“Irreverence is our only sacred cow”
-- Paul
Krassner
[On the morning of July 21, I woke with a vision of Paul Krassner, master satirist and anarchist publisher. In the vision, I asked him if he had something we could use for this issue of The SHADOW and he said “Well, there’s this.” Later that day, I heard that Paul had passed that morning. Sadly, I don’t remember what he offered me in the vision.]
There is sooo much to say about Paul -- too much to be said here. Simply put, Paul was THERE when things were HAPPENING, from the late 1950s through the present. Paul wasn't just an observer, he was a participant, interacting and working and playing with important and influential counter-cultural heroes and revolutionaries (some famous and others infamous), writing, publishing, performing, plotting, engaging in activities (some legal and others not so legal) and, most importantly, having a ball the entire time.
From Paul’s
description in his 1993 autobiography, CONFESSIONS OF A
RAVING, UNCONFINED NUT: MISADVENTURES IN THE
COUNTERCULTURE [re-published by Paul in 2012 when the
rights reverted back to him], the course of his life
seems to have been set in motion by a series of happy
accidents, or maybe not so accidental.
As Paul tells it, while still in college in the mid-1950s, his encounter with the American Association for the Advancement of Atheism [AAAA] leads him to the ISM Forum, which introduces him to the New York Rationalist Society, where he is referred to a tabloid called Exposé, where he meets editor and maverick publisher Lyle Stuart, who later changes the name to The Independent. Paul begins writing for Stuart and then quits school. When The Independent moves its offices next to MAD Magazine, Paul meets and works for MAD publisher William Gaines as well. By that time, Paul begins a short-lived stand-up comedy career under the name Paul Maul and he sells sketches to the Steve Allen show.
In another
happy not-so-accident, in 1958, with encouragement from
Lyle Stuart and a mailing list acquired from Progressive
World magazine, Paul starts his own magazine, which
comes to be called The REALIST. Inspired by an article
in Esquire Magazine written by English journalist and
satirist Malcolm Muggeridge, titled “America Needs A
Punch,” Paul says: “My goal was to communicate without
compromise. My vision was a magazine of ‘freethought
criticism and satire.’” The Realist was the right thing
at the right time in America, as the limits of free
speech and expression, as well as legal definitions of
“obscenity” in books, magazines, films and public
performances were being tested in the courts.
IMAGE: THE
FIRST ISSUE OF THE REALIST [June - July 1958]
Through The Realist, Paul connects with comedy show host Steve Allen, his first subscriber. Steve Allen sends in several gift subscriptions, including one for controversial stand-up comedian Lenny Bruce, who, in turn, sends in gift subscriptions for others. Paul and Lenny become good friends when Paul interviews Lenny for The Realist and for Playboy Magazine. Playboy later hires Paul to edit Lenny's autobiography “How To Talk Dirty and Influence People.”
In
“Confessions....” Paul says that The Realist “developed
a reputation as a haven for cartoons which could be
published nowhere else.” One of the more outrageous
cartoons that Paul ran, in memory of Walt Disney’s
death, was MAD Magazine artist Wally Wood’s “Disneyland
Memorial Orgy” as a center spread, which featured Disney
cartoon characters having sex with each other and taking
drugs. The Disney company, fearing negative publicity,
never sued.
IMAGE: DISNEYLAND
MEMORIAL ORGY PRINTED IN THE REALIST [ISSUE #74 - MAY 1967]
Aside from satire and irreverence, including the occasional “put-on,” The Realist was very REAL when it came to important issues, especially government conspiracies. Paul was the first publisher of legendary assassination and conspiracy researcher Mae Brussell's exposés, which included addressing the 1963 assassination of president John F. Kennedy. The Realist also published interviews with writers, including Norman Mailer, Ken Kesey, Joseph Heller, and with people as diverse as philosopher Alan Watts, comedians Lenny Bruce and Dick Gregory, Playboy publisher Hugh Hefner, former Harvard professor Timothy Leary and even american nazi party leader George Lincoln Rockwell.
