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Showing posts with label Paul Krassner. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paul Krassner. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 28, 2024

SNAFU principle corollary? And Paul Krassner's FBI file


Jesse Walker (with his friend, the gecko). Jesse is an editor at Reason magazine, but he also takes time at X.com to come up with material for this blog. 

On Twitter,/X.com, Jesse Walker suggests a corollary to the SNAFU principle:

"- The SNAFU Principle: 'Communication is only possible between equals.'

- Schwarz's Corollary to the SNAFU Principle: 'Having huge amounts of power is like being hit in the head with a baseball bat every day'." 

He's referring to this item from Jon Schwarz: "Some people believe Elon Musk cannot possibly be this stupid & so he's consciously spreading disinformation. But I think having huge amounts of power is like being hit in the head with a baseball bat every day & will make even smart people 'stupid.' "

Possibly related: A Gene Healy classic, "Why Politics Are Bad For Us." 

Jesse, busy on X.com coming up with possible items for this blog, also noted that the FBI has been posting its Paul Krassner files.  (As editor of The Realist, Krassner published much of RAW's early writings, giving RAW a foothold as a writer). Jesse writes, "The FBI is digitizing and posting its Paul Krassner files, so I know how I'll be spending probably much more of this afternoon than I should."

That's probably enough for this blog post, so  I won't even mention Jesse pointing to the UFO cult compound being for sale. 

The Guardian on five good books about conspiracy theories, includes four books not written by Jesse. 

Thursday, March 28, 2024

Robert Shea, men's magazine editor


Before Robert Shea took a job at Playboy magazine, he served from 1965 to 1967 as the editor of Cavalier, a men's magazine similar to Playboy.

If you are curious about what a magazine edited by Shea would be like, I have an example to point to. The Internet Archive has a copy of the September 1966 issue of the magazine; a PDF of the complete issue may be downloaded and examined. 

A few observations: Robert J. Shea is listed as editor. Arthur Kretchmer, who had a long career at Playboy, is listed as managing editor. 

The table of contents includes a story by Bruce Jay Friedman and also a story by John D. MacDonald. There's a column by Shea's friend Paul Krassner, and an article on British political cartoonists by Bob Abel, another friend of Shea's.  If Shea was doing Abel a favor here by providing a market, surely Shea was repaid; Abel was the Dell book editor who bought Illuminatus! There are two photo features of attractive young women. Some of the cartoons aren't bad, and the ads are interesting. 

The issue also has a piece by Shea, apparently a regular column, "The Cavalier Attitude," about attending the showing of an Andy Warhol movie. 

I wondered if some of the replies to the letters column were written by Shea. One reply defends the space program. A letter on page 10 from a reader in Winnipeg warns that the publication of nude photos in Cavalier will inspire God to destroy America. The editor's reply says "What about Canada?" 

The advertisement for subscriptions ($6 if you live in the U.S.) says, "Like good cigars, brandy and LSD, Cavalier is best enjoyed in a comfortable, warm and secure atmosphere." 

Another Internet site has a directory of back issues of Cavalier for sale, from 1966; it lists an article for July 1966, "Dr. Timothy Leary on the Psychedelic Revolution," and it shows that Isaac Asimov was a contributor to the magazine. 

Sunday, April 10, 2022

RAW on Paul Krassner

"He Makes a Career Out of Being Offensive," Martin Wagner's latest discovery, is a 1965 piece in PHOTO magazine, Robert Anton Wilson's tribute to Paul Krassner and The Realist. 

"The editorial policy of The Realist is quite simple, according to Krassner: 'The things I print have one thing in common: they couldn’t be printed anywhere else.' In following this editorial line, Krassner has been almost super-humanly impartial."

Many examples are offered; Martin also links to the RAW articles in the Realist archive. 

