R.I.P. Hunter S. Thompson

tommyj27

Not really Banned
edit: nevermind, guess it was already posted. :faptard: http://www.otcentral.com/forum/showthread.php?t=18140&highlight=hunter+thompson


how did this get missed by the board?

http://www.denverpost.com/Stories/0,1413,36~53~2723492,00.html

Hunter S. Thompson shoots self in head
"Fear and Loathing" author dead at 67
By Troy Hooper and Claire Martin
The Denver Post

Sunday, February 20, 2005

Aspen - Hunter Stockton Thompson, who coined the term "gonzo
journalism" to describe the unique and furiously personal approach to
reportage exemplified in his 1972 book "Fear and Loathing in Las
Vegas," died Sunday night of a self-inflicted gunshot wound at his
Woody Creek home. He was 67, family members said.

Pitkin County Sheriff Bob Braudis, a friend of Thompson's, confirmed
the death. Thompson's son, Juan, discovered his body Sunday evening.

"Dr. Hunter S. Thompson took his life with a gunshot to the head. ...
The family will provide more information about (a) memorial service
... shortly. Hunter prized his privacy and we ask that his friends and
admirers respect that privacy as well as that of his family," Juan and
Anita Thompson, Hunter Thompson's wife, said in a statement.

"Details and interviews may be forthcoming when the family has had the
time to recover from the trauma of the tragedy," Braudis said from
Thompson's compound, Owl Farm.

Countless fans strove to imitate Thompson's startlingly candid
first-person accounts that described legally errant escapades fueled
by drugs, alcohol and nicotine, yet he maintained a savagely private
personal life.

"Obviously, my drug use is exaggerated or I would be long since dead,"
he told a USA Today reporter in 1990.

He famously threatened to shoot trespassers, providing endless fodder
for cartoonist Garry Trudeau's ongoing portrayal of Thompson as the
hard- living Duke, named after Raoul Duke, a character in "Fear and
Loathing in Las Vegas." The book was made into a 1998 movie starring
Johnny Depp.

Pitkin County Commissioner Dorothea Farris, who moved to Carbondale in
the late 1980s after living in Woody Creek, called Thompson a "fine"
neighbor despite the fact it was common to hear gunfire from his
property. Firearms were abundant at Owl Farm, where he had his own
shooting range.

The son of an insurance salesman who died when Thompson was in high
school, Thompson grew up in Louisville, Ky., as a star athlete. Before
graduation, he was arrested for robbery and served 30 days at a
correctional facility. When he got out, Thompson joined the Air Force,
where he caught up on credits and earned his diploma.

He was still enlisted when he studied journalism at New York's
Columbia University, and began his career as editor of the Eglin Air
Force Base newsletter, simultaneously moonlighting as a sportswriter
for a local civilian paper.

In 1959, Thompson went on to become a Caribbean correspondent for Time
magazine and the New York Herald Tribune. After relocating to South
America, he wrote for the National Observer, and then returned to the
U.S. and became the West Coast correspondent for The Nation.

Rolling Stone magazine publisher Jann Wenner learned of Thompson from
his columns for Scanlan's Monthly and Ramparts, and hired him as
national affairs editor. This propelled Thompson and his cynical,
heady reporting style to international fame. People who really did
read Playboy for the articles began picking up Rolling Stone for
Thompson's caroming take on politics, particularly his incendiary
coverage of the 1972 presidential campaign.

"A lot of people really loved Hunter, and despised him at the same
time," longtime friend and Rolling Stone photographer Lynn Goldsmith
said."I know, having been a celebrity portrait photographer, that
there are individuals who aren't like other people. That's because
they're geniuses. So you can't expect them to act like a normal
person."

Thompson seemed to revel in eccentricity. In 1968, he ran for Pitkin
County sheriff but lost. He kept peacocks, the descendants of
Hannibal, his storied watchdog-peacock in the 1970s.

Did you think Hunter S. Thompson was a great American writer, or
over-rated? Share your thoughts about the "gonzo journalist."

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Friends and acquaintances reeled on learning of his death.

"Oh, my God," sobbed Coleen Auerbach, mother of Lisl Auman, who was
convicted of felony murder in 1998. Thompson championed Auman's cause,
bringing his friends Warren Zevon and actor Benicio Del Torro to a
rally protesting what Thompson believed was a wrongful conviction.

Jim Horowitz, who founded the Aspen Jazz Festival, remembered that
Thompson invariably attended his event.

"He always seemed to materialize, kind of out of thin air, and always
backstage, and always wearing his hat," Horowitz said.

Aspen friend Gerry Goldstein called Thompson "not only a national
treasure but the conscience of this little village."

Thompson married twice, first to Sandra Dawn Thompson Tarlo, with whom
he had one son, Juan Fitzgerald Thompson. He later married his
longtime assistant, Anita Thompson, a native of Fort Collins. Besides
his wife and son, survivors include a grandson, William Thompson.
 
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