Traveling to Cuba shortly after the successful revolution by Fidel Castro and his comrades in December 1960, Paul hooked up with a prostitute, bitter over her loss of business since the overthrow of the corrupt Batista regime. As she performed fellatio on him, she stopped and asked Paul “You sure you’re not a communist?” Paul told her: “Even if I was, I wouldn’t tell you now. You’d bite it off.” Later that night, Paul met Castro at a reception at the presidential palace, where he gave Castro a copy of The Realist and requested an interview. Just then, a palace guard handed Castro a cablegram from departing US president Dwight Eisenhower, calling off diplomatic relations with Cuba. Paul never got his interview.
In 1962, after publishing an interview with an anonymous doctor who performed illegal abortions in Ashland, Pennsylvania for women (Black and White) coming to him from all over the country, Paul found himself referring desperate women seeking safe and affordable abortions to the doctor. After the doctor was arrested by state police and forced to retire, Paul continued to refer women to doctors referred to him by the doctor he interviewed. In “Confessions....,” Paul reveals that The Realist “began to serve as an organizing tool” for a “domestic Peace Corps” called “People.” Using his Playboy salary, Paul supported a free birth-control clinic, a remedial reading program called “Neighborhood Pilot Project,” the “Lower East Side Action Project” and a judo center.
In 1964,
after running an article in The Realist by Robert Anton
Wilson about Timothy Leary, who had become notorious for
advocating the use of psychedelic drugs such as
psilocybin, mescaline and LSD for mind expansion, Paul
was invited to Leary’s place in Millbrook, New York.
Paul returned to Millbrook in April 1965 for his first
acid experience. In “Confessions....,” Paul says: “The
CIA had originally envisioned using LSD as a means of
control, but millions of young people became explorers
of their own inner space. Acid was serving as a vehicle
to help de-program themselves from a civilization of
sadomasochistic priorities....The CIA’s scenario had
backfired.”
PHOTO: TIMOTHY LEARY
Leary told
Paul about “prominent people whose lives had been
changed by taking LSD,” among them actor Cary Grant,
Alcoholics Anonymous founder Bill Wilson, Time
magazine publishers Henry Luce and his wife Claire,
and film director Otto Preminger. Paul first met
Preminger in 1960 when he interviewed him for Playboy
and again in 1967, as he was making a pro-LSD film
called Skidoo. Famed comedian Groucho Marx, then
almost 77 years old, was set to play a gangster in
Skidooo named GOD. At a dinner with Paul, Groucho
asked if he would get him some LSD and accompany him
on a trip. In “Confessions....,” Paul says: “I did not
play hard to get.” Paul dropped acid with Groucho and
wrote about his experience. [You can read it at: http://www.ep.tc/realist/groucho-acid/].
On the last
day of 1967, Paul, hanging out with fellow anti-war
activists, including Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin,
created the Youth International Party, which he called
YIPPIE! As Krassner explained it: “We needed a name to
signify the radicalization of hippies, and I came up
with YIPPIE! as a label for a phenomenon that already
existed, an organic coalition of psychedelic hippies and
political activists. In the process of
cross-fertilization at anti-war demonstrations, we had
come to share an awareness that there was a linear
connection between putting kids in prison for smoking
pot in this country and burning them to death with
napalm on the other side of the planet.”
Yippies
became famous and infamous for their sense of humor and
media stunts, using pranks, put-ons and guerilla theater
to get coverage that reached millions of people. Yippies
also organized anti-Vietnam War demonstrations in New
York, California and at the 1968 Democratic National
Convention in Chicago, where they ran a pig called
Pigasus as the YIPPIE! presidential candidate. Peaceful
demonstrations degenerated into violent police riots
after city officials refused to issue permits. The Windy
City’s “finest” were seen on live television beating
demonstrators, bystanders and even reporters, as people
chanted “The Whole World Is Watching!” Eight activists,
including Hoffman and Rubin, David Dellinger, Tom
Hayden, Rennie Davis, John Froines, Lee Weiner and Black
Panther Party leader Bobby Seale, were later charged by
the federal government with conspiracy and inciting to
riot -- Paul was named as an “un-indicted
co-conspirator.”