Wednesday, September 23, 2020

A new zine from Arthur Hlavaty

Lots of nice content can be found in "Nice Distinctions 33," the new zine (after three years) issued by Arthur Hlavaty. I'm on his email list, but you can go grab your own own digital copy easily enough. (If you get hooked, see the Hlavaty zine archive. )

Much of the zine has an kind of amusing grumpiness about it, as when he says "I  never liked golf. It's not a major problem for me, at worst taking up space on the sports page for some reason." Or when he says he stopped listening to new music 45 years ago. (Doing the math suggests he stopped in 1975. Is it too late to turn him on to 1980s Tom Petty and Elvis Costello? I knew a guy in Lawton, Oklahoma, who thought classical music went bad in about 1775.)

But the jokes also merge into thoughtful content, as when he reviews two books about the "golden age" of science fiction, or writes pithy obituaries, here are two I liked but the others are worth reading too:

Justin Raimondo quite seriously described himself as the #1 gay supporter of Pat Buchanan (he admitted there was not a lot of competition), but that was not the whole story. I have abandoned the hope of having a society without a few elements controlled by a legitimized armed gang, but I still have a lot of sympathy for libertarianism, not just sex&weed&dirty books but two other good ideas: 1) distrusting the cops. Radley Balko proudly upholds that one, now more liberals are noticing, and that may be the one element of vestigial libertarianism in Rand Paul's makeup. 2) staying out of Asian wars. Going back to Woodrow Wilson and continuing today there is the allegedly liberal doctrine that democracy is so wonderful that we must impose it everywhere no matter how many people we have to kill. Justin Raimondo and antiwar.org stood up to that idea. 

Paul Krassner was the first great corrupting influence in my life. _The Realist_ introduced me to Robert Anton Wilson and Albert Ellis, among others, and he himself commented incisively on the follies of our times. In the 70s he went through paranoia and came out the other side. I always sent him my zines, and one of the high points of my writing life was being quoted in _The Realist_.

Thursday, February 27, 2020

New Paul Krassner film in the works


Paul Krassner

Any serious fan of Robert Anton Wilson knows that RAW was heavily indebted to the late Paul Krassner, who encouraged RAW's writing career by publishing much of his early work.  In addition, Bob Abel, the book editor who gave Wilson and Shea a huge break by agreeing to publish Illuminatus!, was a Krassner protege.

So I'm very pleased to report a film documentary about Krassner is in the works, details here.

See also "Jesse Walker talks to Paul Krassner about RAW."

Hat tip: Mondo 2000 on Twitter, which you should follow if you use Twitter.




Monday, July 29, 2019

Jesse Walker talks to Paul Krassner about RAW

The Parts Left Out of the Krassner Interview

By Jesse Walker
Special guest blogger

I conducted a long interview with Paul Krassner in 2012, while I was researching my book about conspiracy theories. Last week, after Krassner died, I published an edited version of that conversation at Reason. But I truncated the transcript considerably before we posted it—the full interview was more than three times the length of the Reason version, because not everything we talked about was going to be interesting to a general audience.

Some of those excised bits might still be interesting to a more specialized audience, though. In particular, this selection from the cutting room floor may interest the readers of RAW Illumination, since it’s about Robert Anton Wilson:

* * *


Paul Krassner

Jesse Walker: You stuck a footnote in one of [Wilson’s] earlier articles, when he mentioned being “greatly indebted” to Norman Brown’s Life Against Death. You wrote, “Editor’s note: As with Bob Wilson, there are undoubtedly books—fiction, non-fiction, serious, humorous—to which you are greatly indebted; write in and we’ll list ’em.”

Was that a jab? Or just a random joke? Do you remember this?

Paul Krassner: No, I probably meant that as a service to the readers....He was talking about Norman Brown’s book on—I’m trying to remember his thesis, the theme of it. It was pro-Norman Brown if I recall. And so I knew that there would be readers who might, just because Wilson recommended it—that they would be satisfied that it would be worth a read if Wilson liked it. And so I thought there must be other books like that, that they knew.

Because my policy was, instead of writing down to the readership— Because I’d hear magazine editors who say things like “We get it, but they won’t get it.” And one of the cartoonists for The Realist, Dan O’Neil, said to me: “We’re not peerless.” Meaning we weren’t superior to the readers, which a lot of magazine editors thought they were. And so I learned a lot from the readers. Because the readership I think had a higher level of education—not just education—but they were mostly FBI agents. I think they had a healthier skepticism than the population in general. And so I guess I must have printed anything that anyone sent in. Any recommendations.

