• Home
  • Bio
  • News
  • Media
    • Videos
    • Gallery
  • Events
    • Upcoming Events
    • Past Events
    • All Events
    • Contact
  • ON AIR
    • New & Approved On 95.5 KLOS

mattpinfieldmusic_hpagpk

Matt Pinfield Discusses His ‘Insane, Improbable Rock Life’ in New Book

Matt Pinfield Discusses His ‘Insane, Improbable Rock Life’ in New Book

September 18, 2016 by Admin
News Articles

By Michele Amabile Angermiller | Billboard

MTV VJ and current KFOG San Francisco morning show host Matt Pinfield has long been called a human encyclopedia of music. Name any album, he knows a deep track. Name-check a band, he probably hung out with them, or, more likely, he and a member of said group are lifelong friends. 

His is a career that began before he was even in elementary school, with his passion for music kicked off by the sounds of the British Invasion and mining the vinyl libraries of his older siblings. His show-and-tell projects at school involved sharing records and turning his classmates on to new bands. As a college DJ at Rutgers University and later at WHTG FM 106.3 in Eatontown, NJ, he found larger audiences to share his passionate love of music. When his daughter, Jessica, was born, he called in to WHTG to request that the on-air DJ play David Bowie’s “Kooks” — a song about the birth of Bowie’s son — to mark the occasion.

Pinfield tells that story — and many other tales — in his new book: All These Things That I’ve Done: My Insane, Improbable Rock Life. His decision to write a memoir, he said at a recent Q&A held at Word book store in Jersey City, NJ and moderated by Rolling Stone writer Rob Sheffield, came from the artists themselves.

Read full article: Matt Pinfield Discusses His ‘Insane, Improbable Rock Life’ in New Book

Matt Pinfield Reflects On 30 Years Of MTV

Matt Pinfield Reflects On 30 Years Of MTV

August 3, 2011 by Admin
News Articles

Talk of the Nation | NPR

At midnight on August 1, 1981, MTV co-creator John Lack uttered the words “ladies and gentlemen, rock and roll,” and the network premiered its first music video to an audience of a few thousand.

“Video Killed the Radio Star” by the Buggles was just the first of countless music videos to air on the network over the last 30 years. MTV also pioneered reality television with The Real World, and broke new ground in animation with Beavis and Butthead.

Matt Pinfield, host of MTV2’s 120 Minutes, talks with NPR’s Tony Cox about the evolution of the network, and listeners share their most memorable MTV moments.

Read full article: Matt Pinfield Reflects On 30 Years Of MTV

« Recent News
All rights reserved © 2025 Matt Pinfield
Website crafted by DSB Design Agency