Benjamin Jeremy Stein (born November 25, 1944, in Washington, D.C.,) is an American attorney, former game show host, actor, screenwriter, former political speechwriter, law professor, economist, author, columnist, and commercial personality. He is the son of Herbert Stein.
His early years were spent growing up in a heavily Democrat neighborhood in Silver Spring, Maryland. After graduating from Montgomery Blair High School, Stein attended Columbia University in New York City, where he majored in economics. He graduated with honors in 1966, and then enrolled in Yale University Law School, graduating as the class valedictorian in 1970.
Stein began his career as a speech writer and lawyer for United States President Richard Nixon, and later for President Gerald Ford. He regularly denies being Deep Throat.
Stein eventually became a Hollywood consultant, helping liberal writers portray a conservative family on television. He then moved into acting and is most famous for playing a colorless, boring economics teacher in Ferris Bueller's Day Off. Stein excelled at playing bland and unemotional characters, and he was subsequently typecast into these roles, mainly as a nerd.
In reality, he was first a poverty lawyer in New Haven, Connecticut and Washington, D.C. before becoming a trial lawyer for the FTC. His first teaching stint was as an adjunct professor, teaching political and social content of mass culture at American University in Washington, D.C, and then at UC Santa Cruz (UCSC) in Santa Cruz, California. Additionally, he also held classes on political and civil rights from the United States Constitution at UCSC. At Pepperdine University in Southern California, Stein taught libel law and securities law and its ethical aspects. He remains an active law professor at its Malibu campus, having joined Pepperdine's faculty in the mid 1980s.
His efforts at film and television screenwriting have largely been for naught, though he is notable for his script Murder in Mississippi and contributed to the creation of the well-liked TV comedy Fernwood 2-Night, among other works.
In 1997 Stein was given his own game show by Comedy Central titled Win Ben Stein's Money. True to its name, the money that contestants won on the show was subtracted from the $5000 Ben earned (in addition to his salary). The show won seven Emmy awards before ending its run in 2003.
Despite having appeared in many "Hollywood" movies, he is a noted critic of many attitudes found among film studio leaders, but not of the "rank and file" of the film industry itself.
A prodigious writer, Stein has written books on several topics including economics, and is a vocal supporter of the Republican Party. He writes a regular column in the conservative magazine The American Spectator. Stein has also written for numerous publications including the Wall Street Journal, New York Magazine, Los Angeles Magazine and Barrons, where his discussion of the Michael Milken Drexel Burnham Lambert junk bond situation as well as the ethical dimensions of management buyouts attracted heavy US national attention in the 1980s and '90s.
Stein currently resides with his wife and son in Beverly Hills, California. He was previously a San Fernando Valley resident of Los Angeles, California. He lives part time in Malibu, California in a house with a Pacific Ocean view while teaching at Pepperdine University.
His book titles to date (7 fiction, 9 nonfiction) include: