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Author Topic: Hunter S. Thompson. Dead at 67.  (Read 18053 times)
Sky
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Reply #105 on: March 01, 2005, 01:42:40 PM

I'm reading F&L in LV right now. I dunno, just seems like me rambling on about the band days. Decent read, not sure what the big deal is, but that's probably because I'm reading it in 2004 and not 1974. The world had already died long ago, the wounds no longer fresh, scars barely visible in books like this.

Reading the LSD stuff is pretty wild, given my own experiences (vast) with the substance as a young man. One summer my band tripped every single day, excepting weekends, when we'd allow our systems to clean out so the LSD would become effective again. When he wrote that bit about needing golf shoes with cleats to get across the floor, trying to 'maintain' (our exact word for it, too), all that brought those memories back.

I think enough people around here play games with the language enough that some of his good language interplay is also somewhat lost on me, or at least taken for granted.

Still, good read.
stray
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Reply #106 on: March 01, 2005, 01:45:17 PM

Well, I read and love Philip K. Dick too, and not just the mainstream stuff.  My enjoyment of HST's work is consistent with my strangeness.  On some level, I'm probably a drug voyeur.  Plus, I have to admit that some of my enjoyment of HST comes from the fact that I find his political writings to be brilliant.

Well, if you can understand or enjoy Phillip K. Dick, then I think you have a rough idea of what psychedelic drugs are like. Not that tripping on acid or shrooms is like a PKD story, but what I mean is, if you can grasp his train of thought (or Hunter's), then you have a good idea. It barely has anything to do with hallucinating and being bombarded with strange visions, and more to do with perceiving the world in a (for lack of words) deeply metaphoric level. The hallucinations are just a part of it.

Maybe "metaphor" is not the right word. It's just more to do with pattern association..or something. You ever seen a crack in the wall, and pictured a face or some other recognizable image from life? Or have you ever been mesmerized by a strange pattern on someone's carpet? Hallucinations usually start off the same way.

Sometimes things get out hand, and you take things to their most nonsensical conclusion, but all in all, it's more of a philosophical experience than it is a visionary one. "Bad trips" are not the result of people seeing something disturbing, but the result of someone taking a thought to it's most frightening conclusion. And believing in it (which is easy to do under the influence of a drug that makes you question what's real or not).

Hrm, I'm probably not making sense. It's hard to really explain the experience, so I'm not really making an effort here, I guess. So just take that for what it's worth. Point is, I think anyone who is able to think philosophically can easily understand HST without missing something.
« Last Edit: March 01, 2005, 02:09:47 PM by Stray »
HaemishM
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Reply #107 on: March 01, 2005, 02:15:56 PM

You want nasty drug assoctiation stories? Read William Burroughs. Then we'll talk.

stray
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Reply #108 on: March 01, 2005, 02:30:09 PM

You want nasty drug assoctiation stories? Read William Burroughs. Then we'll talk.

Burroughs was more of a heroin junky though. I like Burroughs, but I don't think he was making a chronicle out of real experiences. At least not with the crazy stuff you'd read about in Naked Lunch. Heroin is just a nerve drug --- think of taking a good painkiller and multiply the experience by 20.
MaceVanHoffen
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Reply #109 on: March 01, 2005, 02:33:41 PM

You want nasty drug assoctiation stories? Read William Burroughs. Then we'll talk.

Oh man, I'd forgotten about Naked Lunch.  Even though I've only read it once, I feel like I've read a dozen times simply because I had to keep going to back to reread passages to understand the plot (and I use that term loosely).  I can't say I enjoyed that book, though.  The wierdness was great, it was just .... something.   Characters maybe.  Perhaps the writing style.  It just didn't grab me the way other counterculture fiction has.
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Reply #110 on: March 01, 2005, 02:36:44 PM

You'll be one of only about 2 or 3 people I know who ever finished Naked Lunch. Plot is not something I'd say it has. PlotS, maybe. The Soft Machine and Nova Express are pretty much the same way. If you want something with just one plot, read his Junky, an earlier biographical work about trying to kick dope.

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Reply #111 on: March 01, 2005, 04:50:37 PM

You want nasty drug assoctiation stories? Read William Burroughs. Then we'll talk.

