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that's our home boy

How Houstonian teacher Shea Serrano became a best-selling author, in a few simple steps

Chris Gray
Dec 14, 2017 | 8:00 am
Shea Serrano book Basketball and Other Things
Serrano's latest tome merges sports, with, well...you'll have to read it.
Courtesy photo

Editor's note: In a rare local media interview, Shea Serrano reunites with fellow Houston writer Chris Gray, who was Serrano's music editor at the Houston Press.

The story of Shea Serrano, the Houston middle-school science teacher turned New York Times best-selling author, sounds like a fairy tale — unless you know him, and then it seems like the most natural thing in the world. I first met him as the Houston Press, where his off-the-dome Q&As and timestamped concert reviews were hilarious and insightful.

But Serrano’s talents demanded a more flexible platform, and in 2013, he parlayed a bunch of rapper sketches he had done over spring break into a popular Tumblr page — and then to paper, in Bun B’s Rap Coloring and Activity Book. Two years later came The Rap Year Book, his first collaboration with illustrator extraordinaire Arturo Torres.

His latest, Basketball (And Other Things), stuffs a wealth of hoops information into chapters like “What Year Was Michael Jordan the Best Version of Michael Jordan?” and “Which NBA Player’s Group Are You Joining If the Purge Begins Tonight?”

Serrano also enjoys a national following as a writer for (the now-defunct) Grantland, and currently, The Ringer.

While he makes the rounds promoting his new best-seller, Serrano is finishing a pilot script he’s developing for ABC with sitcom guru Michael Schur (Parks and Recreation, The Good Place), about a college-bound youth’s adolescent life with his mom and five uncles. (Serrano likens it to the hit animated movie Inside Out.) The show is still a long way from making it on-air, he notes: “As soon as the news came out everybody was like, ‘Oh, what channel does it come on?' We’re not anywhere near that.”

CultureMap: Just how big a basketball junkie are you?

Shea Serrano: Pretty big. I’ve been watching it since I was a kid. I watch it all the time now, still. I was writing about it all the time at Grantland and The Ringer.

CM: How young were you when you got interested?

SS: My dad started taking me to games really early, as far back as I can remember. Six, seven, eight years old. This is before the Spurs were good. He works for VIA, which is their Metro bus [system], and when they weren’t good they were basically just giving away tickets. He would get those tickets and we would go together.

CM: After you moved to Houston, how was being a Spurs fan in the Rockets’ city?

SS: It was cool. It was cool because the Rockets were bad. They were never winning; really, they never won any serious playoff games. Wasn’t it like 20 years before they made it back to the Western Conference Finals? It was easy to be a Spurs fan because during that time the Spurs were winning championships. It was especially easy last year when they beat ‘em in the playoffs and I got to talk shit to everyone.

CM: Not surprisingly, your new book is wildly entertaining — and informative. You must have had to do a ton of research.

SS: Yeah. That’s the trick to writing. Like an article that at first glance would seem silly, the way to give it weight is to have actual information in there. That was a thing I learned writing for you at the Press. I would turn in an article and you would say, “This sentence doesn’t have anything to do with the point of this article, get rid of it.”

It’s the same thing [here]. All of the sentences in there point toward a thing, [but] only if you do the research ahead of time and you know all the stuff you need to talk about. So we’re talking about weeks of research for each chapter. Super not fun.

CM: What were some early signs that you wanted to be a writer?

SS: There weren’t any. The earliest signs of me wanting to be a writer were [wife] Larami couldn’t work and we needed money. She had these crazy complications one day — she was at work, she was pregnant, they rushed her to the hospital, [and] she couldn’t work anymore. They told her, “You’re on bed rest now.”

I remember I applied at Target. I applied at Pappadeaux. Both times they told me, “We can’t hire you because you already have a full-time job and you’re not gonna be there when we need you.” So I needed a writer job. I mean, I needed another job I could do. I straight-up Googled “work from home jobs.” Writer was one of ‘em.

CM: How do you think your Twitter personality has played into your success with the book?

SS: Twitter has been essential. Without Twitter the rapper book never gets on the New York Times bestseller list, and if that doesn’t happen, then who knows what doesn’t happen after that? So there’s no way to overstate how important Twitter has been. The only way the book game works for anyone is if you can sell 'em.

That’s the one main thing I learned between the coloring book, and the Rap Year Book. When we did the coloring book I was like,”Cool, all I’ve gotta do is get it in like Rolling Stone or The New York Times or whatever; people will see it there, and then they’ll buy it.” I got in all those places, and we sold 900 copies the first week. Something like that. That’s just not how people are built anymore.

