Stuff You Should Know - Rolling Stone Magazine
Episode Date: September 1, 2022Part celebration and part take down, this episode on Rolling Stone magazine dives into the highs and lows of one of America's iconic rags.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information....
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Welcome to stuff you should know a production of I heart radio
Hey and welcome to the podcast, I'm Josh and there's Chuck. It's the one o'clock hour
I just had a nice Caesar salad. So that means it's time for stuff you should know
How do you dress yours lightly or do you like it soggy?
I do it smartly
No, I start out light and then add as needed
Okay, cuz you know I've I've experienced the regret of too much salad dressing. All right, you can't take it away
No, you can't unring that bell
Rolling Stone magazine, what's your history with this rag? It's a couple it goes back a couple of days at least
Oh, you were never into the magazine at all. No, I mean, I've read plenty of like Rolling Stone articles over the years like Matt
Taibbi stuff
Some a hundred Thompson stuff and of course, you know every once in a while
I'll just run across a really good article from like years back, right? But that was it never had a subscription never bought it
At the magazine rack or anything like that. Okay, you know, I just wasn't into it
I didn't hate on it or anything like that. I just was never into it not like you're going to today. I
Will hate on it today. I'll just reveal facts
Yeah, so my history if you care is
I I always
loved Rolling Stone magazine and I continue to digitally subscribe and
You know, it is as we will learn it is not a magazine without its downs and
Controversies. Oh, yeah, for sure
And you know, it's as Ed even points out in this research like it's sort of been sport over the last
Two decades to sort of debate when and if Rolling Stone has lost its way
But it's a magazine that I always I
Just took what I took from it right like when I was reading, you know
At the end of this we'll get to some of their biggest controversial articles and like very poor shoddy journalism
like I never read any of those so I've always just sort of taken from it what I wanted to and
And
Not really thought about it a lot until this research man. There's nothing more rock and roll than that
But I do want to plug another magazine what?
Cream magazine is back. Oh really? Yeah, I've seen people be you know, the the the ones in the know
Like cream was always better than yeah stone. Well, it was and
Like my magazine of choice for music since the
Probably early 2000s was magnets, which I still oh, yeah. Yeah, you know went away then it came back and then
But cream is back now and you I think you get I subscribed immediately
You get four paper copies per year like a quarterly issue, which is kind of cool. Sure
But what's really cool, dude is if you subscribe you get access to all of the archives
So it's really fun to go back and read like a contemporaneous Lester Bangs or Cameron Crow piece
From cream magazine, so I highly recommend here at the beginning of our Rolling Stone article
To subscribe to the new cream, right?
So yeah, cream the impression I have is cream is the one that like really was
True to what it was going for pretty much from start to finish
While Rolling Stone was viewed as more like the corporate version of that almost from the outset
Yeah, the reason that it was viewed as that and still is today is because the guy one of the founders Jan Wenner
Was super corporate like that was his goal. He was an ambitious
Hippy hanger on basically who happened to be in San Francisco
when the summer of love happened when psychedelic rock broke out when like the 60s like really were
Like happening in San Francisco was the epicenter and that's not to say he like didn't dig it and was moved by it
But he also saw that this was a really important thing at least to him
And a lot of other people and he saw that he could probably sell ads against this
So he did what he know how to do and he started a magazine as we'll see
Yeah, that's a nice little intro and for those of you who don't know Rolling Stone is a music largely music magazine
Mm-hmm, but also in over the ensuing years is since
November 9th 1967 has branched out into all manner of pop culture and politics and
You know, we we didn't want to not mention what it was in case you'd happen to live under a Rolling Stone
Oh, man, is that written down on your notes? No, I just I was off the dome. Yeah, whoa
So should we go back in time a bit? Yeah, let's so let's get in the way back machine and go back to the 60s in San Francisco
And there's dusty in here
Contact buzz from some grass that's being smudged. They called it grass back then
So, yeah, you know Ed is very astute to point out that the origins of Rolling Stone is kind of born out of this sort of
Certainly 1960s, but maybe even before
left-wing alt
rags that are self-published these sort of
Poorly printed black-and-white magazines about the counterculture that never really desired to make money
And you know, most of them were super regional and never like went outside of
Usually the city that they were in as far as
distribution
But Rolling Stone was kind of born out of this idea and in particular got a lot of its influence from a
San Francisco
Based magazine called ramparts. Yeah, which was like far far left radical left politics magazine
There was a headline and I think
1968 maybe even earlier than that that ramparts ran it was ramparts offers
$10,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of any cop who has murdered a black man
That was on their cover, but it was on their cover and there's like a cop pointing a gun at you the viewer from the magazine's cover
And that's you know, okay
It's you know shocking especially for for even back then
But it's even more shocking when you realize that just a few years before
Ramparts have been lost launched as an intellectual Catholic quarterly. Yeah, I mean, I don't even know why they kept the same name
That it was a complete redo. It really was and the guy who redid it was a guy named Warren Hinkle
And you can't talk about Rolling Stone without talking about Warren Hinkle
That's right
He transformed that magazine into that, you know, that leftist rag that they knew and it was you know, obviously big in San Francisco
but it reached national levels of fame if not like widespread fame like the writers were
like featured on talk shows and
Other kind of notably I guess when you're a magazine being written in by other magazine being written about by other magazines
you've definitely made your mark and
Time magazine even had a very famous article called a bomb in every issue
I think it was a cover article on Ramparts magazine, right?