No thanks. Drug stuff is pretty boring to the sober.

Um, never mind.
stray
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Reply #112 on: March 01, 2005, 05:16:30 PM

No thanks. Drug stuff is pretty boring to the sober.

Ironically, my life has been pretty boring ever since I quit living like that. Not to say I regret my decision. I've learned all I could out of it. But I've had a hard time finding a good group of "sober" friends ever since. Even if I'm sober myself now. Where the hell are all the cool people in the world, who aren't at the same time, completely dangerous (or at the very least, not entirely helpful) to hang out with? I hate conventionalism just as much as I do recklessness.
« Last Edit: March 01, 2005, 05:35:18 PM by Stray »
Margalis
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Reply #113 on: March 01, 2005, 05:37:40 PM

Dick is awesome. (Insert jokes here)

If you like Dick (more jokes) you migth also try some Cordwainer Smith. (I might be spelling that wrong) It's kind of out there a bit - there is some mad intelligence at work there that's 1/2 brilliance and 1/2 just plain wacky. I would say that it's imaginitive but it's more than that. The production of someone who's brain works bit differently than normal.

vampirehipi23: I would enjoy a book written by a monkey and turned into a movie rather than this.
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Reply #114 on: March 01, 2005, 05:48:28 PM

Where the hell are all the cool people in the world, who aren't at the same time, completely dangerous (or at the very least, not entirely helpful) to hang out with? I hate conventionalism just as much as I do recklessness.

You'll find them. It takes time and patience. And the best part is, once you find them, you'll live long enough to enjoy them.

Um, never mind.
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Reply #115 on: March 05, 2005, 01:50:37 PM

Put on your tinfoil hats, people.

Quote from: The Globe and Mail
Alexander Pope in a prose convertible

By PAUL WILLIAM ROBERTS

Saturday, February 26, 2005, Page F9

Hunter telephoned me on Feb. 19, the night before his death. He sounded scared. It wasn't always easy to understand what he said, particularly over the phone, he mumbled, yet when there was something he really wanted you to understand, you did. He'd been working on a story about the World Trade Center attacks and had stumbled across what he felt was hard evidence showing the towers had been brought down not by the airplanes that flew into them but by explosive charges set off in their foundations. Now he thought someone was out to stop him publishing it: "They're gonna make it look like suicide," he said. "I know how these bastards think . . ."

Quote from: Info Wars
Hunter S. Thompson ... was indeed working on such a story.

Now check out this February 25 Associated Press story about Thompson's death. Sounds a lot like a professional hit with a silencer:

"I was on the phone with him, he set the receiver down and he did it. I heard the clicking of the gun," Anita Thompson told the Aspen Daily News in Friday's editions.

She said her husband had asked her to come home from a health club so they could work on his weekly ESPN column...

Thompson said she heard a loud, muffled noise, but didn't know what had happened. "I was waiting for him to get back on the phone," she said. (Her account to Rocky Mountain News reporter Jeff Kass is slightly different: "I did not hear any bang," she told Kass. She added that Thompson's son, who was in the house at the time, believed that a book had fallen when he heard the shot, according to Kass' report.)

Mack White sums up the questions well:
Thompson's family says he was not depressed, nor was he in enough to pain to kill himself. In fact, by all reports, he was quite happy. He was talking on the phone to his wife, getting ready to work on his column, when he decided it would be wise to kill himself, so that he could go out (we are told) while "still at the top of his form," even though this would mean not finishing his column or his expose on 9/11 (potentially the most important thing he would ever write) (?)...

RELATED: Hunter S. Thompson Suicide Story Changes

This account says Thompson killed himself while sitting in a chair on his typewriter and yet the original account tells us that Thompson shot himself while talking to his wife on the phone in the kitchen. Why has the story changed andwhat is the significance of the word typed on the paper in light of the fact that Thompson said he would be 'suicided' before being able to release a major story on explosives bringing down the twin towers?

RELATED: Hunter S. Thompson thought 9/11 an inside job
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Reply #116 on: March 05, 2005, 02:23:39 PM

If Nixon couldn't and didn't kill him, no one else was going to. Or at least, that's my theory.
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Reply #117 on: March 06, 2005, 12:10:34 PM

 We're dealing with a much angrier and not as smart white man in power now. Those combinations are always more dangerous.

