A year of celebration with Arthur Magazine

THINGS ARTHUR GOT BEHIND IN 02006, MONTH BY MONTH:

** JANUARY 02006 (published Dec 02005) **
“THE BUDDHA MACHINE” machine
COLLEEN “The Golden Morning Breaks” album
EARTH “Hex: or Printing in the Infernal Method” album
SUNN 0)) “Black 1” album
TV ON THE RADIO “Dry Drunk Emperor” mp3
CAST KING “Saw Hill Man” album
NINA SIMONE “The Soul of Nina Simone” dual disc
“Niger: Magic & Ecstasy in the Sahel” dvd
OOIOO album
PEARLS AND BRASS “The Indian Tower” album
THE FALL “Fall Heads Roll” album
TARANTULA A.D. “Book of Sand” album
MI AND L’AU “Mi and L’Au” album
BJORN OLSSON the lobster album
BIFF ROSE “The Thorn in Mrs. Rose’s Side”/”Children of Light” cd
LAVENDER DIAMOND “The Cavalry of Light” ep

**ARTHUR MAGAZINE MARCH 02006 (pub’d Feb 02006)**
DELIA GONZALEZ & GAVIN RUSSOM “The Days of Mars” album
TAV FALCO & PANTHER BURNS
MOUNTAINS “Sewn” album
CITAY “Citay” album
THE DUKE SPIRIT “Cuts Across the Lane” album
ISOBEL CAMPBELL & MARK LANEGAN “Ballad of the Broken Seas” album
BETH ORTON “Comfort of Strangers” album
BELLE & SEBASTIAN “The Life Pursuit” album
SPARKS “Hello Young Lovers” album

** ARTHURBALL: FEB. 24-25, 02006 IN LOS ANGELES**
JOANNA NEWSOM debut performs entire album “Ys” to 700 stunned audients nine months ahead of its release
5:15ERS one-time only performance by Josh Homme/Chris Goss desert duo
MORIS TEPPER legendary Beefheart guitarist with PJ HARVEY on bass
LAVENDER DIAMOND special perf with a string quartet
GRANT MORRISON live radiant standup poet rant
BRIGHTBLACK MORNING LIGHT hazy daisies
COLLEEN from France, for a single gauzy U.S. show
SUBLIME FREQUENCIES filmmakers who find the last sounds left from the older world
WHITE RAINBOW sound room of light at Machine Gallery
ERIK DAVIS performance lecture
PEARLS AND BRASS big-armed rockage
B+ beats filmmaker
PLASTIC CRIMEWAVE SOUND hydroponic sonics
MI & L’AU woodland elementals
UNKNOWN INSTRUCTORS beatnik explosion
TARANTULA A.D the next Floyd
OM metaltators
CITAY rolling pastoral psych / gentle metal
GROWING couchlock
AFROBEAT DOWN ow
THE MARS SOCIETY time to leave the planet
LEWIS MACADAMS interview by KRISTINE MCKENNA american river history
BORN HELLER Josephine Foster
INDIAN JEWELRY dark jamboree
TOWN & COUNTRY fully functional dream machine

** ARTHUR MAGAZINE MAY 02006 (pub’d April 02006) **
GROWING “The Color Wheel” album
ORGANIC APPLE CIDER VINEGAR with the ‘mother’
OM “Conference of Birds” album
JEREMY NARBY “Intelligence in Nature: An Inquiry Into Knowledge” book
PANDIT PRAN NATH chapter from “The Dawn of Indian Music in the West” book by Peter Lavezzoli
MARVIN GAYE “The Real Thing: In Performance, 1964-1981” dvd
GNARLS BARKLEY “St. Elsewhere” album
RUFUS HARLEY “Sustain” album
THE BLACK KEYS “Chulahoma” ep
EAGLES OF DEATH METAL “Death by Sexy” album
THE CUTS album
FUTURE PIGEON album
AGGROLITES album
FIERY FURNACES “Bitter Tea” album
ESPERS “II” album
ALEX MITCHELL “Life is a Phantom K-Mart Horse Starting Up in the Middle of the Night” book
JOHN TOTTENHAM “The Inertia Variations” book
JOSEPHINE FOSTER “A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing” album
SCOTT WALKER “The Drift” album
FRED NEIL compilation album
BELONG “October Language” album
BORIS “Pink” album
HOWLIN RAIN album