And though it would exist alongside Rolling Stone for a little while in the 70s
it was not a big widespread financial success and
And obviously because his politics had a pretty
Just by nature of what it was a sort of limited audience, right?
And so Jan Wenner who was one of the founders of Rolling Stone and who basically
Personified Rolling Stone over the decades because he was the CEO for years and years and years
He was involved in Ramparts through a guy named Ralph Gleason who will meet in a second
But the upshot of this is that Jan Wenner saw Ramparts what it was doing
how important it was and that it never really took off that I saw it blew through at least two personal fortunes Rampart magazine did before it
declared bankruptcy and
He noted that and he kind of took it to heart for his magazine Rolling Stone and the lesson for him was
Reflect the counterculture without actually like furthering the agenda and you can probably be
Absorbed by much more people and be palatable to advertisers too
Yeah, and as far as Wenner goes he himself was a college dropout from Berkeley
He is sort of the personification of what we now think of as like the boomer generation
Which is to say that he
And probably still does you know
Just sort of laud that generation and everything they did as of the utmost importance and
the music of the time and the movements of the time were
truly historic and not to be
trifled with and
Also in a sort of a boomer-esque way
Said it, but you know, it's great as making tons of money
Right being a capitalist and loving Coke
Sure
Yeah, I'm sure that was not
I'm sure they were not in short supply
No, they weren't he was very famous for his ability to put put away bags of cocaine
All right, so you mentioned Ralph Gleason who we're gonna meet
He was a jazz critic a music critic who also dabbled in the rock and roll world, but he was not a boomer
He was born in I think
1917 so he was 30ish years older than Venner and they met at a Jefferson
airplane concert and
Became buddies and I think a young winner really looked up to him and they sort of developed a
mentor
Relationship mentor mint minty. Is that what it is? It depends
So if if Gleason was strictly kind of advising and training and teaching
Yon winner that would make him a mentee
But if he did anything to further Yon winners career, which he ended up doing that would make winner his protege
Okay. Well, let's just say it was a mix of both. Sure. I just I looked it up and I really wanted to share that I
Gotcha. Okay. There's a distinction sure, but they were friends and I
Believe it was Gleason that also worked for ramparts
Some and then when ramparts fell apart
They hatched the idea for Rolling Stone magazine
Well, it so Gleason left even before ramparts fell apart because Warren Hinkle did not love the psychedelic rock era
did not love hippies and
Ralph Gleason did even though he was a jazz critic. He definitely got the psychedelic movement and was very
appreciative of it and wrote very kindly about it in his columns and in ramparts
But they're falling out happened when Warren Hinkle ran the social history of the hippies
Yeah, which was a pretty unflattering cover story about hippies and the summer of love and how basically he accused them of
falling down on the job of
taking over the
Responsibility to steer the country and instead they were just off like dropping acid and shirking their responsibility
which would pan out to be really prescient when you're talking about the baby boomer boomer generation, right and
Ralph Gleason didn't appreciate that at all
So he left in disgust he quit ramparts and that was about the time when winner was like, hey, let's make a magazine together
Summer of love 1970 you can forget. I know. Oh wait. No, it was 72
Yeah, cuz John Travolta played at the Woodstock for that summer of love concert in 72. Oh
Boy always feel bad for people who don't pick up on the inside jokes. Yeah, we'll get some emails. That's all right. It's fun
Yeah, so they again hatched this idea together and they really
Kind of borrowed a lot from ramparts. Not the least of which was their logo
If you look at the ramparts logo, it's I don't know if it's exactly the same font
I'm sure there's they probably technically might have made a new font
But it looks a lot like that font and not the original
Rolling Stone magazine font because the the earliest issues it was definitely a little bit different
But the one that we all know today is the Rolling Stone font looks a lot like ramparts
They definitely hired away a lot of people from that magazine
including
You know, some of the designers some of the writers some of the some of the editors
Photographers and even the office space they they raised they wanted to raise 10 grand
But they ended up raising seventy five hundred dollars from a variety of investors including
Jane winner in her family who was
Yon winners wife who actually had a much larger role in the early days of the magazine then I believe she's
Usually giving credit for yeah, I saw it described in I think it was an Atlantic article. Is that where it was?