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HaemishM
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Reply #118 on: March 07, 2005, 09:58:57 AM

Wow, so now Hunter can go down in history with Jim Morrison, Bruce Lee, and John F. Kennedy as symbols for guys whose shorts are too tight? Shit.

I tend to agree with schild on this one. If Nixon didn't have him whacked, no one would.

Charges set at the foundations of the World Trade Center? WTF? Not only would that require advance knowledge that the attack was taking place on said certain day, it also just doesn't make physical sense to me based on what I watched on 9-11.

Someone's reaching.

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Reply #119 on: March 08, 2005, 01:33:20 PM

Quote from: AP
Stars Attend Hunter S. Thompson Memorial

Mar 8, 1:45 PM (ET)

ASPEN, Colo. (AP) - Johnny Depp and Bill Murray, who both portrayed Hunter S. Thompson in films, joined Sean Penn, Jack Nicholson and others over the weekend to remember the gonzo journalist at a private memorial.

Depp, who played the part of Thompson in "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas," read a passage from the book in which Thompson rues the end of the '60s, according to a Rocky Mountain News reporter.

The reporter was given permission by Thompson's family after Saturday's memorial to report on the event.

The eccentric Thompson, 67, shot himself at his home near Aspen on Feb. 20 after weeks of pain from a host of physical problems that included a broken leg and a hip replacement.

At the memorial, neighbor and actor Don Johnson remembered once asking Thompson: What is the sound of one hand clapping? Thompson responded by slapping Johnson across the face.

If only he hadn't stopped at one slap.
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Reply #120 on: March 17, 2005, 01:43:12 PM

Quote from: "Some Tinfoil Hat Wearer
Jeff Gannon, Johnny Gosch, Hunter Thompson, and Bohemian Grove Snuff Porn
Posted on Wednesday, March 02 @ 09:35:59 PST by joeb

Columnists

I've been watching this story percolate since the weekend, and with Thursday's return of "Jeff Gannon" to the blogosphere with a column entitled "Fear and Loathing in the Press Room" really bringing it all full circle, several questions are begged here.

As the Jeff Gannon story progressed and turned into a Bush White House homosexual prostitution scandal, Internet investigators started asking if there could be a connection to the previous Bush White House homosexual prostitution scandal.

If you recall, the stories of 15-year-old callboys wandering through the White House in the middle of the night was linked to the "Franklin Cover-Up" case exposed by Nebraska State Sen. John DeCamp. In that case, a Republican operative named Larry King was involved with procuring boys and girls from Boys Town in Nebraska and elsewhere and entrapping them in a child sex-slave and espionage ring. King, with an annual salary of under 20K, was throwing sex parties for the powerful in a $5,000-a-month condo in Washingotn, DC; apparently taping the proceedings for blackmail purposes.

One of the victims of this ring was one Paul Bonacci, who testified in court proceedings that he helped kidnap Johnny Gosch into this ring in 1982. It was apparently at 2:29 AM, Sunday, Feb. 20 that the question was first asked -- is "Jeff Gannon" really Johnny Gosch?

By the end of the day, Hunter S. Thompson was reported dead.

This is where it gets really interesting. Bonacci also testified that he was forced in July 1984 to participate in a homosexual/pedophilic/necrophilic orgy at (what has since been identified as) the Bohemian Grove; all of which was filmed. And according to Bonacci, the man in charge of the filming was someone picked up in Las Vegas on the plane headed to the Grove, a man who Bonacci was told was one "Hunter Thompson."

No doubt most people who came across this information in the past and were familiar with Thompson's work dismissed the idea that the man behind the camera could have been the famous writer. After all, this was a man who has been fighting the like of Nixon and Bush his entire career.

But could Thompson have been brought to the Grove by someone who presented it as an opportunity to investigate what the power elite was up to behind closed doors? Could Thompson have quickly found himself in over his head, compromised, by virtue of his very presence at this horrific crime, by the men he thought he was investigating undercover? (Or perhaps compromised some other way -- perhaps for instance, he was surreptiously filmed with an adult female prostitute who was then murdered. But I digress.)