**ARTHUR MAGAZINE JULY 02006 (pub’d June 02006) **
BRIGHTBLACK MORNING LIGHT album
MINT herb
DERRICK JENSEN “Endgame” book
“THE ROAD TO GUANTANAMO” film by Michael Winterbottom & Mat Whitecross
PETER WATKINS “Punishment Park,” “Culloden,” “The War Game,” “La Commune,” “The Gladiators,” “Edvard Munch,” “Privilege” dvds
ED HALTER “From Sun Tzu to Xbox: War and Video Games” book
BELONG “October Language” album
COMETS ON FIRE “Avatar” album
VETIVER “To Find Me Gone” album
AWESOME COLOR album
“ZIZEK!” dvd
BEAVIS & BUTTHEAD “The Mike Judge Collection Volume 2” dvd
“PHI TA KHON: GHOSTS OF ISAN” dvd directed by Robert Millis
“A VISIT TO ALI FARKE TOURE” dvd by Marc Hurax
TONY ALLEN “Lagos No Shaking” album
“ECCENTRIC SOUL: THE BIG MACK LABEL” album by The Numero Group
JAMES HUNTER “People Gonna Talk” album
RAMBLIN’ JACK ELLIOTT “I Stand Alone” album
LOREN CONNORS “Night Through: Singles and Collected Works 1976-2004” 3-cd box et
CHARALAMBIDES “A Vintage Burden” album
“THE GOLDING INSTITUTE PRESENTS FINAL RELAXATION” self-help album of the year

** Aug. 1, 02006: IRA COHEN’S “INVASION OF THUNDERBOLT PAGODA” DVD released**

** Aug. 29, 02006: JOSEPHINE FOSTER’S “SO MUCH FIRE TO ROAST HUMAN FLESH” CD released — a compilation to benefit counter-military recruiting campaigns **

** ARTHUR MAGAZINE OCTOBER 02006 (pub’d SEPT 02006) **
ETHAN MILLER of COMETS ON FIRE & HOWLIN’ RAIN
WALNUTS brainfood
THE SHARP EASE “Remain Instant” ep
WENDY MULLIN Sew U book
JOHN SINCLAIR guide
AKRON/FAMILY “Meek Warrior” album
BEACH HOUSE album
MICK BARR & ZACH HILL “Earthship” ep
THE HORRORS “The Horrors” ep
THE USA IS A MONSTER “Sunset at the End of the Industrial Age”
WOLF EYES “Human Animal” album
“GOOD GOD! A GOSPEL FUNK HYMNAL” album
THE BYRDS boxset
TRAINWRECK RIDERS “Lonely Road Revival” album
ED ROSENTHAL’S BIG BUDS calendar
BUFFALO KILLERS album
BLIND FAITH “London Hyder Park 1969” dvd
GRAHAM COXON “Love Travels at Illegal Speeds” album

** ARTHUR NIGHTS OCT. 19-22, 02006 in LOS ANGELES **
ARCHIE BRONSON OUTFIT
AWESOME COLOR Li’l Stooges
AXOLOTL
BE YOUR OWN PET
BELONG
BERT JANSCH
BORIS
BUFFALO KILLERS
C.B. BRAND
CHARALAMBIDES
CHRISTINA CARTER
CHUCK DUKOWSKI SEXTET family outing
THE COLOSSAL YES
COMETS ON FIRE
EFFIE BRIEST
ESPERS
FIERY FURNACES
FUTURE PIGEON
GROUPER
HEARTLESS BASTARDS
THE HOWLING HEX
JACKIE BEAT
JOSEPHINE FOSTER
LIVING SISTERS (Inara George, Eleni Mandell & Becky Stark)
KYP MALONE (of TV on the Radio)
MIA DOI TODD
MICHAEL HURLEY
MICK BARR
MONEY MARK
THE NICE BOYS
NOEL VON HARMONSON & BEN CHASNY
THE NUMERO GROUP dj sets!
OM
RESIDUAL ECHOES
RUTHANN FRIEDMAN
THE SHARP EASE
SIX ORGANS OF ADMITTANCE
SSM
SUNDOWN SCHOOLHOUSE group led by Fritz Haeg
SUN RA ARKESTRA
TALL FIRS
TAV FALCO & PANTHER BURNS
WATTS PROPHETS
WHITE MAGIC
WOODEN WAND & VANISHING VOICE
YELLOW SWANS