Yeah, that was a great article. It really was I think it was called the rise and fall of Rolling Stone or something like that
and
Jane Shindelheim winner is described as basically being that she was so cool that her
Her personality was what attracted those, you know, cool photographers and cool musicians and just people to the magazine
That they wanted to be close to her basically or she knew how to behave around them basically
Yeah, and they had a
Interesting marriage. He came out of the closet in the mid 90s
Much to her well, I say much to her surprise apparently she had heard rumors over the years and things like that
But I think it was sort of a sudden thing for her and did not go down well
And I believe he's been in a partnership with the same gentleman since then. Yeah
It was a it was a sudden surprise for Jan winner too because I read that he was outed by the Wall Street Journal without his permission or even
Interesting even a heads up really just outed him in the pages of the Wall Street Journal
The the the author even pondered like wow is this is this scandal going to be the thing that sinks Rolling Stone?
But it was 1995 by then or 94 and everybody's like who cares, you know, it's I don't think that qualifies as a scandal
Yeah, absolutely
so
They have this money they got the 7500
Ed is points out that young winner kept his Porsche though. It's not like he sold his Porsche to raise money for the for the magazine
Mm-hmm
So they got the money together and they hire a bunch of the ramparts people. They in fact used a lot of the same equipment
The magazine was the same size had a bit of the same look. They had a bunch of unused paper
From ramparts that they were able to use and they even used the
Offices where they printed it. I think the loft above the office was where they first made their home
So yeah, they really had a bit of a head start
Yeah, and so if ramparts had spun off something called the Sunday ramparts newspaper and that's what had gone to funk
So ramparts the magazine is still going at this time
But they used all the Sunday ramparts newspaper stuff including staff, right?
So they have well when it worked for them
Yeah, and and when Gleason quit in protest and I think shortly after that the Sunday ramparts newspaper folded
That's when they got together and did this and like you said they did it with 7500 bucks and they were able to print
I think
40,000 copies of Rolling Stone number one
There was a last-minute decision to put a production still of John Lennon in the from the movie how I won the war
Yeah, wearing like a like a fatigues and like a helmet with netting on it and everything he's looking at the cameras
a very famous photograph and they said that it was like a perfect mix or perfect
Metaphor for the mix of like politics culture and music all rolled into one
It really was a perfect photo for Rolling Stone number one's cover for sure
I think so and maybe we could take a break and talk about how that first issue fared
How's it does that for a cliffhanger?
It's great. All right, we'll be right back
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But you might have an Airbnb to find out what your place could be earning at air bnb dot c a slash host
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Did it sell no did it sell no chuck now that first
40,000 I believe 34,000 issues were returned
I think a lot of this was in part to the fact that they tried to be their own distributor
Mm-hmm, which they realized right away was not a good idea
and so they quickly signed deals with distributors and newsstands and
Realized that you know at 25 cents a copy weren't gonna make a lot of money with that sort of distributor partnership model
No, so I mean they did the sensible thing and they gave up a pretty significant chunk of their their margin
To that district distribution company, but in return they were able to grow grow grow like from issue number two or three
I'm not sure exactly when they took on that new distributor, but it was pretty soon after the failure of the first issue
Yeah, and then they started selling pretty well
As far as the name goes they did get uh, I think sort of threatened
Legally speaking by the Rolling Stones music group
But they sort of got out of that pretty quickly. I think they may have realized
Hey, maybe it's good to be friends with this up and coming music magazine. I don't really know for sure
But yeah, that would make sense. Yeah, I saw a
That it was I saw it described as a letter writing campaign or correspondence between that was initiated by Mick Jagger
To yon winner basically saying hey, man, you can use this but how about some free advertising and lots of really good coverage and all that
That's exactly
Yeah, and I guess it got dropped or something like that supposedly only that initial letter survives
So no one knows exactly how it panned out, but yon winner was definitely the kind of person to trade
You know space for something else like maybe advertising dollars or you know a fair sure a favorable review
of a record
In return for that record company or the parent company advertising and Rolling Stone
He was definitely not only not not above doing that. He was actively chasing that kind of opportunity
Yeah, and you know, I don't think there's a lot of people that would stand up and say that yon winner was the greatest boss
They ever had especially back in those days. I think he might have cleaned up his act, you know later on but
In the 60s and 70s. It was very well known that he would like you said make these sort of under the table deals
He would play labels and writers against one another
Add sales people against one another. He was apparently a pretty cruel editor
He was never the best writer in the world. He wrote some reviews and things here and there but
that wasn't his strong suit, but
Yeah, he was known as being fairly misogynist and sexist and sort of all the things you might imagine from a
Sort of magazine editor-in-chief in the 1970s. Yeah, like a good example for the first issue in early on in Rolling Stone's life
A guy named Michael Leiden was the managing editor and he used to write for Newsweek
And he brought his wife Linda along who was also a writer and an editor
And yon winner made Linda answer the phones because she was one of the few women working there, right? It's a good example
Yeah, and this isn't a hit piece. There's a very well known biography of yon winner out there that is
Also, while not a hit piece not very kind to him at all the sticky fingers one that came out
Yeah, yeah, yeah, so he had been apparently yon winner had been shopping his his story around for
