Melissa Plaut
GET UPDATES FROM Melissa Plaut
Melissa Plaut is the author of HACK: How I Stopped Worrying About What to Do with My Life and Started Driving a Yellow Cab, published by Villard/Random House.

After college, Plaut held a series of unsatisfying office jobs until getting laid off from an advertising agency at the age of 28. Not wanting to return to an unfulfilling corporate career, she decided to treat life as a series of adventures. Her first step: become a New York City taxi driver. Undeterred by the fact that 99 percent of cabbies in the city were men, she went to taxi school, got her “hack” license, and hit the streets of Manhattan and the outlying boroughs.

A year later, she started writing and photographing for her blog, New York Hack, which detailed her nightly experiences behind the wheel. Within a few months, the blog was receiving several thousand hits a day. Plaut’s book, HACK, expanded on the blog, tracing her first years traveling the 6,400 miles of New York City streets, navigating the inner workings of the city’s taxi industry while revealing the crazy parade of humanity that passed through her cab.

Plaut’s writing has appeared in the New York Times, USA Today, BUST Magazine, and the San Diego Reader. She has also written and recorded stories for NPR’s All Things Considered and Weekend America.

Plaut is currently at work on her second memoir and first feature-length screenplay. She lives in Brooklyn.

Photo credit Julia Gillard.

Blog Entries by Melissa Plaut

Taxi Drivers: Guilty Until Proven Innocent

Posted March 23, 2010 | 13:41:05 (EST)

Every cabbie in New York City knows the Taxi & Limousine Commission is not on their side. Finally, now, the rest of the city can know it, too. The recent "taxi scam" story has served to bring the TLC's own fraudulent and irresponsible practices into the public eye.

Using data...

Read Post

Cash or Credit? In a Taxi, It Depends Which Side of the Partition You're On

Posted November 17, 2009 | 12:03:12 (EST)

Riding in a New York City taxi has never been more convenient. Forgot to take out cash? No big deal -- you can just charge it. But two years after the city mandated that credit card readers, ad-saturated "information" monitors, and GPS trackers (with no navigational capabilities) be installed into...

Read Post

Denying Cab Drivers a Cell Phone Puts Them in Danger (and Makes You Late)

Posted October 21, 2009 | 16:47:48 (EST)

It's a basic fact of life in New York that your taxi driver will probably be on the phone.

That may soon change. Last week, the city's Taxi & Limousine Commission (TLC) proposed new rules that will prohibit the city's 46,000 cab drivers from wearing hands-free devices while behind the...

Read Post