** ARTHUR MAGAZINE WINTER 02006 (pub’d Nov 02006) **
JOANNA NEWSOM “Ys” album
CHRISTIAN RATSCH & CLAUDIA MULLER-EBELING “Pagan Christmas: The Plants, Spirits and Rituals of Yuletide” book
ALAN MOORE pornographer
LISA ANNE AUERBACH sweaters
TV ON THE RADIO aware
CHUCK DUKOWSKI guide
SANDY BULL “Still Valentine’s Day 1969” album
SUNN O)) & BORIS “Altar” album
WHITE MAGIC “Dat Rosa Mel Apibus” album

*** SOME (NOT ALL) OTHER GREAT STUFF WE WERE TOTALLY GASSED ON BUT WERE UNABLE TO DEVOTE ACHIEVEMENT-APPROPRIATE COVERAGE TO***

ALELA DIANE “The Pirate’s Gospel” album
ALLEN GINSBERG “First Blues” album
THE BLACK CROWES “Tall” album
BOB DYLAN “Modern Times” album
BONNIE PRINCE BILLY “The Letting Go” album
BRAIN DONOR “Drain’d Boner” album
CALIFONE album
CAT POWER “The Greatest” album
CORMAC MCCARTHY “The Road” novel
DANIEL (A.I.U) HIGGS “Interdimensional Song-Seamstress” album
DEAD MOON “Echoes of the Past” 2xCD
DEERHUNTER “Cryptograms” album
DIRTY PRETTY THINGS “Waterloo” album
DOGNTANK album
EL GOODO album
ENTRANCE “Prayer of Death” album
FETUS “Battiato” album
GEORGE MITCHELL COLLECTION 7-inch vinyl series on Fat Possum
GREGG KOWALSKY “Through the Cardinal Window” album
THE HEADS “Under the Stress of a Headlong Dive” album
HERESI “Psalm II” ep
THE HOWLING HEX album
IAN SVENONIUS “The Psychic Soviet” little pink book
J.G. BALLARD “Kingdom Come” novel
IDIOCRACY film by Mike Judge
JOHN CALE “New York in the ’60s” boxset
JOHN MCBAIN “The In-Flight Feature” album
KAREN DALTON “In My Own Time” album
LIARS “Drums Not Dead” album
LOS LOBOS album
LOSCII “Plume” album
LUCCIO BATTISTI “Amore E Non Amore” album
M. WARD “Post-War” album
THE MARS VOLTA album
MARY J. BLIGE “MJB Da MVP” song
THE MASTER MUSICIANS OF JAJOUKA “Bouheloud” album
MATTHEW FRIEDBERGER “Winter Women” album
MICHAEL KUPPERMAN “Tales Designed to Thrizzle” comics
MILTON NASCIMENTO
MOONCHILD “Songs Without Words” album
MV & EE WITH THE BUMMER ROAD “Green Blues” album
NEIL YOUNG “Living With War” album
NICK OLIVERI AND THE MONDO GENERATOR “Dead Planet: SonicSlowMotionTrails” album
NINA SIMONE “Forever Young, Gifted & Black: Songs of Freedom and Spirit” album
NOAH GEORGESON “Find Shelter” album
ONEIDA “The Wedding Party” album
OOIOO “Taiga” album
ORTHODOX “Gran Poder” album
PAUL WINE JONES “Stop Arguing Over Me” album
THE PSYCHIC PARAMOUNT “Origins and Primtives (vol. 1 + 2)” 2xalbum
RICK VEITCH “Can’t Get No” book
SILVER APPLES “The Garden” album
SLY STONE Grammys appearance
SOFT MACHINE “Middle Earth Masters” and “Grides” albums
SIX ORGANS OF ADMITTANCE “The Sun Awakens” album
SONIC YOUTH “Rather Ripped” and “The Destroyed Rooms” albums
THOMAS PYNCHON “Against the Day” novel
TOWN AND COUNTRY “Up Above” album
“Townes Van Zandt: Be Here to Love Me” film dvd by Margaret Brown
VIKING MOSES various albums
VINCENT BLACK SHADOW album
“What We Want, What We Believe: The Black Panther Party Library” 4xdvd presented by The Roz Payne Archives and Newsreel Films
WINTER FLOWERS album
WIRE “Live at the Roxy, London April 1 &2, 1977″/”Live at CBGB July 18, 1978” cd
YO LA TENGO “I am…” album

"Guilty."