Walker: I don’t think I saw whatever feature there was, but I might have just missed it.
Did you guys become friends early on, or did that develop later? Was it just an editorial relationship?

Krassner: We became good friends. Him and his wife, Arlen....In fact, I was still living with my parents when I lost my virginity at Mad magazine, and I had a date with that same girl, as they were then called. And we came to his house and so we shared the sofa. In their house, while they were in their bedroom. So I’d say we were intimate friends.

And then when he was living in Santa Cruz, and then L.A., my wife and I would have dinner with him and his wife. Every time they came to town, we were living in Venice, so this friendship remained until his dying days. We saw him in Santa Cruz, and he had post-polio syndrome, and he was weak and his energy was gone. But he had a support group there, which was a medical marijuana dispensary later on. And he was one of the ones outside city hall in a wheelchair with a bunch of others, smoking marijuana cigarettes. They were smoking joints to indicate they were patients and that this was medicine. And Mayor Adams didn’t do it. Didn’t call the police, or that sort of thing. So we were at his house and saw that his computer was extending his life, because he could communicate. It was very important to him to communicate with people and there was a group there who knew him. The people from the medical marijuana dispensary—a couple of them had joined these groups he had—on analyzing the work of James Joyce, for example. So he was really like a guru. Not that well known for it, but that’s how people treated him.

Have you ever seen the documentary made about him?

Walker: Maybe Logic?

Krassner: Yeah, that was the one. We just saw it for the first time recently.

Walker: What did you think of it?

Krassner: It really captures him. Let me just take a little drink of water.

Walker: Oh, sure.

Krassner: (high-pitched voice) OK, that’s better! (normal voice) So I wrote this obituary of him. I think I called it “The Parts Left Out of His Obituary.” Which if you never saw I could send to you.

Walker: Was that the Huffington Post piece, or was this a different—

Krassner: Maybe it was.

Walker: I saw something you wrote about him for The Huffington Post, but I did not—

Krassner: That was probably it. I’ve lost four magazine assignments for having stuff on Huffington Post, because the editors wanted to be exclusives. And if they found something that appeared online, they wouldn’t publish it, so I stopped blogging. But anyway, that must have been it, because I don’t think I wrote anything else about him online. I think they asked me for something from Boing Boing, and I sent that to them too.

Walker: Just based on things that each of them wrote, I’m pretty sure that he and [conspiracy theorist] Mae Brussell really didn’t like each other. I wondered if you ever saw the two of them in the same place, if there was interaction, or if there was a sort of intellectual incompatibility that flared up in print.

Krassner: I don’t know how familiar she was with his work. I think it might have been that they maybe never met, were never in the same place at the same time. So I don’t know if he was aware of her work and admired it. But I don’t know if there was any enmity between them. Had you heard that?

Walker: I’ve seen things they’ve written that made sort of swipes at one another. I don’t have it in front of me, but I think she accused someone he was a friend with of being in a conspiracy, and he didn’t take to that, or...

Krassner: Oh—yeah, yeah, yeah.

Walker: Leary, or someone like that. I don’t remember who.

Krassner: If there were conspiracy researchers who didn’t agree with her points, she would think that he was part of the conspiracy.

Walker: Right.

Krassner: She believed she had the truth, and I think that a lot of it was just assumptions.

* * *


Jesse Walker (with duck friend). 

A few days after we spoke, I sent Paul an example of Wilson and Brussell crossing swords. It was copy of a letter Brussell sent to Conspiracy Digest, which amid other invective claimed that Wilson and Leary “are used by the CIA Intelligence Community to sugar sweet the yellow brick road to Oz, while the means to enslave mankind are being manufactured under our noses.” I also included Wilson’s sarcastic reply, which among other things declared that he has “been a high official of the Central Intelligence Agency since July 23, 1973” and has “gold bars (stolen from Fort Knox by Winthrop Rockefeller) stacked to the ceiling in every room of the house, including my cellar.”

