For the last three years, Ethan Persoff has been posting the full run of Paul Krassner's magazine The Realist on the Web. That archive is now complete. I wrote about Persoff's project here on Hit & Run when it started, and for those of you who aren't familiar with The Realist I'll quote the description I offered back then:
In 1958 Paul Krassner set out to create a Mad magazine for adults. He was well-qualified for the task, being both a former Mad contributor and, in fact if not always in spirit, an adult. The result was The Realist, a journal whose great innovation was to refuse to label which articles were journalism and which were satire, and sometimes to add just enough truth to a piece of fiction that readers would be left completely befuddled as to what, if anything, they should believe. Some call it a prelude to the underground press. I call it a prelude to the Internet.
Krassner's most infamous hoax (and probably his best article) was "The Parts Left Out of the Kennedy Book," which posed as a series of outtakes from William Manchester's The Death of a President. It begins with some stories about JFK that were well-known but had not yet been reported, grows steadily less reliable, and concludes with Lyndon Baines sticking his Johnson in the president's throat wound. It's a testament to Krassner's literary skill -- or the average reader's gullibility, or LBJ's unpopularity -- that many people were fooled.
Some reading to get you started: a great interview with Ken Kesey, Lenny Bruce's ruminations on his troubles with the law, Robert Anton Wilson (writing as "A. Nonymous Hack") on his experiences working for a "schlock factory," and Krassner's brilliant investigative satire, "Who Killed Jerry Rubin?"
Joel Schlosberg has some more Realist links here. And I interviewed Krassner for an article on the yippies back in 2008.
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"Lyndon Baines sticking his Johnson in the president's throat wound" - I'm pretty sure that one is true.
"a Mad magazine for adults..." that hurts. I thought Mad was for adults. That's like being a Time reader and seeing this: http://www.theonion.com/video/.....-ad,17950/
I have to agree. As a kid I hardly got any of the jokes....and mostly stuck with the spy vs spy stuff and the cool back cover that you would have to bend to see the hidden picture.
The result was The Realist, a journal whose great innovation was to refuse to label which articles were journalism and which were satire, and sometimes to add just enough truth to a piece of fiction that readers would be left completely befuddled as to what, if anything, they should believe.
How did people distinguish this from Walter Cronkite's nightly news reports?
"a journal whose great innovation was to refuse to label which articles were journalism and which were satire"
Yeah, but now...you just can't parody satire journalism...or is it you can't distinguish reports of satire of parodies from real journilism satire? OH, the irony...
Paul Krassner lives in Riverside County now, and I have had a chance to talk with him at a couple of legalize marijuana events. Sadly, he has become just a generic leftist, who still believes in socialism without having any idea what it is.
He attempts to be a humorist, but his only really funny lines are all drug related. When he tries for political humor, it is leaden.
The Realist was entertaining in its time, but the mood has passed.
"Lyndon Baines sticking his Johnson in the president's throat wound" - I'm pretty sure that one is true.
"a Mad magazine for adults..." that hurts. I thought Mad was for adults. That's like being a Time reader and seeing this: http://www.theonion.com/video/.....-ad,17950/
"a Mad magazine for adults..."
I have to agree. As a kid I hardly got any of the jokes....and mostly stuck with the spy vs spy stuff and the cool back cover that you would have to bend to see the hidden picture.
The result was The Realist, a journal whose great innovation was to refuse to label which articles were journalism and which were satire, and sometimes to add just enough truth to a piece of fiction that readers would be left completely befuddled as to what, if anything, they should believe.
How did people distinguish this from Walter Cronkite's nightly news reports?
"a journal whose great innovation was to refuse to label which articles were journalism and which were satire"
Yeah, but now...you just can't parody satire journalism...or is it you can't distinguish reports of satire of parodies from real journilism satire? OH, the irony...
Paul Krassner was the editor who created the infamous "Meatgrinder" cover when he worked at Hustler.
Paul Krassner lives in Riverside County now, and I have had a chance to talk with him at a couple of legalize marijuana events. Sadly, he has become just a generic leftist, who still believes in socialism without having any idea what it is.
He attempts to be a humorist, but his only really funny lines are all drug related. When he tries for political humor, it is leaden.
The Realist was entertaining in its time, but the mood has passed.
the cool back cover that you would have to bend to see the hidden pictur