You know to be written initially by a ghost writer and then finally a biographer
Like he couldn't get anybody to do it because he was just known as such a control freak and everybody was like
I do not want to be involved with you for three or four years writing your story
Like he would pick apart line by line
Captions under photos in magazines. This is in the 90s. He was still doing this, you know, like he was that kind of boss
So you can just imagine what a train wreck nightmare. He would have been if you were his biographer
He finally got somebody to do it, but that somebody said dude, you've got to give me creative control over this
You have to give me freedom and the you know the guy like you said it wasn't a hit piece
But it also wasn't just a fawning and flattering like
Apparently yon winner had kind of hoped it would be right, of course
Um, as far as circulation goes they say that it peaked in 2008 with a circulation of 1.4 million
uh, and is around
500,000 today about 27,000 of which is actually I believe like, you know paper copies
Uh, although maybe that's just
Newstand and not uh subscription. Yeah, I was wondering if that number reflects their um digital subscribership because that's kind of low actually
It is and
Honestly, I never really knew what magazine distribution
Equaled anyway, so I was surprised that
It peaked at 1.4 million, which just seems for such an iconic magazine that just doesn't seem like a lot of
human beings
Reading a magazine. No, I mean think about it. We're not too far off from Rolling Stones peak. You know, I didn't want to say that
But that's what I was thinking I was like wow
I had a Caesar salad for lunch, so I'm feeling rather chuffed
Anyway, um
Yeah, I don't know what I thought it would be I figured it'd be like 10 million or something like that
But no, that's still rather respectable 1.4 million that's subscribers to I believe yeah, or it's circulation
I think that includes newstand sales, but the the reason I'm wondering whether the web
Um or the digital subscribers are included in that later number the recent stuff
Is because they very famously or I should say Jan Wenner very famously
Shunned the idea of moving
Into the digital realm. Yeah, and even even as well his son Gus was the guy who was running the digital arm
He still wouldn't give them resources to support like a genuine website
Yeah, an example I saw is that Rolling Stone broke some story
I can't remember what story it was, but it was a big story and
Everybody had to go read about it on other digital news sites because they hadn't posted anything or the story
On Rolling Stones website like it was like that
interesting
they've also changed format just size-wise over the years they
They started out, you know as this sort of regular size smaller magazine or should I just say average magazine
Um and it was in black and white with the with a little bit of color here and there like a single color
process and then in the early 70s switched to a four color process
and went to that glossy
Large format style that Rolling Stone
Like to me was really known for it was always just different because it was a big
Large magazine, but also the it was glossy, but it wasn't like that glossy slick magazine pages of today
Wasn't it glossy newsprint basically? Yeah
So that that gave it its own feel too along with the size like it was definitely its own own thing
Right, but then it went back to the small and then now is back to the big. Isn't that right?
Yeah in 2008 they went to standard magazine size in 2018. They said uh forget it. We're going back to the 10 by 12
I'm glad they did. I mean that's I don't again. I don't buy the uh paper version, but I just always associated that sort of
Iconic 10 by turns out 11 and 3 quarter size
It's a quarter inch really bugs me. Yeah, it does. You just made me snort man
well good, so um
Initially Rolling Stone was like a national magazine that was centered in San Francisco because again
That was the epicenter of the hippie movement of everything that was going on that was important in the late 60s and early 70s, right?
But then Jan Wenner kind of spiritually decamped from San Francisco even before the magazine did
And then finally Ralph Gleason remember Ralph Gleason the jazz critic who kind of co-founded Rolling Stone
He kept a column in every issue where basically he was just talking about
San Francisco goings on or whatever and he eventually was like the last
tether to the origin the roots in San Francisco and when he died in 1975
Jan Wenner waited a couple more years and then moved the whole thing to New York City
And it was officially a gen a bona fide national. You can even say international magazine around that time
Yeah, and I think from what I understand when Gleason died. He was sort of battling with uh, Wenner at the time
uh, and that they had
Fallings out and I believe I'm not so sure if it was personal, but maybe it got personal, but it was
Definitely over like the direction of the magazine. I think
Uh, I always got the feeling that Gleason
Was a little less likely to be accused of
Some of the sort of sellout things that Wenner would eventually be accused of he was a jazz critic
That's not exactly a that kind of says it all pursue when you're an ambitious money hungry, you know wall street type
Yeah, I think that's a good point. So, um Ed makes a really good point here
I've seen it elsewhere too and it's kind of like something that people have realized in the last like few years
maybe last decade or so and that is that
Rolling stone is possibly the most important mouthpiece
For the boomer generation. Yeah, and that it was so important
It's entirely possible that things like woodstock or the Beatles or the summer of love or all the stuff
We associate with the beginnings of boomers and then onward and onward
um
That rolling stone amplified it to a way that now we think of those things as like historic events, but
They might not be we might think of them as historic events because rolling stone amplified it
Yeah, I don't I don't agree with that
But I do agree that it has been a boomer mouthpiece for sure for sure
But I don't think that one could reasonably make an argument that the Beatles wouldn't be the Beatles
I have not been for rolling stone magazine coverage. No, no, no, I don't think that's the point
I think the point is would would the would we consider the Beatles as having changed the world
If rolling stone had never been there. Yeah, I definitely think so. All right. That's just my opinion. Okay
Um, what about wings?
