What's so great about him?

What's so great about him?

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youtube.com/watch?v=NHeSC_Ws5Ic

He didn't just write about something. He did something.

What's NOT, is the true question.

DUDE DRUGS LMAO. But seriously, his personality and life were so insane that his cult of personality popularized his work.

He took the easy way out.

Was there any other way for him though? Looking back at him it seems like he couldn't die a normal death.

It feels a bit odd to read his works today, since he is part of mainstream culture. I can't seriously imagine him as something subversive or counterculture.

Ignoring his obnoxious cult of personality, he wrote some truly incisive political and cultural commentary that has yet to be rivaled by any journalist since his death.

Here is his daily routine, its quite a read.

mentalfloss.com/article/33487/hunter-s-thompsons-daily-routine

His corpus represents America, or at least one strain of it, personified.

he was great in breaking bad. i don't like better call sual all that much though.

what'd he do?

His private life was a pretty dysfunctional hell, despite all his public glamor.

He took probably the only reasonable way out at that point in his life. He was in his 60s, hopelessly addicted to alcohol, quitting it would probably kill him. He had to have a surgery every year just to restore basic motor functions, but it wouldn't really help that much because his alcohol intake inhibited his body from healing. He was shitting his pants on a regular basis, could barely walk, and his latest wife wanted to divorce him.

He basically looked around and saw that things were not getting better at this point, it was going way fucking downhill, so he killed himself. Can't really say he was wrong...

Plus 9/11 and its aftermath left him more disillusioned with civics than he'd ever been before. His life and his nation were headed towards the inferno.

Ran for sheriff and almost won, also was good friends with a popular anti-war presidential candidate, George McGovern, whom he followed on their campaign. (Fear and Loathing on the Campaign Trail '72). Said to be the most truthful and the least factual coverage of the campaign.

if you coloured him in brown he'd look like a somali

I love his writing style and his bizarre use of vocabulary. He was just a unique person and a lot of people are intrigued by his heavy drug use. It like... inspires you to be more adventurous or something.

>Ran for sheriff and almost won
Didn't he run in one of the most white, richest and liberal parts of America?

>In democracy you have too...be a player
*gunshots*
The most American American of the 20th century, by far.

Have you only read Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas? There's more to counterculture and subversion than being edgy. That book is subversive as fuck, and it's got an anti-countercultural, or at least fundamentally pessimistic, message about the 60's if you actually fucking read it. The rest of his stuff is insightful and his prose style is unlike almost anything else in 20th century journalism. I haven't read enough Tom Wolfe to know how comparable they are.

f&l is great because it's counter to almost all culture. The hippy movement was the counter-culture of the time, and it's even counter to that. It paints a picture of the people in power being idiots, and the people fighting it being romantic misfits with no real aim.

He scared the shit out of that town. He and a bunch of friends moved out there and they did it as a joke and a critique of American politics.

epitome of not a faggot. but crazy.

He was one wild and crazy dude.