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The FBI was
right, says George Carlin. This man is dangerous--and funny;
and necessary.
ABC newscaster Harry Reasoner wrote in his memoirs, Krassner not
only attacks establishment values; he attacks decency in general.
So Krassner named his one-person show Attacking Decency in General, receiving
awards from the L.A. Weekly and DramaLogue. He is the only person in the
world ever to win awards from both Playboy (for satire) and the Feminist
Party Media Workshop (for journalism).
When People magazine called Krassner Father of the underground press,
he immediately demanded a paternity test. Actually, he had published The
Realist magazine from 1958 to 1974. He reincarnated it as a newsletter
in 1985. The taboos may have changed, he wrote, but
irreverence is still our only sacred cow. The final issue was published
in Spring 2001.
His style of personal journalism constantly blurred the line between observer
and participant. He interviewed a doctor who performed abortions when
it was illegal; Krassner then ran an underground abortion referral service.
He covered the antiwar movement; then co-founded the Yippies with Abbie
Hoffman and Jerry Rubin. He published material on the psychedelic revolution;
then took LSD with Tim Leary, Ram Dass and Ken Kesey, later accompanying
Groucho Marx on his first acid trip.
He edited Lenny Bruces autobiography, How to Talk Dirty and Influence
People, and with Lennys encouragement, became a stand-up comic himself,
opening at the Village Gate in New York in 1961. Ten years later--five
years after Lennys death--Groucho said, I predict that in
time Paul Krassner will wind up as the only live Lenny Bruce.
He rarely works the comedy-club circuit, preferring to perform on campuses,
at theaters and in art galleries. His venues have ranged from the New
Age Expo to the Skeptics Conference, from a Neo-Pagan Festival to the
L.A. County Bar Association, from a Swingers Convention to the Brentwood
Bakery, where members of the audience were each given a free pastry of
their choice.
Over the years, he has built up a cult following that has steadily been
edging into mainstream awareness. His reviews have been highly complimentary.
The New York Times: He is an expert at ferreting out hypocrisy and
absurdism from the more solemn crannies of American culture. The
Los Angeles Times: He has the uncanny ability to alter your perceptions
permanently. And the San Francisco Examiner: Krassner is absolutely
compelling. He has lived on the edge so long he gets his mail delivered
there.
He has been a guest on Late Night with Conan OBrien and Politically
Incorrect with Bill Maher. He hosted his own radio call-in show in San
Francisco, was head writer for an HBO special satirizing the presidential
election campaign, did on-air commentary for the Fox networks Wilton-North
Report, and was a writer on Ron Reagans late-night TV talk show.
Mercury Records released his first two comedy albums, We Have Ways of
Making You Laugh and Brain Damage Control. Artemis Records released his
next three: Sex, Drugs and the Antichrist: Paul Krassner at MIT, Campaign
in the Ass and Irony Lives!
His articles have appeared in Rolling Stone, Spin, Playboy, Penthouse,
Mother Jones, the Nation, New York, N.Y. Press, National Lampoon, Utne
Reader, the Village Voice, the San Francisco Examiner, the Los Angeles
Times and the L.A. Weekly. He writes a monthly column for High Times,
Brain Damage Control, and another for AVN Online, One
Hand Jerking.
His autobiography, Confessions of a Raving, Unconfined Nut: Misadventures
in the Counter-Culture, was published by Simon & Schuster and sold
out 30,000 copies. His other books include: The Winner of the Slow Bicycle
Race: The Satirical Writings of Paul Krassner, with an introduction by
Kurt Vonnegut; a trilogy--Pot Stories For the Soul, with an introduction
by Harlan Ellison, Psychedelic Trips For the Mind and Magic Mushrooms
and Other Highs: From Toad Slime to Ecstasy--Sex, Drugs and the Twinkie
Murders: 40 Years of Countercultural Journalism; Impolite Interviews;
and Murder At the Conspiracy Convention and Other American Absurdities,
with an introduction by George Carlin.
At the 14th annual Cannabis Cup in Amsterdam, Paul Krassner was inducted
into the Counterculture Hall of Fame--my ambition, he claims,
since I was three years old.
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