PHOTOS: CHICAGO RIOT
COPS BEAT DEMONSTRATORS ON LIVE TV -- "CHICAGO'S
FINEST" NAB PIGASUS IN THE ACT
During the
resulting “Chicago Eight” political trial, in which
defendants refused to behave as directed, half-senile
judge Julius Hoffman had Seale bound and gagged in court
and jailed defense attorneys for “contempt” when they
repeatedly objected to his violations of rules and law.
Paul, tripping on acid, testified for the defense. All
convictions were subsequently overturned on appeal.
PHOTO: "THE CHICAGO SEVEN"
WITH THEIR ATTORNEYS OUTSIDE THE COURTHOUSE
Years later, Paul said he made the decision to spend his life provoking action because he "couldn’t help but notice the difference between what I experienced in the streets and the way it was reported in the mainstream media, which acted as cheerleaders for the suppression of dissent.”
When we started publishing The SHADOW in 1989, Paul generously shared his wit and wisdom with us, for which we will always be grateful. One day, I called Paul to ask his permission to use something he had written. Because I was asking him and not just stealing it, he sarcastically asked me: "What kind of Anarchist are you?" I told him: "The kind of Anarchist who respects people like YOU!"
In 2013, The
SHADOW [Issue #55] commemorated the 50th anniversary of
the JFK assassination. We wanted to counter mainstream
media reports pushing the same old government and media
LIES about the assassination to a new generation. Paul
kindly contributed a piece he had written about Mae
Brussell, whom he had interviewed in 1972.
PHOTO: MAE BRUSSELL
In 1964, Mae
Brussell was a single mom with five children, curious
about the findings of the Warren Commission, created by
JFK successor Lyndon Johnson in order to thwart
investigations by Congress and the Senate into the JFK
assassination. Brussell observed that the un-indexed 26
volume Warren Commission report had ignored physical
evidence in order to pin the rap on Lee Harvey Oswald,
who was killed by low-level mobster Jack Ruby on live
television two days after JFK. Her research and
investigations expanded over the years to include
murders of those connected with the JFK assassination,
nazi war criminals smuggled into the US by way of
Operation Paperclip [read The Nazi Connection to the
Assassination of John F. Kennedy at: http://ce399fascism.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/rebel_112283.pdf
-- Ed.], the assassinations of Malcolm X, Robert F.
Kennedy and Martin Luther King, and the attempted
assassination of Alabama governor George Wallace as he
campaigned against president Richard Nixon in 1972.
Brussell even hosted a weekly radio show, called
“Dialogue Assassination.” [For more on Mae Brussell
(websites, books and articles), see: http://www.whale.to/b/brussell.html]
IMAGE: THE REALIST [ISSUE #95
- DECEMBER 1972] IN WHICH MAE BRUSSELL MADE
CONNECTIONS BETWEEN WATERGATE + THE JFK ASSASSINATION
As Paul
tells it in “Confessions....,” when the Watergate
scandal erupted in 1972, “No wonder Mae Brussell was so
excited. She could trace linear connections leading
inevitably from the assassination of JFK to the
Watergate break-in, and all the killings in between.”
Brussell completed a lengthy article for The Realist,
“documenting the conspiracy and listing the players,
from the burglars all the way up to FBI Director [L.
Patrick] Gray, Attorney General John Mitchell, and
President Nixon.” When Paul’s printer demanded an
unusual $5,000 payment in advance before running that
issue of The Realist [Issue #59 - December 1972], John
Lennon, who was fighting an attempt by Nixon to have him
deported from the US, went to his bank with his wife
Yoko Ono and gave Paul the money. Paul says that a few
months later, John told him: “Listen, if anything
happens to Yoko and me, it was not an
accident.” Lennon was assassinated in 1980.