CM: Talk about life on the best-seller list. I saw you were on TNT the other day with Charles Barkley and them. What other kind of opportunities have you had?

SS: On ESPN they’ve got a show called The Jump with Rachel Nichols. A whole bunch of radio stuff. They have a show called The Starters that’s on NBA TV. Some other kind of pregame show called 10 Before Tip. You just get to do a bunch of cool s*** once you have that title by your name, you know?

CM: One of the coolest things I think I’ve ever seen was two years ago around Christmas, you running around giving people money.

SS: That came about because Arturo and I were making these bookmarks to help sell Rap Year Book. But I didn’t want to keep the money because I wasn’t working at the time. I was at Grantland, and Grantland got shut down, but ESPN had to pay out the rest of the contract for the rest of the year.

So, we just took that money and we were like, “What are we going to do with it? Let’s donate it somewhere.” I think we had maybe $1,400 left over, so I was like, “Cool, we’ll just go around and give fast-food employees $100 at different drive-throughs, and we’ll do it for 14 different people.”

CM: How viral did that go?

SS: I mean, it was all over the place, but I don’t know how you measure how viral something goes. But it was neat.

---

Basketball (And Other Things) is out now on Abrams Image books. $19.99.

Serrano's latest tome merges sports, with, well...you'll have to read it.

Shea Serrano book Basketball and Other Things
Courtesy photo
Serrano's latest tome merges sports, with, well...you'll have to read it.
celebrities sports books city-news-roundup
news/entertainment
news/sports

weekend event planner

Here are the top 14 things to do in Houston this weekend

Craig Lindsey
Dec 31, 2025 | 4:30 pm
Steve Aoki
Steve Aoki/Facebook
See Steve Aoki in concert at NOHO in EaDo.

This weekend, it’ll be a brand new year. Although some may be partied out after New Year's Eve, some cool stuff will be happening.

Welcome 2026 with a festive brunch. Music from Nat King Cole and Steve Aoki will be played on Friday night. Saturday begins with a matcha pop-up and ends with a salute to goth/darkwave at Wonky Power. And, on Sunday, you can get in a fun run/walk and see the Thin White Duke on the big screen.

Thursday, January 1

The Union Kitchen presents New Year’s Day Brunch
The Union Kitchen is kicking off 2026 with a celebratory New Year’s Day brunch at all Houston-area locations. Customers will enjoy festive brunch sips, including $2.50 mimosas, $4 Bloody Marys, and $4 bellinis. Additionally, in true Southern tradition, the restaurant will offer cabbage, black-eyed peas, and cornbread — the classic good-luck trio for prosperity in the year ahead. Walk-ins are welcome, but reservations are encouraged. 10 am.

EZ’s Liquor Lounge presents New Year’s Day Hangover Brunch
For those who know they’ll be party-hopping this New Year’s Eve, here's a place to go and deal with that gnarly hangover the day after. The annual Hangover Brunch will feature fried chicken, biscuits, champagne specials, and caviar at cost. 11 am.

MKT Bar presents New Year's Day Brunch
While some people are known to eat black-eyed peas on New Year’s Day – for good luck and prosperity for the year ahead – head over to MKT Bar (located inside Phoenicia Specialty Foods' location downtown) and get their famous chicken and waffles for half-off. The Danielle Reich and Bruce Saunders Quintet will also be on the premises, performing some eclectic, jazz/pop numbers. Noon.

Friday, January 2

Punch Line Houston presents Sam Jay
Stand-up comic Sam Jay will be doing a two-night stint at Punch Line Houston this weekend. The Emmy-nominated former Saturday Night Live writer has been seen on HBO’s Pause with Sam Jay, a weekly late-night series on which she served as host and executive producer, as well as Bust Down, the Peacock sitcom she co-created and co-starred in. Recently, she did her solo show Sam Jay: We the People at the Edinburgh Festival and New York’s Lincoln Center Theater. 7 and 9:15 pm.

Houston Symphony presents "A Nat King Cole New Year"
The Jones Center for the Performing Arts will have an “Unforgettable” start to 2026 as Byron Stripling, Denzal Sinclaire, and the Houston Symphony Big Band perform the timeless hits of Nat King Cole, along with well-known songs by other jazz legends. The program will include songs like “Mona Lisa,” “Nature Boy,” “When I Fall in Love,” “Just One of Those Things,” and more. (We wonder if we’ll get Cole’s “The Christmas Song” one last time.) 7:30 pm (2 pm Sunday).

