You're Wrong About - Courtney Love
Episode Date: June 29, 2020Special guest Candace Opper tells Mike and Sarah how a grunge star became the protagonist in one of America's most persistent conspiracy theories. Digressions include Neil Young, protest songs an...d the coolest baby of the 1990s. Mike continues to mine his public school education for anatomically impossible rumors. This episode contains detailed descriptions of suicide.Pre-order Candace's book, check out her website or follow her Tweets! Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere else to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show
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But the point is that you're supposed to ignore all that and be like,
this man was behaving normally and Courtney Love assaulted him with her monstrous period.
Welcome to You're Wrong About, the podcast that makes over your historical understandings.
Makes over. Is that a reference?
That's the only whole song I know. Oh, make me over.
Okay, see, I don't know that one. See, when you have to explain it, it's very good.
Because I'm extremely basic, the only whole song I really know is the truly amazing cover they did
of It's All Over Now, Baby Blue, but that's still a Bob Dylan song. Wow, Sarah. I know.
I am Michael Hobbs. I'm a reporter for The Huffington Post.
I'm Sarah Marshall. I'm working on a book about the satanic panic.
And if you want to support the show, there are lots of ways you can do that in the description.
And I am rushing through this part because I want to get to our delightful special guest,
Candace Opper. A returning guest.
Yes. Welcome back, Candace.
Hi, guys. Thank you so much for having me back.
Candace is one of our favorite writers and one of our longstanding friends of the show.
And she is working on a book called Certain and Impossible Events that comes out this fall.
And she says that she struggles to have an elevator pitch about it,
which in my experience is the sign of a good book.
This is a podcast pitch, which means you can talk for 45 minutes if you want to.
Broadly speaking, it's about suicide. But it's more specifically about my experience losing a
friend to suicide in the early 90s, actually right after Kurt Cobain. And that was what we
recorded our original year-round about a couple years ago.
Yes. As Candace mentioned, she was our guest a year ago, a year and a half ago.
When we were a little seedling growing in a little cup.
If you haven't scrolled down that far, that was an episode about Kurt Cobain and the phenomenon
of copycat suicide. Since then, one of our actually most requested people is Courtney Love.
Like people really want us to talk about Courtney Love. And so we thought we would
ask Candace to come back and do an entire episode talking about Courtney. So here we are.
Here we are. Candace and Courtney.
I was definitely, I'm so excited to be here. I was definitely intimidated when you guys asked
because it feels like such a huge task to do her right.
That's true. Yeah. Well, and I think like the longer someone is out kind of weathering as an
oversimplified public figure, like the more restoration work you have to do, you know,
to figure out what has been lost and then express it in a way that manages to jump over
these little hurdles people have put between themselves and empathy.
Right. I also, I've been looking forward to this one because Candace, you will,
I'm sure correct me, but it seems like Courtney Love is one of those figures who is maligned,
but also like kind of genuinely problematic in some ways and like difficult to like in many
public appearances. And it's important to talk about historical figures and public figures in
that way because pulling these people back from being overly maligned is not the same
as lifting them up into these like perfect angelic figures.
I agree. She is a problematic figure and I had lots of feelings
digging into this research where, you know, I was feeling like, I'm not sure if I like this
person or if I, if I, and you know, honestly, just reading about her and trying to get a sense
of her personality over watching several interviews, she reminds me of many women I've
known in my life where I have felt like I don't really want to be this person's friend,
but I'm scared of what will happen if I'm not like, like it's safer to be their friend
than not be their friend. Is it like the kind of person who's like really unpredictable in a
way that's initially fun. And then after a while, you're like, I'm tired all the time.
Sort of? I think so. That like, I get the sense, I get that sense from,
from her friends that have been interviewed about her.
Okay. What's your relationship with Courtney Love, Sarah?