“I’m glad you sent that,” Krassner replied. “I recalled arguing with Mae, trying to defend Bob and Tim, but she was too attached to her perception, which fit her own agenda.”

I wrote back: “Did you ever have the converse argument with Bob, defending Mae Brussell?”

“No,” he responded, “because I knew Wilson and Leary intimately, and I knew that Mae was wrong...for example, she convinced herself that the government helped Tim to escape, when actually it was the Weather Underground...since Bob defended Tim, Mae said he was brainwashed when  his whole philosophy was to avoid being brainwashed...I thought his response in Conspiracy Digest was a brilliant satirical approach, sort of like Stephen Colbert’s role-playing exaggeration of right-wing actions...”

“Oh, I knew you wouldn’t defend Brussell’s accusations against *them*,” I wrote back. “I just wondered whether you ever had a conversation with Bob (or for that matter Tim) in which you felt the need to say, ‘She does make some good points on some other subjects, though, such as...’”

Krassner’s answer: “yes, although that was in 1972”—that is, when he published Brussell’s first major Watergate article in The Realist. He added: “at that point, it was sharing, not defense—before she wrote that letter to Conspiracy Digest in ’77.”

Editor's Note: My sincere thanks to Jesse Walker, and again, don't miss his Reason interview with Krassner, which had more RAW material and much else of interest. His conspiracy book will interest many of you.

Tuesday, July 23, 2019

Paul Krassner on RAW


Paul Krassner

Jesse Walker has responded to Paul Krassner's death by publishing a "Lost Interview" with Krassner, and some of the discussion is about serving as Robert Anton Wilson's editor.

Excerpt:

Walker: What was the editorial process like with him?

Krassner: I would just tell him not to censor himself and hold back. If there was something I didn't understand, I would have to assume I was the common denominator of the reader, and so I would ask the most questions. I would have to look up words in the dictionary when I was reading his manuscript, and I figured the reader would have to look it up too if they didn't understand what it meant.

He would do a thing on Ezra Pound's poetry. And I really didn't quite understand it, but it was interesting that he could transcend the Nazi aspect of him and just deal with this poetry. Because he was a taboo, you know. So for me, it was like, "Can you separate art from the personality of the artist?" It's like Wagner.

More about RAW (and much else besides) at the link. 

Monday, July 22, 2019

RIP Paul Krassner [UPDATED]


New meme from Rasa

The New York Times obituary.

San Francisco Chronicle obituary.

Michael Johnson writes (to an email list, reprinted by permission):

"Chums-

"I loved this guy.

"So many stories.

"One night my wife and I went to go see him give a talk at the Midnight Special bookstore on the Santa Monica Promenade. His appearance wasn’t advertised very well, so there were only about 12 people who showed up. So he did his entire routine standing amongst us, as if we were all at a party. He interacted with us and improvised a lot. He was totally hilarious. I bought one of his books and asked him to sign it as if I had been there with him at the 1968 Democratic National Convention, so he did.

"Every time I had a Q that I thought he’d be able to help with, I emailed him and he was very gracious.

"The doing LSD with Groucho thing is something I’ve told a lot of people about, but they often didn’t believe me.

"Read him. In his many books he recycles his own stuff a lot, like RAW did, but I never minded. There was always enough new stuff to make me happy.

"I’ve recommended his autobio, Confessions of a Raving, Unconfined Nut to so many people and everyone has loved that book. I consider it essential for understanding the counterculture from 1960-80. His story about the San Francisco police riot on “White Night,” when protesters showed up on the streets of SF, angry that Dan White’s “twinkie defense” worked, is harrowing. Paul wasn’t doing anything violent, but some cop beat on his leg so bad he walked with a limp the rest of his life.

"Paul took pride in never doing any legal drugs. I’m not sure how his last few years went, but who really cares?

"Bless him and Dove sta memoria. He gave RAW a huge break."

UPDATE: Steve Fly writes about Krassner. 

For more RAW connection, see my two previous blog posts. One of my earlier posts on Krassner. 




