Critical Profile of Leading Journalist: Hunter S. Thompson
“I hate to advocate drugs, alcohol, violence, or insanity to anyone but they’ve always worked for me”.
In the world of journalism, very few figures have gained a reputation such as Hunter S Thompson. Thompson became one of leading figures in the New Journalism movement as well being founder of the off-kilter movement of Gonzo Journalism.
His innovation in the field of Journalism, his renegade attitude and tales of excess have made him a cult figure in recent years. Known for his infamous catch phrases such as “When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro” and “Buy the ticket, take the ride” Thompson shook up the industry and produced some of the genre bending articles in a time of cultural revolution.
After a career in the US Air Force where contributed to his bases’ own newspaper as
a sports editor; Thompson attended the Columbia University’s School of General Studies studying part time in writing classes.
Thompson eventually moved San Juan, Puerto Rico, to work for the newspaper El Sportivo which eventually folded. Soon after the paper’s demise, Thompson worked as a stringer for the New York Herald Tribune covering Caribbean issues. Thompson would work further a field in Brazil working for the Dow Jones owned National Observer as a South American correspondent and later working for the Brazil Herald.
Thompson’s experiences in Puerto Rico were fictionalized in the novel The Rum Diary which was not published until 1998. Although not quite Gonzo Journalism, the novel depicted the excessive lifestyle of journalists in foreign countries.
Thompson was considered to be part of a movement known as New Journalism which was founded established journalist and writer Tom Wolfe. The New Journalism movement opted to use a variety of innovative literary techniques within journalism and writing. The movement was more present in magazines such as The New Yorker, Rolling Stone and Esquire Magazine.
Thompson would contribute to Rolling Stone for many years as a National Affairs correspondent. He was known as one of the very few writers in the magazine that did not contribute musically which Rolling Stone was most notable for.
Thompson was asked to contribute to the anthology The New Journalism by Wolfe in 1975. Thompson’s contributions came from Hell’s Angels and The Kentucky Derby Is Decadent and Depraved. It was due to the The Kentucky Derby Is Decadent and Depraved that the term “Gonzo” was coined. The piece which was published in 1970 in Scanlan Monthly. When Bill Cardoso, editor of The Boston Globe Sunday Magazine, read the article, he wrote to Thompson praising him saying “This is it, this is pure Gonzo. If this is a start, keep rolling”.
Thompson’s writing style would often be in first person and subjective. As seen in Hell’s Angels it could be bizarre and almost vulgar in places. “… like Genghis Khan on an iron horse, a monster steed with fiery anus, flat out through the eye of a beer can and up your daughter’s leg with no quarter asked and none given”.
Fellow Gonzo Journalist contemporary Tom Wolfe would later describe Thompson’s writing style as “part journalism and part personal memoir admixed with powers of wild invention, and wilder rhetoric inspired by the bizarre exuberance of a young civilization.”
Thompson would adopt an alter ego known as Rauol Duke which appeared in many of his writings including Fear And Loathing Las Vegas. In an interview with the BBC, Thompson said he used Duke as “a vehicle for quotations that no one else would say. That was me really talking. Those were my quotes”. The method of Gonzo journalism would involve almost participation within the story. Later in his career, Thompson recognised that he had become “part of the story”. He recognised that he almost became a victim of his own success. “I used to be to stand in the back, observe stories and absorb them. I can’t do that any more. When I appear in a story I become part of it”
Considered by many as Thompson’s first gonzo piece of writing, Hells Angels was published in 1966. Thompson spent many months living and riding with the notorious motorcycle gang at a time when they were considerable notoriety in the press for their hell raising antics in West Coast America. Thompson was aware of the media’s campaign against the Hell’s Angels commenting that they were cast as the “American bogeymen”.
Perhaps considered as Thompson’s most critically acclaimed novel, Fear And Loathing Las Vegas was published in 1972 after being serialised in Rolling Stone the previous year. The novel is written from a first person perspective with Thompson adopting the Raoul Duke persona as used in other writings in his other writings.
Fear And Loathing Las Vegas was conceived when Thompson and lawyer Oscar Zeta Acosta took a trip to Las Vegas as part of Strange Rumblings In Aztlan, a an expose story in Rolling Stone about the death of Mexican-American television journalist Ruben Salazar in a Anti-Vietnam War demonstration. Thompson and Acosta used an assignment for Sports Illustrated covering the Mint 400 motorcycle race to escape a racially tense Los Angeles. What happened on that trip became fictionalised and encapsulated in Fear And Loathing Las Vegas.
The novel takes in to context the drug culture of the 1970’s. Most notably within the first chapter with the mind boggling list of narcotics acquired by the Dr Gonzo and Raoul Duke. “We had two bags of grass, seventy five pellets of mescaline, five sheets of high powered blotter acid, a salt shaker half full of cocaine, and a whole galaxy of multi-coloured uppers, downers, screamers, laughers… and also a quart of tequila, a quart of rum, a case of Budweiser, a pint of raw ether and two dozen amyls.”