Oh, I mean, I'll tell you actually, I have sinned against Courtney Love. So let me tell you about
that. When I was 16 or 17, I wrote for a high school, like talent night, a parody song of
Phil Oaks's Love Me I'm a Liberal, a protest song from the 60s that like no other teenager who I knew
had heard before, except for the ones who went to like folk music camp. So my parody song was
called Love Me I'm a Portlander. And I included the line, I cried when Courtney killed Kurt.
And I just was like, I need a rhyme. I don't believe it happened, but it's like a reference
to something people believe and like, whatever, I need this line for my parody song. So I sang that
line and I feel kind of mortified about that now. And I think I'm going to feel increasingly
mortified about it in the next hour. So I like to think that that's how people wrote jokes for
Jay Leno for decades of like, I don't believe this, but like, I need a joke. I gotta finish this
parody song. Yeah, totally. And you'll wonder how these things get perpetuated. Exactly. Yes.
But this is such a good transition into how we're going to do this. Because Candice,
you said you wanted to start by talking about like the main rumors and like debunkable factoids
about Courtney Love. I would say the bulk of those debunkable rumors sort of take place
over her relationship with Kurt Cobain. The main rumor about Courtney Love is that she killed
Kurt, right? Yes. I don't know if it's the most detrimental to her, but it's probably the most
hurtful. So to give you a little, little context. So around the time Kurt Cobain, those last few
months of his life, they had been married for two years. They have their daughter, Francis Bean,
who's about a year and a half, I think at that point. Nirvana is probably the most famous band in
the world, I would say. Like I'm sure that fluctuates, but you know, at the time they were.
And Kurt had been suffering from heroin addiction for probably 12 to 18 months at that point,
like really serious heroin addiction. And it also feels like something that is by definition
counter-cultural, getting that huge would just be, I don't know, I think it's like why blame
Courtney Love when you can blame fame and it's right there. That's my question. Yeah. And I just
have to say right now as a disclaimer, like it's really important to me when we're talking about
this that I like focus on Courtney, but I think it's impossible to talk about her without talking
about Kurt Cobain because their lives were so intertwined and they were so famous and they
both had such an impact on each other and things that were happening to him because of his career
directly impacted her and vice versa. So it's like, you know, as I was thinking about this,
I kept thinking like there's there's one funny interview with them. There's this good documentary
that came out a few years ago called The Montage of Heck and there's a home video of them where
they're just sort of like bickering about something in a lighthearted way and she's like,
why are you always the good one and I'm always the bad one? And it's clearly like something they
understood about their relationship, but it's also just like immediately the roles they fell into
in the world and how they were perceived. That is true. I mean, the ways in which like male rock
stars get to be messes in public is very different than the way that female rock stars get to be
messes. Oh yeah. And how Jim Morrison is like this angel of rock still. Yeah. Right. And I mean,
Kurt and Courtney both did a lot of drugs. Both were in and out of rehab, but I think we collectively
attend to forgive Kurt for that a lot more than we forgive her for that. Yeah. So the run up to his
suicide is all of this kind of getting worse. So he was using heroin pretty frequently for,
you know, I would say a year or 18 months. And then that just snowballed. I mean, like that just
got worse and worse. And at the beginning of 1994, the band had kind of Nirvana as in Nirvana.
They weren't doing a whole lot. They weren't actually like their album had come out the previous
fall. They had started to tour a couple of times, but Kurt canceled the tours because he was struggling.
But you know, Kurt Cobain was a person who grew up really poor, classic kind of broken family,
parents divorced when he was young. He never got over that. He was an unwanted child that was passed
between parents and step parents. He grew up in the middle of nowhere, Washington. He got really
famous, really fast. And I think he loved that and hated that. But besides that, he couldn't
really emotionally deal with it. And I think part of it is that there was such a price on
authenticity in that community, that music community they were in. And so he was so obsessed
with being authentic. And he also could not take ridicule and he obsessively read bad reviews of
his music or interviews where his his words would be taken out of context. And he I don't want to
use the term he's a textbook suicide, because I think maybe that's meaningless on its own.