But back for now to the "Who is Jeff Gannon?" question. James D. Guckert seems to have appeared out of nowhere around 1999, setting up male escort websites. In profiles on these sites from around 2001, "Jeff" said he was 31 years old, closer to Johnny Gosch's age than James Guckert's. (Guckert/Gannon claims to be 47 today.)

"Jeff Gannon" aka "James Guckert" also was attending alumni events at the TKE fraternity of West Chester college in Pennsylvania. Local media called the college and confirmed that a "James Guckert" graduated from West Chester in 1980; but apparently no one has checked yearbooks and such to confirm if the same man seems to be depicted.

Could "James Guckert" be just another false identity? Another Democratic Underground investigator found 1986 and 1987 pictures of a "Jeff Guckert" from Fairview High School, in that same Pennsylvania/Delaware border area that "James D. Guckert" (aka "Jeff Gannon") claimed residence on his escort & porn websites and was cited for $20,000 in back taxes. "Jeff Guckert" would have been about the same age as Johnny Gosch when he was playing high school golf.

Did Gosch go on to assume the identity of "James Guckert," a man ten years older than himself, some time in the 1990s?

Consider this, from his mother Noreen's Johnny Gosch Foundation website in 2001:

Johnny was subjected to severe trauma and torture of a satanic and sexual nature, in order to intentionally destroy the conscious personality.... brainwashing. This intentional application of trauma is a systematic procedure used to control these victims, in order to use them in sexual slavery, pornography and more.

In February 1999, in Federal Court testimony in Omaha Nebraska, Noreen Gosch [pictured] testified that Johnny Gosch came to see her in 1997, providing information about his experience, asking for his mother's help and pleading for her to not reveal his visit.

Johnny is now 31 years old. After years of suffering tremendous torture and pain at the hands of his captors, being used and abused, he and several others escaped. They have been living in hiding under new identities... they fear for their lives.

People ask ... why is it necessary for someone to hide and live this way..... It is simple, Johnny can identify many of the people involved and would be a threat to the very people who took him. He is known as the "chameleon". Why? Because he can so completely change his appearance.

Chameleon? Again, on DU, someone points to a purple blemish on Jeff's chest in one of his circa 2002 "escort" photos, asking if that is the mark left by birthmark removal. According tohis mother Johnny "the Chameleon" Gosch still had the birthmark in 1997.

In one of his first interviews, on CNN's Anderson Cooper 360, "Jeff Gannon" said "James Guckert" "s the name on my driver's license." His handlers have apparently warned him on that point and he now claims it is his "given name."

So, what's the deal here?

Is Jeff Gannon really Johnny Gosch? Noreen Gosch refuses to confirm or deny.

If Gannon is Gosch, what is going on with him? Is his strange behavior a result of years of brainwashing? Or is it something more? Is it possible he drew attention to himself during that January 26 press conference to pique the curiousity of citizen investigators? To draw attention to the dark side of the past 24 years of the Bush regime? He invited this investigation after the press conference (and before the "escort" revelations) by publishing a column titled "Hiding in Plain Sight." This was within days of Franklin cover-up figure George Paul's Bishop sudden arrest.

And, did that investigation have anything to do with the death of Hunter Thompson? Sherman Skolnick and Tom Heneghen at Cloak & Dagger Internet Radio say Thompson was working on a book about high-level sex rings; though they haven't offered a source. But that claim aside, we still have the timing of Thompson's reported death coinciding with these investigations. Did Thompson kill himself out of shame for his part in what happened at the Grove? Was he murdered to shut him up? Or did he fake his death to go underground while all this was breaking?

Is there anything at all to these questions? "Jeff Gannon" hints at a "yes" by putting up a new website headlined by a piece titled after Thompson's most famous works.

It's all "in plain sight" -- albeit through the looking glass.
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Reply #121 on: March 17, 2005, 01:59:27 PM

Can't we just kill Gannon and get his stupidity out of our existence forever?

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Reply #122 on: March 17, 2005, 02:28:56 PM

Can't we just kill Gannon and get his stupidity out of our existence forever?