Oh, I love wings
man
Jet give me that all day long
Uh, one thing rolling stone was definitely at the forefront of even though they did not create
Uh, what's called? um, the new journalism and this was basically when journalism went from
kind of anonymous style reporting
to putting the writer
Right in the middle of the story and sometimes
The story was even about the writer in the case of hunter s. Thompson who was also at the forefront of new journalism
and it was very, uh
literary style writing it was very
Uh, not flowery because that sounds kind of haughty, but just sort of a kind of a higher caliber
Literary style writing than typical journalism had been
Um, I love it. I've always been a big fan of new journalism
I think it has its place
And shouldn't be confused with other kinds of journalism, but I've always been a big big fan
Yeah, it's amazing. Um, and there's so hunter Thompson
He was so he was so at the forefront of it. He actually spun off his own sub-discipline called gonzo journalism
which is, um
New journalism to the extreme
Like when you spell extreme starting with an x kind of thing, right? Why haven't we done an episode entirely on him yet?
I don't know weird. We will someday
It just seems very strange for us, but he so um, yon winner did not discover hunter Thompson
um
He was actually kind of introduced to the magazine world. He'd already written hell's angels in 1968
So he made a name for himself, but the the first piece of gonzo journalism is considered
Um, the kentucky derby is decadent and depraved. Uh-huh. That was commissioned by um,
Warren hinkle
Who had gone off and started another magazine right former ramparts chief?
Yes, exactly. And warren hinkle was the genius who put ralph stedman and hunter thompson together
And they first appeared together in the um, I can't remember scan lens. I think it's the name of the magazine
Uh with the the kentucky derby is decadent and depraved and so yon winner saw this
He's like this guy needs to come right for me or
I think it might have been the other way around. I think hunter thompson showed up at rolling stones offices and basically
Demanded that he'd be made a writer for that magazine
Yeah, and was certainly, you know, one of the the most famous writers they ever had along with
um
Cameron crow, of course was well known as a teenage writer for rolling stone magazine. I know he got a cover assignment age 16
To follow the almond brothers, and that's what almost famous is based on
Yeah, and he very famously too was sort of based on his work with the band eagles
You mean the eagles
It's eagles and I always just like to annoy people by saying eagles
That's awesome
because it's like
Who else was it or I might have already talked about this. It's eagles and uh, oh holla notes
It's like daryl hall has a big
Be in his bonnet about the fact that they're not holla notes. They were always daryl hall and john oats
Oh, really?
And he's like people just called us that and that's not it's not on any of the records
They're out. They all say daryl hall and john oats, huh?
And the eagles don haley was always like it would never was the eagles. It's eagles. That's funny. I'm like, all right just
Just relax another way to annoy people chuck is just to play eagles music, right?
I came back around with the eagles. Did you yeah, I mean I took I took off
I love them growing up and I took off probably 20 years
Two solid decades of no eagles. That's great. And then I came back around. I was like, I love this music
What am I doing? You're back off the wagon
Uh, so anyway, hunter s. Thompson a very famous writer for them, obviously
And he did something which other writers
In the new journalism school would do which was including one tom wolf
Was used the magazine as not a testing ground, but
It's sort of the beginnings of what would become books by writing these sort of chapter like installments
every issue and hunter s. Thompson did that tom wolf did that with
Uh, his early work on what would become the right stuff and the bonfire the vanities. Yeah, um, man
Tom wolf. I think is my I prefer tom wolf to hunter Thompson these days. I think he's interesting. Yeah
I just like him more but hunter tomson's um fear and loathing in los vegas
Was it was born out of two different assignments where rolling stone sent him to los vegas first to cover the mint 400
And then to cover that then to cover the right the police convention on drugs
That's where the book came from was those his submissions for from those two assignments
I think tom wolf is the natural graduation point from
Like you like hunter s. Thompson more in your 20s and 30s, maybe
Yeah, but I also read electric kool-aid kool-aid acid test. Yeah around the same time
And I was just like I love hunter Thompson, but tom wolf is just I think by far the better journalist
Yeah, electric kool-aid acid test is the only thing I've read by tom wolf. Actually, uh, the right stuff is really amazing, too
the thing about tom wolf is
He because he's a new journalist
He writes about things where he can be kind of involved or like he's there or it's really kind of
Like he puts you in the middle of what's going on sometimes in people's
Like bedrooms at night when a guy's talking to his wife
And he does it so well that you forget first of all that you're not there, but then you forget that he wasn't there either
Right, like he's working off interviews sometimes other authors notes
Um, and he just gives the he's he's so good at it
You just assume like he was there for all this stuff and he wasn't there for any of it
There's like a couple in bed and it just pans over and tom wolf sitting there in his seersuckers
Yep, exactly, but his legs crossed very interesting. That's right. Can you say that again?