But if you take into account everything that happened over the course of his life,
leading up to his fame, but then also him not being able to deal with fame, him being on drugs,
he collected guns. I mean, it's like, it's just a bad cocktail.
Right. And I also, I mean, this is kind of it's a little tangential for him. But one of the things
I find really interesting about your research, can you talk about this in your book is that
one of the major risk factors for suicidality in the United States is to be a white male in a
large square state with a lot of guns in it. Yes, that is, that is very true. And Curtis from
Washington, yeah, just square with a little squiggly on it. Yeah, squares with squiggly's
count. Yeah, no, that's absolutely true. And unfortunately has gotten much more true over
the last 20 years. Yeah. So leading up to his death, the band is not doing great. He's not doing
great. He can barely go a day without heroin at this point. Their family is kind of falling apart
because Courtney has to spend a lot of time taking care of him physically, because he's so strung
out all the time. He has expressed suicidal ideation multiple times. And so they're getting,
they keep getting into these huge fights. And she'll often call the cops as like an best domestic
abuse report just to get him arrested or just to get them to take the guns away because she's
worried that he's going to kill himself. So like, do they take him in for like a day? Or do they
like take the guns away and then he gets them back a day later? They take the guns away and then
there the guns are given back or he buys more guns. Okay, six weeks or a month before his death.
They're in Rome. Nirvana is playing a show and she's promoting whole. And he has a suicide
attempt, like a pretty severe suicide attempt where he has to be taken to the hospital on overdose
on pills. And they don't want the media to know that. So they just say that he OD'd. But there was
a suicide note. And so I think this is when it really like peaked. And so they come back
to the States and she decides she wants to plan an intervention, like a formal intervention with
band members and close friends and his manager and things like that. And just really does not go
well. What do we know about what happened? Yeah, well, yeah, I mean, it just seems really tragic.
I mean, he rejects everything. Like his mom is there, his sister is there, obviously Courtney is
there. I think it was during this intervention or at some point in that last month, he was really
high and allegedly dropped the baby on her head and didn't remember doing it. And the baby was fine.
But Courtney brought it up as this, you know, she was like, I need to play this card to try
to get through to him. And later on, she cited that as a reason that she thought that she like
pushed him too much over the edge by saying that she also goes back and and cites the intervention
as like she thinks the intervention as a whole pushed him over the edge. And this was in, you
know, deep in her morning period, where she's trying to make sense of this. And, you know,
I wonder sometimes if those are things that fans see and they're like, Oh, well, she said it,
it's her fault. You know, right. And here's this woman like grieving her husband's death trying to
make sense of the suicide. And of course, it's very natural for people close to a suicide to
blame themselves. Right. And she's also talking about what she was doing specifically to prevent
right to suicide. Right. Right. It's like, it's clear that it was like an emergency. Yeah. So
it wasn't like, lol, he might kill himself. Like this is something she was taking extremely
seriously. Absolutely. But he just rejected it and rejected it. And eventually, they did get him
to go to rehab. They live in Seattle, but they go down to Los Angeles and he checks into this
rehabilitation facility called Exodus. He's there for a few days. He seems to be doing a little
bit better. But then he escapes. He just walks out, jumps the fence and buys a plane ticket back
to Seattle. Wow. So this is the point where it gets murky because there's a few days where
he is missing. And these are the last three days of his life.
And is this a big news item? Is a call put out to the public or anything like that?
Or do they try and keep it quiet? I think that was kept quiet at the time. So Courtney finds out
that he's missing and she calls a private investigator to help her find him. She doesn't
want to leave Los Angeles because she's working. I mean, this is something that we also need to
talk about is that she's a musician. She has a band. She has an album coming out.
She's a working rock star. She's trying to promote herself and have a career. And she's been on top
of that and taking care of a child has been taking care of her husband. She's leaning in. Yes.