I did, but he keeps coming back. I think my save is busted.

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Reply #123 on: March 18, 2005, 10:26:55 AM

Lookit what I got in the mail today:


:-D
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Reply #124 on: August 17, 2005, 10:43:23 AM

Quote from: Pittsburgh Live
Gonzo Zambelli send-off for Hunter S. Thompson

Wednesday, August 17, 2005

Gonzo journalist Hunter S. Thompson's final journey began early today as his ashes left New Castle packed in 34 fireworks shells.

The Thompson family hired fireworks giant Zambelli Internationale to fulfill the writer's last wish of having his ashes scattered in a fireworks show over his Owl Farm estate in Woody Creek, Colo., near Aspen.

"We've been working on this for seven to eight months, since he passed away," company spokeswoman Marcy Zambelli said Tuesday. "This would probably rank as one of the most unusual requests we've had."

Zambelli workers custom-designed the brown paper cylindrical shells, which will be part of the aerial display shot out of a 157-foot-tall cannon. The $2 million invitation-only display, paid for by actor Johnny Depp, will take place at sunset Saturday.

"It's more of a launcher rather than a cannon," said Thompson family spokesman Matt Mosely, of Denver-based GBSM Communications.

Thompson, 67, shot himself at his home in February. The renowned counterculture author, whose works included "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas," had revealed the idea for scattering his ashes in a 1978 BBC interview.

"I learned a long time ago not to question his wishes," Mosely said.

Thompson's widow, Anita, arrived by limousine at Zambelli's Lawrence County plant Aug. 9 to deliver his ashes to the plant superintendent. They were in a plastic bag inside an ornate, inscribed wooden box, Zambelli said.

"It was very emotional. She had tears in her eyes when she handed the box over," Zambelli said. "It was very important for the family to meet everyone in the plant involved in the project. They wanted to know how the ashes would be treated."

A convoy of Anita Thompson's friends will follow the truck carrying the shells, Zambelli said. The trip covers more than 1,600 miles.

The launching tower weighs 2 1/2 tons, topped with Thompson's signature gonzo fist emblem -- a double-thumbed fist clenched around a dagger with a peyote button in the middle. A peyote button is the crown of cactus containing the psychedelic drug mescaline.

About 350 friends and family will attend the ceremony. Mosely said Depp is involved because the actor and Thompson became close after Depp portrayed the writer in the "Fear and Loathing" movie.

Zambelli project coordinator Matt Wood, who designed the Thompson tribute, said the show strikes a delicate balance.

"We're working very closely with the family and want to keep some things private," said Wood, who is leaving today for Aspen for three dress rehearsals. "It is a funeral."
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Reply #125 on: August 17, 2005, 12:09:07 PM

Rock on.

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Reply #126 on: August 17, 2005, 01:45:02 PM

Heard about that this morning on NPR. Was interesting toh hear as New Castle is about 30 minutes north of where I live. Fun stuff. And Zambelli is damn good. Way to go out with a bang, HST. ;)

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Reply #127 on: August 21, 2005, 07:26:39 AM

Quote from: AP
Writer’s ashes going, going, gonzo!
Hunter S. Thompson memorialized with fireworks

Updated: 11:40 p.m. ET Aug. 20, 2005

WOODY CREEK, Colo. - With a deafening boom, the ashes of Hunter S. Thompson were blown into the sky amid fireworks late Saturday as relatives and a star-studded crowd bid an irreverent farewell to the founder of “gonzo journalism”.

As the ashes erupted from a tower, red, white, blue and green fireworks lit up the sky over Thompson’s home near Aspen.

The 15-story tower was modeled after Thompson’s logo: a clenched fist, made symmetrical with two thumbs, rising from the hilt of a dagger. It was built between his home and a tree-covered canyon wall, not far from a tent filled with merrymakers.

“He loved explosions,” explained his wife, Anita Thompson.

The private celebration included actors Bill Murray and Johnny Depp, rock bands, blowup dolls and plenty of liquor to honor Thompson, who killed himself six months ago at the age of 67.

Security guards kept reporters and the public away from the compound as the 250 invited guests arrived, but Thompson’s fans scouted the surrounding hills for the best view of the celebration.

