over.

Rest in peace, pal.

Ray Ratto, Defector Staff Writer

The Defector logo is slightly bent in the middle, and knowing what we know about the staff, “bent” seems like the right metaphor. But it also reeks of Dan, not because he was necessarily bent any more than the rest of our mosh pit of nitwittery, but because nobody at Defector worked more directly with the logo more often. When he wasn’t angsting audibly about the Eagles and Phillies, daily between the hours of 5:30 a.m. and Please Stop, he was the merch maven, the person whose consistently bemused face rose iridescently above “Quit Your Job,” “Chefector,” The Cat Head With The Rose, and “Gross Gas.” He was in the center of it all, and what he didn’t do himself, he managed to find the right people to make it happen. You can fairly say that he is the “Q” behind “Quit,” even though he never truly did.

Indeed, his memory and the stories about him are legendary, even if nobody can relax on past triumphs in a town like Philadelphia. Even the Super Bowl they won only gave the fan base, Dan included, turbo-powered agita over what comes in the unsettled future with a crackpot like Nick Sirianni. In many ways, the perfect Philadelphia season was that Super Bowl, because it never settled the internal shrieks over the Sirianni-fest for even a day, and that’s exactly the kind of team Dan would find most commodious. While most people knew him for his honesty, gentility, conviviality, and kindness, the idea that the phrase “Fuckin’ Jalen Hurts” was never far from his thoughts remains just as Dan as any of those other traits. And because Dan was a civic polymath, his bemused scorn was not limited to the athlete who most recently committed a crime against the town.

Dan was the actual Philadelphian as opposed to the stereotypical Philadelphian, inseparable from the town and its gloried weirdnesses while being much more rational than our shared imagery of it. He was indeed the best kind of fellow—a good hang in all circumstances, especially when he was playing host—and that isn’t typically said of your standard-issue Philadelphian. In a town where you haven’t made your bones until a regular WIP listener calls in during afternoon drive and says you suck, Dan would have taken such an epithet and said without a moment’s bother, “Of course I do. We all do. That’s why we’ve stayed.” It’s how Dan could find the truth behind the love-to-hate/hate relationship with his teams, and simultaneously have a deep emotional relationship with its broader band of weirdos, ne’er-do-wells and folks who say you suck without provocation and whose right to do so you fight to protect. He left us all in a better place for having known him with the things he said, wrote, did, and was. If that means, as an act of McQuadian solidarity, we must all admit that we suck too, it’s only because he would have pulled us aside to show us the compliment lurking behind the words, like the true son of Billy Penn he was.

Laura Wagner, Former Defector Staff Writer

Dan took delight. Nothing was too small to pay attention to, from decorative quotes at a rest stop service area to the fucked-up basketball court on Love Island to the closing of a mall from his teen years. Dan treated people the same way: inherently worthy of his time and attention, seeing the parts that go overlooked.

When I left Defector for a new job, I was homesick, missing the people whose humor and sensibilities had shaped a big part of my post-college self. Maybe that was obvious, or more likely it was just Dan’s nature to keep in touch, but he would reach out every so often with a nice thing to say about one of my stories, or a spikeball promotion he saw, or something Georgetown-related, and then we’d chat. 

Recently, we shared updates about our kids. He sent photos of Simon visiting the mall, perched on a red lawn chair, zipping down a slide. A few days after Defector’s fifth birthday party, he sent another photo: Simon in a swing and Dan standing next to him, one hand on his small shoulders. The trees behind them are green, and the shadows are long on the ground. Dan’s wearing sunglasses and looking one way; Simon, wispy blond hair in a ponytail, looks the other. They’re both wearing Eagles jerseys. “Here’s one where I look like his heavy,” Dan wrote. “Which I guess I am in a way.” It was beautiful to get a glimpse of how he delighted in his son.

Lauren Theisen, Defector Editor

If you read Dan McQuade, you knew how it felt to go down the rabbit hole with him. Whether he was delivering tons of research on a serious topic—like the myth of cops overdosing by touching fentanyl—or using his talents to make you laugh—“In the 1940s, the Palisades Amusement Park baby races once chose a winner ‘because he was better-looking’”—the hallmark of most of Dan’s best work was that he searched all the nooks and crannies for the most colorful, memorable, and hilarious details that the archives had preserved.

I know how much his writing impacted his readers, and it was also a privilege, as someone who worked with him for eight years, to get to see that process from behind the scenes. To work with Dan on a piece, or to even just talk to him about a mutual interest, was to watch him relentlessly pursue whatever sparked his attention, where over the course of the next hour or more, he would pop into your messages again and again: “Oh, I found this … and this … and this.” Learning from his ability to navigate all the data in old newspapers and obscure corners of YouTube made me a better writer in a tangible way, and I’m so grateful for that.

I’m also thankful that I got to experience his ability to pick out small absurdities and share them passionately with the world—bits like “Acting is like scoring a touchdown” attributed to Ed Harris at a New Jersey rest stop; interviewing a guy who accidentally bought 10,400 Greg Briley cards; the puny La Salle smoke machine; investigating a new method of drinking water; or the multiple Devin The Dugong posters I have in my home, courtesy of Dan, that reference old video games I’ve never actually played. Dan had such a good eye for the silly little things that peek out from otherwise normal settings, and he had the boundless energy to explain those things to other people in a way that stuck with them too. I’ll remember him every time I crack up at something that is simultaneously innocuous and ridiculous. Go Birds.

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