I think it's so easy to look back and be like, why didn't she do something? Why didn't she go up
there? Why didn't she do all this? If I were Courtney Love, I would simply cure my husband
of his heroin addiction and suicidal ideations. You love that move, Sarah. That's like becoming
your catchphrase. I think the fact that we are so intent on imagining that people can control
the well-being of the people they love is based largely on our unwillingness to accept that we
can't do that either. Yeah. And also, I mean, we have to think about the fact that this was not
just a one-month troubled period. This has been going on for several months. And honestly, doing
that while taking care of a freaking toddler, I have a three-year-old. Sometimes, having a child
that small is just like having a bee buzzing in your ear all day. It's difficult to do anything.
And of course, they had a nanny, whatever. I think people are like, oh, she had a nanny.
You shouldn't have to do anything. It's like, oh, she's still a mother. Right. You still have a
child. You're still going, I have a child. And I don't know a whole lot about this,
but I have read in different accounts that when you're taking care of someone who's an addict,
there is a burnout that comes along with that. I'm sure that there's moments where she's just like,
I don't want to deal with Kurt right now. Right. There's also this thing where we project
the rising action moving toward the suicide that in hindsight, we're like, well, all of this was
obviously build up to suicide. But if you're in one of these very chaotic relationships with these
huge ups and downs, it's like, well, Kurt escaped from rehab again, or like Kurt overdosed again.
I mean, these are the kinds of things that are extreme to anybody else. But if you're in one
of those relationships, it's like she's probably been through things like as fucked up as this.
Right. Yeah. And until something unthinkable happens, you don't think of everything as moving
toward the unthinkable thing. It's only after. Totally. Yeah. I mean, it's very easy, like,
after a suicide to look at things and find those pieces and put them together. I think in some
suicides, it seems much more obvious than others. Kurt's a perfect example of that. But
she just opens the, it's funny how often the yellow pages comes into these accounts because
the yellow pages just like don't matter anymore. So it's kind of funny to see that her searching
for a private investigator in the yellow pages. But she finds some guy randomly who's willing to
help. His name is Tom Grant. You know, he's in Los Angeles, but he has some people he works with
in Seattle. So they start digging into it. They're interviewing his friends. They're trying to find,
I guess Kurt often stayed at like seedy motels when he didn't want to go home. So they're trying
to find motels. They're trying to find his dealer. In those days, there are some accounts of him
coming and going from home. There were people house sitting for them while they were gone. And
these people were also really messed up on drugs. So like their accounts are sort of murky. So
turns out what happened was that Kurt found one of his guns that hadn't been taken away. And
he shot and killed himself in the room above their garage, which was like a separate building from
their house. So no one thinks to go up there. And the person that eventually finds him is an
electrician who is just going to their house to do some work. And he happens to go up there
because no one answers the front door. So I think a lot of the rumors begin from
this investigator, Tom Grant, who at some point in the next several months comes out
and says, I don't think Kurt Cobain killed himself. I think Courtney had him murdered.
What? This private eye says this? Yes. He comes out publicly and says this. And he has recorded,
he records all of his conversations. So he has tapes and tapes of like phone calls that he had
with Courtney. Oh, I smell a book deal. Did this guy like try to cash in?
This guy's really interesting. I got to be honest. As I was researching, I was trying really hard
not to dig so deep into the conspiracy theories, because I just don't want to give them as much
credence as we give to the things that seem more legitimate about a person. But it is a rabbit
hole for sure. And he has a website. I'll let you guys know, but I don't think we should link to it.
People can find it themselves. It looks appropriately geocities. I can see it in my head.
It is like, it's a black background with green, like line green words, right? With weird like
sidemen, multiple side menus and like weird like flashy gifts of like text.
Yeah. And 80% of the links are dead. Yeah. And it's like, at this point, it's very charming
and historic, but it's not trustworthy. And I'm just sort of like, if you want people to take
you seriously, can't you take your website seriously? Yeah. But that is them taking their
website seriously. So I think that answers the question. They're like, this looks boss. Yeah.