GREEN RAGE
by Matt Rasmussen
from Orion Magazine – January/Feb 2007

Radical environmentalists are caught between their love of the Earth, trespass of the law and the U.S. government’s war on terror

PEOPLE LIKE TO THINK of the courtroom as a crucible of justice, but to me it’s always seemed a diluter of passions. The atmosphere is restrained, so respectful and genteel it’s easy to forget that people’s lives hang in the balance. The system has a way of straining out emotion. It is designed to objectify, to control the soaring passions that created the need for the courtroom in the first place. The perpetrators and the victims pour their passions into the settling ponds of the attorneys, and the attorneys, in turn, pour the diluted stuff into the deep vessel of the judge, and, by extension, into the even deeper water of The System.

If you sat in the gallery of a federal courtroom in my hometown of Eugene, Oregon, last summer and watched as six young men and women entered guilty pleas in a string of environmentally motivated arsons—crimes that the federal government describes as the most egregious environmental terrorism in the nation’s history—you might have wondered where the passion had gone. One by one, in a windowless chamber, the defendants answered perfunctory questions posed by Judge Ann Aiken, who sat Oz-like in the highest chair. One by one, they listened to descriptions of the crimes they were accused of committing. One by one, they accepted the government’s offer of plea bargains, and one by one, they said the word.

“Guilty.”

Continue reading

ARTHUR EMAIL BULLETIN No. 0063

“COMMAND PERFORMANCE”

The Arthur Magazine Email Bulletin

No. 0063

December 22, 02006

Website:

http://www.arthurmag.com

Comments:

editor@arthurmag.com

Warmest greetings to you,

In the spirit of the solstice holiday season and all that, we’ve posted online the complete text of Erik Davis’s acclaimed, epic profile of harper/singer Joanna Newsom, published in the current issue of Arthur.  If you haven’t been able to find a copy of the mag, here’s your chance to read the article — or forward it to someone else — without having to download the 3-part PDF and squint at your computer screen and all that nonsense. Put it in your pipe and smoke it, if you like:

http://www.arthurmag.com/magpie/?p=1580

Arthur Text Goons

Los Angeles, California

"The Light at the End of the Reality Tunnel" by Douglas Rushkoff, from Arthur No. 25/Winter 02006

“The Light at the End of the Reality Tunnel”
by columnist Douglas Rushkoff

(Originally published in Arthur No. 25/Winter 02006)

This has been a very bizarre couple of weeks for me. I changed literary agents, did a bookstore discussion/debate with former Arthur columnist Daniel Pinchbeck, learned of Robert Anton Wilson’s dire end-of-life financial predicament, and then left my wife and 21-month-old daughter to fly to Germany (where I am right now, stuck in an airport thanks to a canceled flight) to give a talk to a big magazine conglomerate about what makes their publications relevant in a mediaspace fast migrating online.

And I’ve found myself alternatively inspired and unnerved, about each and every one of these events. I feel their connection on an emotional level —as if the microcosm in which I’m participating reflects a greater theme. Like an archipelago, this seemingly disconnected string of islands is all connected beneath the surface. And that connection is about how we make value—for ourselves and one another.

Take the Pinchbeck event. Now it’s no secret to Arthur readers that he and I come from different ends of the spiritual spectrum. When he was writing columns in these pages about channeling the wisdom of Quetzalcoatl, I was warning the same readers not to take any prophecy too seriously—and certainly not literally. Then, I ran into Daniel in a coffeeshop just a week after a particularly critical screed on him and the “psychedelic elite” came out in Rolling Stone—an article in which I was quoted on the value of communities over heroes.

We concluded that a face-to-face discussion was in order, and figured we might as well do it in public. So Daniel asked a bookstore where he was scheduled to speak if we could turn it into a two-man show. Almost as soon as the discussion was announced, email started coming in, asking how I was going to “take him on” or “take him out”—the assumption being that we’d have a take-no-prisoners debate. And while I’m certain we’ve pissed each other off over the years, I thought the point of mixing it up a bit would be to learn something from one another. Find common ground. Meanwhile, we’d end up bringing together a rather unlikely audience of media students, recent Burning Man returnees, psychedelics enthusiasts and comics readers. In business terms, we were “creating value” for one another and our separate readerships by introducing them to each other.