“We just threw a gallon of Wild Turkey in the back and headed west,” said Kevin Coy of Chester, W.Va., who drove more than 1,500 miles with a friend in hopes of seeing the celebration. “We came to pay our respects.”

Thompson fatally shot himself in his kitchen Feb. 20, apparently despondent over his declining health. The memorial, however, was planned as a party, with readings and scheduled performances by both Lyle Lovett and the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band.

The author’s longtime illustrator, Ralph Steadman, and actor Sean Penn were on the invitation list, along with Depp, who portrayed Thompson in the 1998 movie version of “Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream,” perhaps the writer’s best-known work.

“Over the last few months I’ve learned that he really touched people more deeply than I had realized,” said Thompson’s son, Juan.

Thompson’s longtime friend George Stranahan lamented the Hollywood-style production. “I am pretty sure it isn’t how Hunter would have done it,” he said. “But when your friends make a mistake you support them.”

Anita Thompson said Depp funded much of the celebration.

“We had talked a couple of times about his last wishes to be shot out of a cannon of his own design,” Depp told The Associated Press last month. “All I’m doing is trying to make sure his last wish comes true. I just want to send my pal out the way he wants to go out.”

Thompson is credited along with Tom Wolfe and Gay Talese with helping pioneer New Journalism — he dubbed his version “gonzo journalism” — in which the writer was an essential component of the story.

He often portrayed himself as wildly intoxicated as he reported on figures such as Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton. At the height of the Watergate era, he said Richard Nixon represented “that dark, venal, and incurably violent side of the American character.”

Besides the 1972 classic about Thompson’s visit to Las Vegas — in which the central character was a snarling, drug- and alcohol-crazed observer and participant — he also wrote an expose on the Hell’s Angels and “Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail ’72.”

The Kentucky-born writer also was the model for Garry Trudeau’s balding “Uncle Duke” in the comic strip “Doonesbury.”

In now-chic Aspen, Thompson was an eccentricity: He proudly fired his guns whenever he wanted, let peacocks have the run of the land and ran for sheriff in 1970 under the Freak Power Party banner.

Composer David Amram, a friend of Thompson since the early 1960s, said Thompson had never expected to be successful taking on President Nixon during the Watergate era. “He thought he would be banned or put on an enemies’ list,” he said.

Thompson made himself the centerpiece of his stories “to show that a regular person could be in the midst of the craziness of the time,” Amram said. “He was our historian.”

After his suicide, one close acquaintance suggested Thompson did not want old age to dictate the circumstances of his death. Anita Thompson said no suicide note was left.

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Reply #128 on: August 22, 2005, 08:15:42 AM

Quote from: AP
Some decry glitz of Thompson blastoff

By ROBERT WELLER
Associated Press Writer

WOODY CREEK, Colo. (AP) -- Hunter S. Thompson's grand finale went off as planned: His ashes were blasted into the night sky in an explosion friends and fans agreed he would have loved. But some said the gonzo journalist would have sneered at the Hollywood trappings - champagne toasts by movie stars and former presidential candidates.

Filmmaker Nancy Cohen tried to organize a group of 100 fans outside the gates of Thompson's farm to crash the Saturday night party.

"That's what Hunter would have done," she said.

"This looks more like a fancy dress ball than a memorial for a counterculture icon," said Cohen, of New York, producer of "My Dinner With Abbie," a film about 1960s radical activist Abbie Hoffman.

Crashing the party would have been difficult with the dozens of black-clad security guards who lined the roads leading to the farm.

"It looks like the neighborhood has been invaded by the Viet Cong," friend and neighbor Mike Cleverly said of the guards.

"I am pretty sure it isn't how Hunter would have done it," said longtime friend George Stranahan.

The writer's ashes were fired from atop a 15-story tower modeled after Thompson's logo: a clenched fist, holding a peyote button, rising from the hilt of a dagger. It was built between his home and a tree-covered canyon wall.

The guests gathered in a pavilion next to the platform. Inside were blow up sex dolls and a mask of Thompson's arch enemy, late President Richard Nixon. With drums beating in the background, trays of champagne circulated before Thompson's remains flew.