uh, other famous, uh
Writers early on that went on to have outsized careers elsewhere is uh, mtb's curt loader
Uh, joe esther house
Screenwriter and filmmaker of what?
Oh esther house was he was fatal attraction, right fatal attraction. It just goes downhill from there. Basically instinct. Yeah. Yeah sliver
showgirls
Jay girls, of course, but it's weird like he had a real type his his screenplay was a real
Like, you know, like hey, you want to see some some boobs 12 year old kid come see my movies
That was the show esther houses jam. Yeah, absolutely
Uh, lester bangs from cre magazine wrote for rolling stone and then, uh, of course the legendary journalists
Being ben fong torrez who uh was one of the greatest rolling stone writers in their in their history for sure
Yeah, for sure and all these people like were legitimately great writers
Um, and they were contributing to this music magazine that really just also had its finger on the pulse of really good journalism too
Yeah, so in that um article on the uh from the atlantic
they do quite a bit of speculating on um,
sort of when they think rolling stone might have
started selling out and become something
Uh untrue to its roots and and they basically talk about even in the 70s and 80s
Uh, basically, you know, yon winner saw the writing on the wall and said, hey, we can't just be a boomer archive
and a nostalgia jam
And I want to sell magazine. So we're going to start writing about tv shows and comedians and
and uh, I mean they always write about politics, but you know really expanded beyond
the sort of mission statement, which was a largely music magazine which also wrote about politics
And it it became something else entirely and really became a popular hugely popular magazine. Yeah, because I mean
Like the rolling stone as an institution was just keeping up with the times
um, if it if it was, you know, looking backward to like the the
The greatest moments in boomer history, you can thank yon winner almost personally for that. And so it's kind of weird as as
yon winner who was like controlling everything
He he had to let the magazine reinvent itself even though he personally, you know, he you know, I'm sure he did
He went to studio 54 and stuff like that in the in the
70s and like, you know
Went to sardis for lunch in the 80s and all that stuff
But he like I saw an interview with him in 2017 and he just casually tosses out the stones and the Beatles and it's like
It's 2017 man, and this guy's still citing like the big three
Whenever he brings up music from the 60s, right? So which were who?
it was
The Beatles probably it was the Beatles the stones
I think I automatically question somebody who uses the stones and that's it
And then um, man, I'm trying to find this quote. It was like a an interview with NPR
But oh the the Beatles the stones and Dylan. That's another thing too
If you just say Dylan
in the stones
I say both those things. All right, Chuck
But my my point is that yon winners frequently accused of what's called rockism
Which is we talked about it in our rock and roll hall of fame episode this idea that rock is white guys
Using a bass an electric guitar drums, maybe a rhythm guitar and a lead singer
They probably use a lot of hair product and like that's rock and nothing else matters
Apparently one yon winner really personifies that and one of the reasons why people get snubbed from the rock and roll hall of fame
inexplicably is because of him specifically it seems
Yeah, I mean he's is he the head chair or is he just on the board?
He's definitely high up in it enough that he can be like no, I don't even want them on the ballot kind of thing
Yeah, and if you remember our rock and roll hall of fame episode we talk about snubs and
A lot of people have had very personal beefs with winner over the years because of this
um, I'm going to read a couple of choice quotes from his
This is from the Atlantic article, but from his biography. Yeah
Uh winner was a little barbarian who's lust for money drugs and sex threatened to outpace his razor
Intellect and turn him into augustus gloop falling into the chocolate river of the 1960s
Rolling stone was an expression of winners
Pursuit of fame and power a magazine more than occasionally at the mercy of his editors
unembarrassed appetite for stardom and excess with me which made him an object of scorn and parody
Mm-hmm, and basically he said it was a parable for the age of narcissism
Uh, and then one final little bit here
As newsstand sales rose winner became hungry for still more sales
By the mid 70s the focus of rolling stone had shifted from what the editors determined to be the best in pop culture
To what was measurably the biggest
Yeah, and I think that was where a lot of people say he lost his way. It was like, well, what's hot?
