In a wide ranging interview with Disinfo’s Matt Staggs, Transmetropolitan writer Warren Ellis discussed the legacy of Hunter S. Thompson.
You can listen to or download the interview at Disinfo. Here are some of the points Ellis made:
- In Transmet Ellis was more interested in the effects of celebrity on Thompson.
- Celebrity had a corrosive effect on Thompson. Although he became more well known, he was portrayed as a cartoon character and that resulted in him being defanged and not taken seriously.
- Because Thompson’s work is so seductively well written, it can actually be a bad influence on writers who try to imitate his style.
- The point of drawing on 60s and 70s politics in Transmet was to show how little things had changed in the 90s and 00s when Ellis was writing it, and how unlikely it was that things would change substantially in the future.
I love Thompson’s work but think he can be a bad influence on writers and journalists who wind up writing crappy prose in an attempt to be edgy and play it fast and lose (sic) with the facts to be “gonzo.” And because of his image and style, his message was often lost. Too many people remember him as a character.
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