PHOTO: JERRY
RUBIN - YOKO ONO - JOHN LENNON - ABBIE HOFFMAN
In 2016,
Paul gave The SHADOW [Issue #59] an article
commemorating the 50th anniversary of the death of Lenny
Bruce that Paul had written for the LA Times, which
heavily trimmed and censored it – we at The SHADOW were
happy to run the full, unexpurgated version, as we have
done countless times for other writers.
PHOTO: LENNY
BRUCE
Lenny Bruce
was a Realist subscriber when he and Paul met in 1959.
As Paul tells it: “We developed a friendship integrated
with stand-up comedy.” Over time, Bruce evolved from
telling standard jokes to weaving “taboo-breaking
targets: teachers’ low salaries vs show-business celebs,
religious leaders’ hypocrisy, cruel abortion laws,
racial injustice and the double-standard between illegal
and prescription drugs into stream-of-consciousness
vignettes.” As he progressed, testing the boundaries of
free speech, Bruce was arrested several times in
different cities. In some cases, police claimed to be
looking for drugs, but in other cases, cops made it
clear that they and their superiors objected to the
content of his monologues, one of which included the
word “cock sucker.” They also disliked Bruce talking
about the catholic church and organized religion. In
less than two years, he was busted 15 times in a
co-ordinated campaign of harassment by authorities
across the country. Unable to get work because club
owners were afraid to book him, Bruce sought injunctive
relief from the Court of Appeals. The three judge panel
was headed by former NAACP chief counsel Thurgood
Marshall, who later became the first Black person
appointed to the Supreme Court. Marshall denied his
motion. On August 3, 1966, with his New York obscenity
conviction still on appeal, Bruce received a foreclosure
notice on his home. He died later that day from an
overdose of morphine. Eighteen months later, Bruce’s
obscenity conviction was overturned.
PHOTO: LENNY BRUCE
HASSLED BY A COP
Two years earlier, Paul had written a fake obituary on Lenny Bruce in The Realist. This was one of many put-ons that Paul engaged in from time to time. In “Confessions....,” Paul says: “The point was that he couldn’t get work and his work was his life, so he might as well be dead. And if people regretted that they hadn’t helped him, well, now they could have a second chance because he was still alive.”
In addition to public appearances that included conventions and stand-up comedy gigs, Paul continued to write prolifically for magazines, newspapers, and websites, right up to the end. With his fertile mind, Paul always had something fresh to say and, with his huge archive, he had plenty to share with new generations of readers.
There is
still much more to say about Paul. If you want to know
more about him and hear him speak, do a web search. Read
his auto-biography, ‘Confessions of a Raving, Unconfined
Nut,” in which Paul lets it all hang out, sharing his
life with anecdotes and personal experiences, some of
which are embarrassing, dangerous, amusing and
hilarious.
For his 1968 Life Magazine profile, Paul offered a personal philosophy: “If I had one thing to tell everybody, it would be: Do it now. Take up music, read a book, proposition a girl — but do it now. We know we are all sentenced to death. People cannot become prisoners of guilts or fears. They should cling to each moment and take what enjoyment they can from it.”
Those are great words to live by.
-- Chris
Flash
RECOMMENDED READING:
• CONFESSIONS
OF A RAVING, UNCONFINED NUT: MISADVENTURES IN THE
COUNTER-CULTURE
By Paul Krassner (Soft Skull Press)
RECOMMENDED WEBSITES:
• HOSTILE
INTERVIEW OF PAUL KRASSNER ON THE JOE PYNE SHOW (FEB.
1967)
• PAUL
KRASSNER ON LSD, THE PRANKSTERS, THE HIPPIES AND THE
YIPPIES