 Basic Info Name: Dylan Andrew Turner Nicknames: Dyl, Andy, A.T. Birth date: July 12th, 1984 Age: 27 Profession: sports writer Marital Status: single Sexual Orientation: Heterosexual Birthplace: Boston, MA Current Residence: Myrtle Beach, SC Parents: Jacob and Elise Turner Parents Occupations: dock worker and writer Siblings: none
Random Info Car: 1967 Shelby GT 500 Pets: None Hobbies: reading, watching sports, ballroom dancing cooking Languages: English
History College was a pipe dream for Jacob Turner, no one in the Turner family had ever gone on to higher education, it was the successful ones that wound up getting past high school and moving on to decent waged jobs. Jacob was like his father, and his father before him, they all wound up being dock hands in the harbors of Boston, that was just the way they did things. Jacob ended up meeting a girl from the north side, and unlike Jacob's family, she was a college graduate and wrote for one of the local papers in Boston. They weren't sure what brought them together, or how polar opposites were able to stay so close and so loving for so long, but Jacob and Elise Turner were able to pull it off. With little support and contact from their families, they were able to make a decent life for themselves in Boston, and eventually they greeted their own child into the world, a son by the name of Dylan. Even from a very young age Dylan was a shy boy, he was quiet and tended to keep to himself rather then spend time with the boys on his block. His dad worried about this, but reminded his son constantly that regardless of how many friends he had, and how he kept his time, family was important, above anything else. It was this that kept him from going crazy at times, because he knew that his family had his back, but even that was shaken when his mother left to persue a job in New York City, leaving Jacob and Dylan by themselves to move on with their life in Boston.
With his mother's departure, Dylan retreated further inward, and the only person he ever truly confided in was his father, and even then it was few and far between that the two would talk about anything. They were able to bond, though. His father, not only a hard working man, but a lover of sports, introduced his son to all the great sports teams of old, and of course the present wonders that beheld him. Dylan was never a physically over powering boy, but he loved to watch other people play, he understood the concept and finesse of the game and he loved to watch the masters go at it. From Larry Bird and Robert Parish to Ted Williams and Carl Fisk, Dylan started to find his niche in the world, and much like his mother he started to write about everything that he saw on and off the fields. As he grew up, he started to write longer articles, and wound up writing for not only the school paper but for the year book staff as well. Though his reserved nature had continued through out his life to this very day, he did let himself open up around the people he trusted, though for a long time he wondered if he ever really did.
When he graduated from high school he wanted to go out to the docks, work with his father and pursue the life that his whole family had pursued in the past, but he was stopped by the very men he admired. Dylan was accepted to many schools, and the boys on the dock knew that this life wasn't meant for him, he was chased away, told to get the life none of them could've achieved. Dylan promised to make them proud, and it was then that he moved to Virginia and attended the college of William & Mary. The moment he stepped foot there he felt like an even bigger outsider then before, but he did his best, and found himself once again the quiet and shy boy who wrote for the school paper and kept to a very few select group of people, one of those people wound up becoming his best friend, Marshall Thomas. He graduated with a degree in English and a minor in journalism, he was back and forth on what he wanted to do, deciding on journalism instead of heading into the world to teach, he decided to spend his time in Virginia for a year or two until he got a job with the Boston Globe and moved back home.
Dylan had recently gotten a job with ESPN, working on their website as a sports commentator and writer, his dream job from since he was a child, something he was happy to do. Eventually though he decided to move to South Carolina, his best friend was there and going through a hard time after his father's passing, and in all honesty he felt like he needed to take care of him. Though after the move was finalized he had gotten a call back from Marshall, he seemed to be in high spirits, and his life had gotten better because he asked his ex, who was now his current, girlfriend to marry him, and she said yes. Slightly annoyed by this recent news, Dylan is now moving to the south to figure out what the hell was going on with his best friend.
|