Saturday, July 20, 2019

Paul Krassner is in hospice care


Paul Krassner in 2009 (Creative Commons photo)

from Mondo 2000 on Twitter: "The great Paul Krassner is in hospice and will be leaving us. He's been a great friend to Mondo and to me and to many others and one of the funniest and kindest people on earth. A cultural hero."

Krassner is a very funny writer and an influential editor, but RAW fans particularly should appreciate him.

In an introduction to "Three Articles from the Realist" in Wilson's essay collection, Coincidance, Wilson explains, "Paul Krassner's iconoclastic journal, The Realist, has published more of my writings than any other American magazine, and there was a period in the late 1950s and early 1960s when I might have given up writing entirely if Paul had not gone on publishing my work. I think everybody in the 'counterculture' owes a great debt to Paul Krassner, but I perhaps owe him more than anyone else."

Here is a Krassner piece published in Variety just a few days ago.

Wednesday, November 14, 2018

Paul Krassner on Lyndon LaRouche



In Reason magazine, the wonderful Paul Krassner reviews Operation Chaos: The Vietnam Deserters Who Fought the CIA, the Brainwashers, and Themselves, by Matthew Sweet, a book about American deserters from the Vietnam War who wound up in Sweden. Many came under the domination of Lyndon LaRouche. 

LaRouche's crazy beliefs, or more precisely, his ability to get other people to take his crazy ideas seriously, are a striking feature of the American political landscape. Sometimes Donald Trump seems like a LaRouche who can play to the masses.

Apparently the book also shows that the sense of pervasive paranoia during the 1960s and 1970s depicted in Illuminatus! isn't something the authors made up. Krassner, writing about the pressures on the deserters:

"And part of the problem was that the deserters were clearly under surveillance. When many of an organization's members are already damaged people, and when their leader is already subjecting them to psychological abuse, it doesn't do anyone's sanity any favors to have actual good reasons to suspect some of your comrades are spies. As Sweet interviews the men who fled to Stockholm, he finds that several still carry suspicions about one another to this day—and he can't help wondering about some of them himself.

"Sweet never quite solves the mystery of who was or wasn't a government agent, but he paints an engrossing portrait of a place and time where such fears were rampant."

Many people who read this blog likely would enjoy Krassner's Confessions of a Raving Unconfined Nut (see my remarks here, and also here.)

Hat tip, Jesse Walker.


Saturday, June 2, 2018

'Historical Illuminatus' news from Hilaritas, and Paul Krassner!


Rasa has sent out another newsletter from the RAW Trust, and he reports that the Hilaritas Press reissue of the Historical Illuminatus Chronicles will be out soon:

"Meanwhile at Hilaritas Press, our intrepid RAW Trust Literary Advisors are helping us unravel a few typographical mysteries as we edit The Historical Illuminatus Chronicles. Both the eBooks and Print editions are finished for Volumes 1 and 2. Volume 3 is going through it's 3rd proofreading — one of the final steps. We plan on releasing all three volumes of the trilogy simultaneously, or at least very quickly in consecutive order. No firm publication date yet, but we are getting very close!"

Rasa also has just published "The Funny Side of 1968" by Paul Krassner at the Hilaritas Press blog. It's an excerpt for Krassner's new book, Zapped by the God of Absurdity: The Best of Paul Krassner. 

Excerpt:

I was a guest on the Joe Pyne show on KTTV in Los Angeles. He was a mean-spirited right-wing interviewer. His questions were vicious. “Well, Joe,” I said, “if you’re gonna ask questions like that, then let me ask you: Do you take off your wooden leg before you make love with your wife?” Pyne had lost his leg as a marine in World War II. Now his jaw literally dropped, the audience gasped, the producers averted their eyes and the atmosphere became surrealistic as Pyne went through the motions of continuing the interview. On another occasion, he asked Frank Zappa, “Your hair is so long. Are you a girl?” Zappa replied, “You have a wooden leg. Are you a table?”


Thursday, December 1, 2016

Krassner on Robert Anton Wilson



And now, I explain why Robert Anton Wilson fans would be interested in Paul Krassner's Confessions of a Raving, Unconfined Nut, which I've been reading.

