Latest Article|September 3, 2020|Free
::Making Grown Men Cry Since 1992
17 min read
Ten years ago, when the Alibi was called NuCity, then-Editor Alma García and former columnist and Personals Manager (not to mention longtime Hunter S. Thompson companion) Norma Jean Thompson (no relation) embarked on a whirlwind journey to spend several days with the father of "Gonzo" journalism, driving around his property at breakneck speed and attempting to interview him while clinging to their own lives. NuCity was roughly three years old at the time, and García and Thompson’s bizarre and entertaining story was one of the first major features for the paper. Ironically, it’s even more entertaining to read now—10 years later, and after Thompson decided to trade in his typewriter for a bullet to the head–than it was when he was a living crackpot.Following is the interview portion of the feature, originally published March 1, 1995:
Everything you’ve heard is true: Dr. Hunter S. Thompson is an electric charge of almost superhuman wattage, and energizes as many people around him as he drains. Naturally, he’s also as human as the next person—only perhaps just a whole lot more brutal, kind, macho and in need of nurturing than the average person, all at once.It’s difficult to capture him, in more ways than one. Our taped interview with him yielded hours of unintelligible mumbling, as well as impenetrable static, the roar of car engines, and a background soundtrack of television and loud music—much of it orchestrated by Thompson himself, depending on his interest in having certain information recorded, it seemed. In any case, we were able to salvage a few of the Doctor’s thoughts, some of them even pertaining to the subjects in which he is considered to be expert. Dr. Hunter S. Thompson’s fans may have to struggle to reconcile his myth to his manhood, but it’s good to know that in this world of compromised lives, a life of gonzohood can be lived with complete integrity.