Thompson shot himself in his kitchen Feb. 20, apparently despondent over his declining health.

The national and most local media were barred from the tribute to the groundbreaking writer who was credited, along with Tom Wolfe and Gay Talese, with helping pioneer New Journalism - he dubbed his version "gonzo journalism" - in which the writer was an essential component of the story.

His only son, Juan Thompson, said the hundreds of celebrities, including actors Johnny Depp and Bill Murray, musician Lyle Lovett and former Democratic presidential nominees George McGovern and Sen. John Kerry, wouldn't have felt comfortable with the press around.

Depp, who played Thompson in the 1998 film adaptation of "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas," paid for the $2.5 million extravaganza. Depp and Juan Thompson embraced as the ashes fell to the ground.

Juan Thompson told the Aspen Daily News that the ceremony not only fulfilled the vision his father outlined in a 1978 BBC video, but it "was bigger than he ever imagined."

Ralph Steadman, who illustrated many of Thompson's works, had a different take on the extravaganza.

"He'd probably say it wasn't quite big enough," said Steadman. "We want him back. (Saturday night) was a kind of pleading for him to come back. All is forgiven."
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Reply #129 on: September 08, 2005, 11:56:59 AM

Quote from: AP
'Rolling Stone' publishes Hunter S. Thompson note

Posted 9/8/2005 11:04 AM

NEW YORK (AP) — Rolling Stone, the magazine that was home for years to Hunter S. Thompson, will publish a note written by the gonzo journalist days before he committed suicide in February.

Douglas Brinkley, the presidential historian who is also Thompson's official biographer, writes that a Feb. 16 note may be Thompson's final written words. It reads:

"No More Games. No More Bombs. No More Walking. No More Fun. No More Swimming. 67. That is 17 years past 50. 17 more than I needed or wanted. Boring. I am always bitchy. No Fun — for anybody. 67. You are getting Greedy. Act your old age. Relax — This won't hurt."

Hunter left the note for his wife, Anita. He shot himself four days later at his home in Aspen, Colo., after weeks of pain from a host of physical problems that included a broken leg and a hip replacement.

Written in black marker, the note was titled, Football Season Is Over.

Brinkley writes in the magazine, on newsstands Friday, "February was always the cruelest month for Hunter S. Thompson. An avid NFL fan, Hunter traditionally embraced the Super Bowl in January as the high-water mark of his year. February, by contrast, was doldrums time."

Most of Thompson's early writings appeared in Rolling Stone. In pieces of great length, he often portrayed himself as a wildly intoxicated observer and participant.

The writer's ashes were blown into the sky in Woody Creek, Colo., amid fireworks on Aug. 20.
WayAbvPar
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Reply #130 on: September 08, 2005, 12:17:41 PM

Quote
Written in black marker, the note was titled, Football Season Is Over

I empathize. The end of football season is a dark, dark time. Just like today is a joyous occasion, starting at 8 pm EDT!

When speaking of the MMOG industry, the glass may be half full, but it's full of urine. HaemishM

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Libertarians make fun of everyone because they can't see beyond the event horizons of their own assholes Surlyboi
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Reply #131 on: September 08, 2005, 03:04:54 PM

Indeed - my wife will be glued to the TV and I can play computer without interuption!

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Reply #132 on: December 28, 2005, 12:34:47 PM

Quote from: Contact Music
LOVETT THRILLED WITHE HERO THOMPSON'S CAR

Country star LYLE LOVETT once bought late author HUNTER S THOMPSON's Cadillac for $2,000 (GBP1,110).

The former husband of JULIA ROBERTS admits he was a longtime fan of eccentric Thompson when the FEAR AND LOATHING IN LAS VEGAS writer offered him the chance to buy his car.

Lovett recalls, "We were backstage and we found out our next show was in Salt Lake City and he said, 'Well, you'll need a pace car for that. You ought to buy my Cadillac.'

"I figured if Hunter S Thompson offers to sell you his car, the only thing you can do is ask him how much.

"He said, 'Two thousand dollars,' and I paid him right there. There was a case of beer in the trunk and he threw that in too."

28/12/2005 10:17
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