In his collection Coincidance: A Head Test, Wilson wrote, "Paul Krassner's iconoclastic journal, The Realist, has published more of my writings than any other American magazine, and there was a period in the late 1950s and early 1960s when I might have given up writing entirely if Paul had not gone on publishing my work. I think everybody in the 'counterculture' owes a great debt to Paul Krassner, but I perhaps owe him more than anyone else."

Here is the first mention of Wilson in Confessions, which explains how Wilson got the byline we all now know:

"Another writer, Robert Wilson, editor of the Institute for General Semantics Newsletter, gave himself a middle name, Anton, for his first published article in The Realist, 'The Semantics of God,' in which he posed this suggestion: 'The Believer had better face himself and ask squarely: Do I literally believe 'God' has a penis? If the answer is no, then it seems only logical to drop the ridiculous practice of referring to 'God' as he. Wilson began writing a regular column, 'Negative Thinking'."

There are other references to Wilson in the book, too.


Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Paul Krassner is funny and interesting


Paul Krassner

When I was in college, I had a red, white and blue poster in my dorm room that proclaimed, "Fuck Communism!" I thought it was funny.

Many years later, and I've learned that Paul Krassner was involved in producing the poster. And there's a lot that I think is funny in his memoir, Confessions of a Raving, Unconfined Nut.

There's a section, for example, where Krassner decides to try LSD.

When I told my mother about taking LSD, she was quite concerned.

She warned me, "It could lead to marijuana."

I keep reading sections of the book to my wife, and she just looks at me.

Krassner knew just about every interesting person involved in the culture. His first interview at The Realist was with Alan Watts. He knew Timothy Leary. He was friends with Norman Mailer. And on and on and on. So, reading the book tells you a lot about 1950s hipster culture and the 1960s counterculture.

There's a more direct reason for RAW fans to be interested in Krassner, which I'll get into soon. But his book is interesting on its own merits.



Thursday, February 7, 2013

Today's book recommendation

Roman Tsivkin mentioned on Twitter that he's been enjoying Paul Krassner's new book (published last fall) Confessions of a Raving, Unconfined Nut: Adventures in the Counterculture. 

Pete Townsend once remarked, about British blues musician Alexis Korner, "If only for helping bring the Rolling Stones together, Alexis should be carried round London in a sedan chair for the rest of his life." As I wrote in a previous blog posting, Robert Anton Wilson fans ought to feel the same about Krassner. RAW wrote, in Coincidance, ""Paul Krassner's iconoclastic journal, The Realist, has published more of my writings than any other American magazine, and there was a period in the late 1950s and early 1960s when I might have given up writing entirely if Paul had not gone on publishing my work. I think everybody in the 'counterculture' owes a great debt to Paul Krassner, but I perhaps owe him more than anyone else."

I asked Roman via Twitter if Krassner mentions RAW in the new book. "Oh yes, quite a bit, and I'm only on page 43. Mostly in passing, though. You will definitely, definitely love it. Krassner sent RAW to do a story on Leary at Millbrook, & shortly thereafter tripped for the 1st time (with Leary, of course). He also mentions that RAW was one of the first contributors to The Realist."

Roman also notes that buying the book from Krassner's Web site will let you obtain an autographed copy. For those who can't afford the paper version, there's a cheaper ($9.99) Kindle edition.

Monday, January 23, 2012

RAW Week at BOING BOING

I've put up a permanent link under "Resources" for BOING BOING's apparently-concluded "Robert Anton Wilson Week."

I tried to link to somebunall of the best articles, but there was a lot of material. BOING BOING's special section featured pieces by Mark Frauenfelder, Paul Krassner, Gareth Branwyn, Antero Alli, Douglas Rushkoff, Jay Kinney, R.U. Sirius, Lewis Shiner, Erik Davis, Ivan Stang, Christina Pearson (in an interview), Richard Metzger, Mark Dery, Propaganda Anonymous and Angus Stocking. Also, some good RAW quotes picked out by Mark, and a "Giant mind-map of Discordianism." Lots of good links in the pieces, too.