Let's just write about that not what's great. Yeah, I saw there was a dust up years back
I guess in the 90s maybe where one of his music reviewers didn't write a flattering
review of hoody and the blowfish's latest album
And yon wetter himself killed the the review and had assigned it to another writer who wrote a much more favorable review
And they were like, well, you know this this record company is a huge advertiser with
Rolling stone and that's I mean, that's what he just did that
You know, I think people see him as a founder of this like really hip
Magazine that was like a voice and a reflection of the times and it kept reinventing itself
And they want him to be like legit and grounded in like that kind of ethos
And he just wasn't like people wanted to pigeonhole him like that and he just was not like that
I don't know him well enough
And I haven't read his biography to see if he tried to put himself out there like that
And that's why people expected him to be or if it was just because he was so closely associated with rolling stone
People mistakenly assumed things about him and then found out he wasn't actually that way. I don't know which is which
All right, so uh, let's take our second break and we'll talk about some of the biggest
Uh controversies in rolling stone history right after this
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It's been a part of my life in india
It's like smoking you might not smoke
But you're gonna get secondhand astrology and lately
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But just when I thought I had to handle on this sweet and curious show about astrology
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And my whole view on astrology
It changed
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Okay, we're back chuck and we're here to talk about now
Some of the low points of rolling stone history. This isn't a hit piece
No, but I mean, I think all of the things that we're going to talk about in the last bit here can be
Classified under one in one big bucket, which is bad journalism
lazy journalism, abandoning journalistic integrity
For the sake of an article and it's really a shame that they've done this kind of repeatedly
Yeah, Joe Esther Haas is rolling over on top of showgirl right now
On top of showgirl right now
Oh boy, that's a sight
Uh, so I guess chief among these um
Sort of high profile instances is uh the 2014 article a rape on campus
by Sabrina Erdley, which made all kinds of news. It was a story about
a gang rape at the University of Virginia at a fraternity house
And the more the story sort of was investigated the more it came out that
Um, not only were there a lot of big time journalistic flaws
Um, but you know, eventually uh lawsuits and a full retraction of the story and police investigations that the story was was made up
I mean journalism 101 flaws
like um
The the author Sabrina Rubin Erdley did not interview friends
Um, who came out publicly and said hey, what this what this story is saying is not what
Jackie the pseudonym of the woman who claimed to have been I think gang raped even at a fraternity house
Um, that's not what she told us that night. There wasn't even a party that night
Um, and apparently it just became more and more clear that the entire event did not happen
And that the the Rolling Stones journalists who they sent out to do this really important story
Did not
Didn't do some basic fact-checking and as a result just bought the whole thing hook line and sinker
Yeah, and in the end Rolling Stone ended up either losing or settling a bunch of lawsuits with
administration at UVA some of the students and the fraternity at UVA
um, it came out during this process that
Uh, apparently there were text messages that seemed to support the idea that
This young woman made this up to gain the affection of a boy on campus
Um, I tried to look as much into it as I could but um in the end they completely retracted the article
Which is a really big deal for a major publication to like fully retract and say all right this article
We do not stand by it. We're taking it. You know, we have takes these backs these
privileges
and they even commission
I guess to their credit a
colombia university school of journalism
review
And published that uh the findings of that review which were not kind
No, the review was titled tisk tisk tisk
But even worse than you know rolling stone losing face and credibility and millions of dollars is that like
This was used as shorthand for people who kind of yeah
Who were like we shouldn't really believe you know rape survivors
And uh that keeps that has a chilling effect on actual rape survivors from coming forward
And like naming their accusers. It was a huge huge
Problem that was created by this that you know, I think it would even came up in the Brett Kavanaugh hearing
Somebody basically used it for that to that end too
Camille Cosby talked about it on the courthouse steps. Are you serious? Oh, yeah. Wow. So yeah
Yeah, so it was a big deal. It was a big fall down and you can really easily point to that as the biggest
Mistake in the history of rolling stone magazine by far
Yeah, another big one was an article in 2003 from Gregory Freeman about
what's called bug chasers, which
is
What appears to be a very fringe
thing where
gay men want to be hiv positive
And and try to have unprotected sex with people they know are hiv positive and
Basically the same kind of thing not a lot of fact-checking
um, he interviewed a couple of doctors who he says
they uh, they said that they um
Said it was like 25 of the the gay male community are bug chasers and both of the doctors said
I never said that at all like I said the opposite and then the author later came out and said no
I remember those conversations explicitly and they're just not admitting to it and I didn't record
The interviews which you should probably always do right and so that that was obviously another big sort of black eye on the magazine
Yeah, um, and then so
And I think it was they were saying 25 of new hiv cases come from bug chasers or something. Yeah. Yeah, I think I mistake
But it's still it's just a that's just a ridiculously
A ridiculous amount. So chuck. Um, this was in the past, right?