I’ll admit, the event both inspired and disturbed me. Sure, the assembled crowd was varied and eager. But the conversation itself was too competitive, no matter how I intended otherwise. All I meant to show was that we each have our own reality tunnels – and that no matter how spectacularly “real” something may appear, especially on super-strong shamanic entheogens, it’s just one metaphor for whatever it is that might really be going on. None of us knows what happens when we die, whether there’s anything or anyone else “out there,” or whether the connections we seem to perceive all around us are conspiring or coincidental.

Daniel tended to dismiss my points he disagreed with as “thoughts,” to which I finally snapped that “everything we’re saying is just thoughts, buddy.” I leave it to you to choose who of us is more Zen, but my lasting impression of the conversation was that we didn’t quite transcend the zero-sum game as I had imagined we would. It was still just two white guys with microphones, competing for mindshare and the marketshare that goes along with it. Had I been used simply to get more people to show up at his book signing? Was I seeing in him the qualities I dislike in myself? Why should such misgivings even arise?

Then came word from a truer pioneer of mind and cosmos than either of us, Robert Anton Wilson: his post-polio syndrome had gotten worse, and the attendant medical bills combined with some trouble with the IRS had tapped him out. He was three days away from not being able to make his rent.

Say what? Robert Anton Wilson, author of Cosmic Trigger and Prometheus Rising, the guy who put the number 23 on the map, and delightfully upgraded the minds of thousands if not millions, forever, could no longer support himself? For those who may be unfamiliar with his work, Wilson is the man who put the many insights of Sixties into perspective. By approaching the seeming interconnectedness of everything with a grain of salt and two grains of humor, he’s helped to demonstrate the value of seeing one’s own reality tunnel for what it is: a limited take on a much greater whole. Rather than getting lost in any particular tunnel (or, worse, pushing it on other people) the object of the game was to learn to move between them.

On learning of his predicament, I felt an anger welling up. I refused to be a member of a generation that could allow an author and philosopher of his caliber to die penniless in a state hospital, so I dashed out a blog post (http://www.rushkoff.com/2006/10/robert-anton-wilson-needs-our-help.php) alerting the “community,” along with Bob’s Paypal address (olgaceline@gmail.com). Thanks to a link from BoingBoing.net, we raised over $68,000 dollars in just the first couple of days, along with a few hundred heartfelt testimonials in the comments section.

But there was a second thread in the comments section that disturbed me. “How do we know this is not a hoax?” some people were asking. Indeed, I wondered. How do I prove I’m not a scam artist of some kind, putting up my own Paypal address? This is the Internet, after all. Further down in the comments, someone had posted the response I might have been embarrassed to make for myself: “just look at Rushkoff’s site and his work.”

And that’s when the value of “reputation”—what business folks call “brand”—actually made sense to me as a good thing rather than just some ego trip. The fact that I’ve been writing books for 15 years and have been hosting an online community of one sort or another for nearly as long has earned me the trust required to communicate an urgent fact and have it believed. At least by enough people to make a difference.

While by far the majority of comments and email since then have been very positive both towards Bob and about the effort to keep him solvent and cared for, there’s plenty of cynicism out there, too. “Why should he get cared for over some other sick and poor person?” one egalitarian asked. “He should have managed his money better,” another complained to me (like I have time to read emails from people who have decided not to help Bob when I can barely process the ones from people looking to help). “I already paid him when I bought his book,” explained another, who best exemplified the trend. It’s the logic of a perverted sort of libertarianism —one that can’t see beyond its own very limited notion of the competitive marketplace.

For even if we use the raw logic of the market, Bob is simply being paid back for the value he created. Those of us who are contributing to Robert Anton Wilson now are still, in effect, paying residuals on what we got from him. We’ve all bought plenty of twenty-dollar books—but few have been worth as much to us as Bob’s. The works generated value for us over time, and we see fit to share this wealth in the form of cash energy with the person who created it for us. This is not the order of a free market economy, but of what might better be called a free market ecology.

“Economics” is based on the assumption that people act in ways that maximize their wealth as individuals. It holds true for many situations. All else being equal, we’ll buy products at the best price we can get them and take the highest wage we can find. The assumption is that we act out of selfishness—and economics is just its rational application. Under the laws of economics, we wouldn’t pay for the same book twice.

An ecology, on the other hand, though wildly competitive and occasionally just as cruel as any economy, is based on interdependency. The members of a coral reef or slime mold know how to take coordinated action when it’s called for. The shit of one organism is fertilizer for another. An ecology still operates under the assumption of maximizing wealth, but of the whole collective organism —and over time.