Thompson uses the means medium of Gonzo journalism to vividly describe the various drug experiences in the novel. Thompson describes the effects of ether as making you “behave like the village drunkard in some early Irish novel… total loss of all basic motor skills: blurred vision, no balance, numb tongue – severance of all connection between the body”.
Drugs had long been a key influence many writers work. Williams S Burroughs wrote about his experiences with heroin in the semi-autobiographical Junkie in 1953 as well as other numerous books. What set Thompson apart from these others writers was the way brought drugs into mainstream literature and so candidly.
Thompson’s next novel Fear And Loathing On The Campaign Trail 72 was published in 1973 and followed Thompson on the 1972 US Presidential Election campaign trail. This was also serialised in Rolling Stone throughout 1972 alongside the campaign. Thompson was a staunch critic of Nixon. Fear And Loathing On The Campaign Trail 72 shook up the political reporting in the USA. As Thompson mentioned in the introduction to the novel, he had the advantage of “being able to burn all my bridges behind me” due to him only being Washington for only a year.
The attitude of Gonzo Journalism is significantly shown in Fear And Loathing On The Campaign Trail 72 . Thompson saw himself as wanting “… to learn as much as possible about the mechanics and realities of a presidential campaign and … to write about it the same way I’d write about anything else as close to the bones as I could get, and to hell with the consequences”.
Thompson was set to cover the closing of the Vietnam War in 1975 for Rolling Stone and arrived in Saigon just as the United States were beginning to evacuate. Unfortunately Thompson discovered that Rolling Stone’s editor Jan Wenner had aborted the story and was stranded in Vietnam without health insurance or any financial support
Thompson’s career would take a reflux to audiences when Fear And Loathing Las Vegas was made into a film starring Johnny Depp and Benicio Del Toro and directed by Terry Gilliam which was received with critical success.
This was not the first film to be based on Hunter S Thompson’s works. Where The Buffalo Roam which was released in 1980 was loosely based on Thompson’s works in the 1970’s with Bill Murray portraying Thompson on screen. Thompson had a large role as the film’s creative consultant. Despite this the film was poorly received by critics.
Towards the end of his career, Thompson gravitated back to the world of sports journalism by writing for ESPN.com’s Page 2 with his own column titled Hey Rube. This ran up to his death in 2005. The last column being titled Shotgun Golf with Bill Murray.
Thompson, like many was intensely opposed into the war in Iraq. In an interview Tim Russert for CNBC in 2003, Thompson described fellow Republican Richard Nixon as “a liberal compared to Bush” and claimed America “would be bogged in the war for a generation”. In a Rolling Stone article in 2004, Thompson called Bush “a treacherous little freak”
Thompson was not alone in the movement of Gonzo Journalism. Other such as Lester Bangs, a writer who contributed to Rolling Stone and more notably Creem adopted the critical and confrontational style of Gonzo Journalism. Bangs was more influenced the writers of the Beat Generation like Jack Kerouac and more notably William S Burroughs as well the influence of drugs.
The method of Gonzo Journalism has managed to migrate to the medium of television. In recent years journalists such as Louis Theroux have adopted the ethos of Gonzo Journalism and explored sub-cultures of American society like with the same participation ethic as Thompson with his series Louis Theroux’s Weird Weekends.
Even more recently actor-turned-presenter Ross Kemp has adopted the Gonzo format with the series Ross Kemp On Gangs and Ross Kemp In Afghanistan by involving himself in danger zones with notorious gangs and fighting with the British Army in Afghanistan.
Despite Gonzo Journalism being a male dominated forum, female journalists such as Dawn Porter are exploring attitudes to lesbianism, dieting, nudity, pregnancy and childbirth using the participant aspect of Gonzo Journalism.
It would difficult to imagine the world of journalism without the presence of Hunter S Thompson. He shook up the industry and brought new attitudes to the profession of being a journalist. He prided himself as a professional and considered himself a “doctor in Journalism”. He had many imitators and but was the only one true innovator of Gonzo Journalism.
Bibliography
Thompson, Hunter S Fear And Loathing Las Vegas
Thompson, Hunter S Fear And Loathing On The Campaign Trail 72
Thompson, Hunter S Hells Angels
Thompson, Hunter S The Rum Diary
Webography
Anson, Robert http://www.gonzo.org/hst/interviews.asp?ID=7 accessed 07/05/08
Sullivan, James http://www.rollingstone.com/news/story/7045227/hunter_s_thompson_dies accessed 06/05/08
Wolfe, Tom http://www.opinionjournal.com/la/?id=110006325 accessed 06/05/08
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r31hV_BPFf0 accessed 06/05/08
YouTube interview Hunter S Thompson being interviewed by Tim Russert for CNBC recorded 02/06/03 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NJxRE7LNadI&feature=related accessed 06/05/08
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hunter_S_Thompson accessed 06/05/08
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Kentucky_Derby_Is_Decadent_and_Depraved 06/05/08