There was another big one too another big flub. They sent Sean Penn to interview el chapo
Like the most powerful vicious drug cartel leader in the world
They sent Sean Penn to do it and Sean Penn sent back a dispatch that was really flattering
Really sympathetic and really one-sided and so they were really criticized for that as well
No, but that's all in the past
Rolling stone has refound its footing, correct? And it's everything's it's all good now. Uh, no, apparently not correct
Uh, just recently I remember just reading this in my subscription not too long ago
They wrote an article about taylor hawkins after he'd like very soon after he died
That um, a lot of the people in the article, uh, like, you know famous musicians that were quoted came out and said wait a minute
This is really taken out of context. I didn't
I didn't mean this stuff. I didn't say this stuff
The article kind of basically said that the foo fighters kind of killed him
With their schedule and that dave girl wouldn't let up and it was you know, had a big
It was a big reason why he died and that was a very recent stain
Uh, they also did a hit piece on maryland manson that didn't preside present
Any of his side of the story he was accused of sexual abuse by an ex-girlfriend of and rachel wood and it was um
Yeah, very one-sided and a lot of people came out and said like the the ones who were quoted were like
I gave them paragraphs and paragraphs of stuff and they used one sentence
You know because I was speaking out in defense of maryland manson
Um, there was also one that was considered having given a moral victory to anti-vaxxers
They posted a story about how oklahoma's
Emergency rooms were being overrun with people who were having toxic reactions to iver mekton
Who were taking that that cattle dewormer when they caught kovid and apparently it was just fake wrong
Not only that they ran a picture of people lined up wearing masks in winter coats
And the events that they described were took place in summer
So it was just from top to bottom a terrible story and that seems to be what's going on and I read an article on um
A website called saving country music and this this um author basically points to the hiring of noah schachman
From the daily beast to take over and noah schachman said we're going to start making our journalism more immediate more visceral
And faster louder and harder and this saving country music person is like that's the opposite of what
Uh journalists are supposed to do when you do things fast and immediate
You're sacrificing like follow-ups getting secondary sources fact checking
And that seems to be where a lot of the most recent like flubs and um biffs are coming from
Yeah, like
I think it's that digital journalism thing where you want to be the first to break a story
And that's where
It's just a the minefield if you try and operate that way, you know
Yeah, but I also get the impression that it's also they're it's clickbait. They're fanning the flames of outrage culture and
Like at the expense of society's sanity basically is how this saving country music person put it
And they're trying to save country music. Yeah, but no they had some it was a really erudite amazing
Like really insightful post by trigger on savingcountrymusic.com
I got nothing else. I mean this could have been a two-parter, but that's a good rolling stone magazine overview
I'm still gonna read it, but I'm gonna take it for what it's worth. Okay. There you go. But get get a subscription to cream
Well, that's it everybody for rolling stone and since chuck said get a subscription to cream
Of course, that means it's time for listener mail
This is a great email from a mum in new zealand
And uh kia or a josh and chuck. I'm writing you all the way from new zealand and it's currently
10 53 p.m. And I need to thank you
you my friends
Are my last bargaining chip my last resort and more often than not the best thing to get a bit of peace
Sounds like an insult, but let me explain. I have two wonderful beautiful enthusiastic
uh intelligent girls 11 and 9 years old in a frequent occurrence in our house is the reluctance to go to bed
Mm-hmm. Sometimes sleep just eludes them. I get it. It eludes me too. However, if all else fails
What about josh and chuck will usually get them to where I need them to be?
Uh tucked up in usually my bed with your two comforting voices
Teaching them about animal science and random things. They settle and relax enough to let old sandman take them away
Although your content is incredibly interesting
Your tones are soothing and comforting like a big hug to settle into and you are often my go-to when I need a comfort food
Podcast and it seems you have the same effect on my girls
Keep being awesome. You're very much appreciated from a tired mum bethany
And uh, I wrote bethany back and asked if she wanted to name her girls and she said absolutely that is allison page
And uh, she had just written me back after I believe using our show to get page to sleep very nice
Allison page also known as thing one and thing two
That's right. And allison page, uh, give mum a break
Cooperated bedtime. Yeah, let's get it together kids. Get it together kids. Uh, well, thank you. Who was the mum?
Uh bethany, thank you very much bethany
Uh, that was very nice to let us know that and I'm glad we could help out and hello to alice and page and everybody there down under
Uh, was she from new zealand?
New zealand. Okay, the downest of unders exactly
Um, if you want to get in touch with us like bethany did you can send us an email even from new zealand
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Do you ever think to yourself?
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I'm munga shtigler and it turns out astrology is way more widespread than any of us want to believe
You can find it in major league baseball international banks k-pop groups even the white house
But just when i thought i had a handle on this subject something completely unbelievable happened to me
And my whole view on astrology changed whether you're a skeptic or a believer
Give me a few minutes because i think your ideas are about to change too
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