By refusing to let Robert Anton Wilson die penniless, we—as a culture, or at least part of a culture—are caring for a certain kind of thinking and activity, even if this is after the fact. By doing so, we not only acknowledge to Robert Anton Wilson the tremendous contributions he made to our lives, but we have the opportunity to reaffirm the same thing to ourselves. Like college alumni who reinforce their own positive feelings about their alma maters when they make donations to keep the institution going, we publicly affirm the value of Bob’s legacy —thus making it more valuable or at least less dismissible for a society bent on recontextualizing the Sixties, psychedelia and mental adventurousness as an embarrassing phase.

Just look at the recent spate of articles accompanying the tenth anniversary of Timothy Leary’s death, as well as Bob Greenfield’s recent biography. These writers are all-too ready to condemn Leary for his undeniably self-centered personality, but all-too reluctant to acknowledge his even more powerfully compassionate, activist nature that spurred him to sacrifice pretty much everything for his vision of an intelligent human species that needn’t destroy itself. It’s as if embracing our inner “hope fiend” is as uncool today as, I dunno, believing that anyone who sets pen to paper or text to a blog is doing it for an ulterior, profit-based motive.

And all this is what I attempted to explain to the magazine executives in Germany yesterday. At their best, magazines —like any cultural product—serve their audiences not merely through their own value, but by allowing their readers to create value for themselves and one another. Sure, this means understanding that a magazine’s true customers are the readers, not the advertisers—a lesson that quality pay-TV is fast teaching their ad-based broadcast counterparts.

It’s also why I changed agents. Not because the first one was bad in any way, but because I met one who challenged me to consider what I thought was the most significant contribution to the world, rather than what might be expected to sell the most out of the gate. This is not the way most people who call themselves “literary agents” speak. It’s economics in reverse; not “how can I get the most value from my efforts,” but “how can I create the most value for everyone through them?”

Those of us dedicated to keeping Robert Anton Wilson’s flesh and finale as dignified as possible are rewarding a great writer for never selling out. But this ethos must not end with the passage of this individual, however heroic—not when he’s given us so many of the tools required to turn this society’s notion of value inside-out. If we’ve learned anything through all this, it’s that the universe we’re creating together needn’t be one where no good deed is left unpunished.

HUNTER S. THOMPSON PHOTO EXHIBIT IN L.A.

HUNTER S. THOMPSON
GONZO

DECEMBER 2, 2006 – JANUARY 20, 2007

612 NORTH ALMONT DRIVE
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 90069
TEL 310 550 0050
FAX 310 550 0605
INFO@MBFALA.COM
WWW.MBFALA.COM
TUE-SAT 10-5

“M+B gallery and AMMO Books are pleased to present GONZO, the debut exhibition of photography by famed American author Hunter S. Thompson. The exhibition coincides with the release of Thompson’s final book, of the same name, and chronicles his life through his own photographs and memorabilia.

GONZO began as a personal collaboration with Thompson prior to his untimely death, and has since come to completion with the support of his family and estate. The show will feature many never before seen photographs from Thompson’s personal archive, including shots from his early days as a foreign correspondent in Puerto Rico, living in Big Sur in the 1960s, time on the road with the Hell’s Angels, illuminating self-portraits, and many personal moments with friends and family throughout the years.

GONZO is a visual tour de force that will take you on an incredible journey through the life and times of the legendary writer Hunter S. Thompson. The iconoclastic American author developed his own style of writing that became known as “gonzo journalism”-a completely truthful, but not always factual, hands on method of reporting. With his numerous articles for Rolling Stone and other magazines, his acclaimed books including Hell’s Angels , The Rum Diary , Curse of Lono and the seminal Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas , Thompson influenced generations and established himself as an original and powerful voice in the political and literary world.

Immortalized on film by good friends Johnny Depp (Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, 1998) and Bill Murray (Where the Buffalo Roam, 1980), Hunter became a cult hero to counter-culture youth, intellectuals and celebrities alike. Notoriously fond of firearms and hallucinogens, Thompson lived in his self-described “heavily fortified compound” in Woody Creek, Colorado. One of his most famous quotes summed up his anarchist and acerbic philosophy on life, “I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence or insanity to anyone, but they’ve always worked for me.”‘