WHO THE .... Am I? Well, THE literary version is here
Full Professional Biography of John Scott Ridgway / John Burden / Johnny Pain
John Scott Ridgway is a Chicago‑based novelist, blogger, performer, and fine artist whose work spans dystopian fiction, political satire, spiritual inquiry, and darkly comic social commentary. Over four decades and across three creative identities — John Scott Ridgway, John Burden, and Johnny Pain — he has built a multidisciplinary body of work marked by moral complexity, surreal humor, and a deep commitment to portraying ordinary people with dignity and emotional clarity.
Ridgway studied literature, philosophy, anthropology, sociology, and history for nearly fourteen years at the University of Toledo, Columbia College Chicago, Northeastern Illinois University, and DePaul University. At the University of Toledo, he published journalism and fiction in the campus newspaper and the annual literary magazine, while also placing work in the small press — several of those early pieces later forming the backbone of the three novellas that became his first book, One War. Over the years, he has written well over a million words online, building a substantial body of digital literature under his own name and the pen name John Burden.
His published works include The Collected Writing of John Scott Ridgway, One War, Waking Up Jesus, and The Religious Psycho Killer’s Shit List. The latter — a darkly comic, politically charged collection featuring his breakout character Johnny Pain — received blurbs from Stephen Colbert and Jon Stewart, who recognized the book’s sharp humor and cultural bite. Ridgway continues to write online, most recently creating a series of AI‑assistant‑driven experimental books on his long‑running blog Shattered Present — an ongoing project in which he contrasts AI‑generated prose and outlining with the instincts, craft, and worldview of a traditionally educated, published writer. He currently lives in Chicago’s Chinatown, where he writes, draws, and shares his home with two cats.
As a fine artist, Ridgway has sold paintings and drawings throughout the Midwest, with permanent installations at Cook County Hospital and St. Anthony’s Hospital. His visual work, like his writing, is known for its emotional immediacy and its focus on the human condition.
Ridgway’s worldview was shaped not only by academia but also by his small‑town childhood and a decade spent driving a Chicago taxi, where he was robbed more times than he can remember and met people from every corner of the world. Those years — dangerous, intimate, and endlessly human — became a living classroom in empathy, character, and the unpredictable rhythms of real life.
His performance career began with the long‑running radio show Peace and Pipedreams, where he played more than fifteen recurring characters in improvised skits. The show became known for Ridgway’s early, outspoken advocacy for the legalization of marijuana — long before it was culturally or politically popular — and it drew an eclectic audience that included Cheech & Chong, Robin Williams, and even a pre‑presidential Barack Obama. Between sketches, the show spotlighted emerging musicians and new artists, creating a hybrid space for comedy, commentary, and cultural discovery.
One of Ridgway’s most enduring creations, Johnny Pain, first emerged as a breakout character during readings at The Elves Attic, the long‑running series he founded at It’s A Secret in Roscoe Village and later moved to The Big Star Café in Rogers Park. Pain’s anarchic humor, raw honesty, and emotional vulnerability made him a crowd favorite and a central figure in The Religious Psycho Killer’s Shit List. His popularity led directly to Ridgway being offered a show at the infamous Fearless Radio studio in downtown Chicago — a station where audiences could watch live broadcasts through street‑level windows, turning performances into a kind of urban theater.
During this period, Ridgway lived in Rogers Park with his huskies, Ruby and Red, on the neighborhood’s lakefront beaches. The dogs loved the ice in winter and the cooling water in summer, joining a sunrise tradition of dog walkers who let their animals run freely — a ritual that continues on Rogers Park’s beaches today. Ridgway’s YouTube films, originally created for fans of the podcast, unexpectedly went viral; The Ruby Dog Versus The Mighty Dash — a husky playing with a tiny kitten — became the number‑one film on the station, surpassing even the music programming and drawing international attention. Though he no longer makes films, this early viral success positioned him as one of the first creators to bridge radio, online video, and grassroots fan culture.
Ridgway has also been a central figure in Chicago’s live literary scene. His reading series at It’s A Secret and later The Big Star Café became known for their intimate, conversational atmosphere — a deliberate contrast to the competitive slam‑poetry culture that dominated the city at the time. Ridgway himself was a frequent reader at the historic Green Mill, where his blend of humor, politics, and surrealism earned him a dedicated following.
Across all mediums, Ridgway’s work returns to the same core concerns: the fragility of society, the resilience of community, the corrosive effects of power, and the stubborn hope that persists even in collapse. Whether writing as John Scott Ridgway, blogging as John Burden, or performing as Johnny Pain, he continues to explore the intersection of politics, spirituality, humor, and human survival with a voice that is unmistakably his own.
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