Theatre Southwest presents Murder on the Orient Express
Agatha Christie’s legendary, literary masterwork will be brought to the stage at Theatre Southwest. On a train traveling through Europe, a wealthy American tycoon is found dead in his compartment, the door locked from the inside. Enter world-famous detective Hercule Poirot, who must navigate a train full of suspects and solve the murder before the killer strikes again. Through Saturday, January 17. 8 pm (3 pm Sunday).

NOTO Houston presents Steve Aoki
Did you know that DJ/producer Steve Aoki invented the trend known as “caking”? That’s when he throws a huge cake out into the crowd while playing Autoerotique’s “Turn Up the Volume,” a song whose video features people getting splattered by exploding cakes. We bring this up because Aoki will be doing a late-night DJ set at NOTO Houston, and there’s a very good chance people in the crowd will get hit with a very delicious dessert. Stay in the back to avoid getting icing on your outfit. 10 pm.

Saturday, January 3

Kazzan Ramen & Bar and Tomo Matcha Pop-Up
Houston’s ramen scene is getting a green tea glow-up. Kazzan Ramen & Bar is teaming up with Tomo Matcha for a one-day pop-up this weekend. For the collaboration, guests who dine in at Kazzan Ramen will receive 20% off Tomo matcha, and customers who purchase a matcha drink will enjoy 20% off their meal. If you can’t make it, Tomo will also do a Sunday-afternoon pop-up at GLO Pilates. 11 am.

The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston presents Resurrection
Bi Gan (whose Long Day’s Journey into Night screened at MFAH in 2018) directs this ambitious, 160-minute, sci-fi detective movie starring Chinese superstar Jackson Yee (Better Days) and actress Shu Qi (The Assassin). In a future where humanity has surrendered its ability to dream in exchange for immortality, an outcast finds illusion, nightmarish visions, and beauty in an intoxicating world of his own making. 2 pm.

Archway Gallery presents June Woest: "Weather Inside Out" opening reception
Archway Gallery will present an exhibit of new work by June Woest that captures the interplay between photography, sculpture, and AI. "Weather Inside Out" explores Woest’s experiences with the unpredictable nature of the weather by challenging the notion that we are helpless against it. Her works are an invitation to embrace change and find comfort in the unpredictable.Through Thursday, February 5. 5 pm.

Wonky Power presents Dia de los Darks
The first Dia de los Darks of the year kicks off this weekend, bringing a night powered by darkwave, goth, rock en español, and cumbia. Scheduled to perform are El Turko Sonidero, DJ Fredster and guitar-playing masked man Orpheus Von Doom. Expect haunting beats, immersive visual installations lighting up the night. A night market will be open late with art, fashion, and local vendors — giving attendees that dark underground vibe. 8 pm.

Sunday, January 4

Flying Saucer Draught Emporium presents Saint Arnold Social Fun Walk/Run
Saint Arnold Fun Runs are back for 2026. Close out the first weekend of 2026 by getting some exercise, taking a social run/walk, and purging yourself of everything 2025-related. Participants get a guided and marked, 3.5(ish)-mile run/walk with beer pacers, three tasty brews from Saint Arnold, a Saint Arnold pint glass, and a Texas tamale breakfast. Rain or shine. 8 am.

Cousins Maine Lobster at Car Spa
Get your car shining and your cravings satisfied all in one stop as Cousins Maine Lobster rolls its truck over to Car Spa this weekend. Whether you're cleaning up your ride or just passing through, swing by and sample such delicacies as Maine, Connecticut, and garlic butter lobster rolls, lobster tacos and quesadillas, lobster tots and lobster tails, lobster grilled cheese, creamy lobster bisque, clam chowder, whoopie pies, and more. 11 am.

Alamo Drafthouse Cinema LaCenterra presents The Man Who Fell to Earth
Alamo Drafthouse Cinema’s “Art Decade: Films of David Bowie 1973-1983” series begins with this 1976 sci-fi curio. The story of an alien (Bowie, of course) on an elaborate rescue mission provides the launching pad for Nicolas Roeg’s examination of alienation in contemporary life. The film’s hallucinatory vision was obscured in the American theatrical release, which deleted nearly 20 minutes of crucial scenes and details. This screening is of Roeg’s full, uncut version. Noon.

Steve Aoki in concert

Steve Aoki
Steve Aoki/Facebook

See Steve Aoki in concert at NOHO in EaDo.

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