And this theory makes sense. I feel like whenever there's a conspiracy that comes from some sort
of seed of something shady going on, there are weird shady things like around his death,
like the fact that he had been missing for several days. And but I honestly think a lot of it is that
all of these people were on lots of drugs and their accounts of what happened are not going to be
absent of holes. Right. That's not like an excuse. Right. And it's not, I don't know. It's honestly
just like a lot of these people are on drugs and they just don't remember what happened.
Well, and even people who weren't on drugs don't remember what happened. Whenever conspiracy
theory is based on like, there was this tiny inconsistency between what someone said then
versus now. It's like, of course, there was like no one remembers anything. Yeah. We remember our
childhoods and we remember Steven Spielberg movies and that is kind of it.
What are the other inconsistencies, Candace? Okay. So there's a very sensational documentary
that came out a few years ago called Soaked in Bleach, specifically about how Courtney Love
killed Kirk Cobain. And one of the theories in this is that his suicide note was faked. The
bulk of his suicide note is about how he can't get joy out of playing music anymore. Most of it is
like about his fans and him as a musician. And then in the end, at the very end, there's like a
message to Courtney and Francis Bean. The theory is that he was actually writing a letter to his
fans to quit music. And then Courtney faked the last portion by copying his handwriting
and turned it into a suicide note. Okay. So that's the kind of thing that's just based on
whole, I mean, that's because there's so many conspiracy theories that are just like fan fiction.
Yes. I mean, I'm sure that Courtney had some phone calls with this guy and told him some mixed
information. It seems true. Like right, he has these tapes, you can hear some of these tapes
where she's saying things to him and she doesn't entirely know what's going on. She's on some drugs
also. And she seems like she's changing her story a little bit. But that totally jives
with Courtney Love. Right. Long time friends will be like, Oh yeah, half of what Courtney says is
not true. But you know, and so because I feel like that's just how she is and how she engages with
people like it doesn't, to me, that's not evidence that she had him murdered. Right. So the inconsistency
is actually more evidence that her version of events is true because it's congruent with her
personality. Yes. So yeah, can we rewind to sort of Kurt and Courtney? Like how, how do they meet
and stuff? Sure. So I have this spreadsheet that I made, like a timeline spreadsheet of Courtney
Love's life. Sarah's gonna make fun of me because she knows that spreadsheets are such a Virgo thing
to do. I'm just so happy. I'm happy to have your spreadsheet that are here with us today.
I never make spreadsheets. I make Google Docs. Mike, what do you do for new spreadsheets?
Are you kidding me? For this show? Extremely. I love it. Oh, I'm the only one who's not making
spreadsheets then. I'm in the minority. So, so just a little background on Courtney. So Courtney's
born in 1964 in San Francisco. Her name is not really Courtney Love. What? What? She didn't
actually have the last name Love. But what was Courtney Love's real name? What's her birth
certificate name? Oh, oh, my God, it's not my spreadsheet. I have her in my home. Wow.
Betraying Virgos everywhere. I know. It's awful. Her original name was Courtney Michelle Harrison.
Harrison is her dad's last name. Her mom's full name is Linda Carroll. I can see why she changed
it. Yeah. Courtney Love is a doper name. So, I think of Courtney Love as a Portlander. She kind
of is, but she was born in San Francisco. I feel like she's one of ours. I'll put it that way.
I would say yes, because she talks a lot of shit about Portland and Eugene. That's what
Portlanders do. We talk a lot of shit about Portland. So, she's born in San Francisco.
She is the first, the oldest child. Her father is like a grateful dead roadie. So,
he's really involved in the dead. And Courtney, as a kid, appears in a photograph on the back
of a Grateful Dead album. Wow. Of course she does. That's lovely. But her parents get divorced
when she's really young. And then they move up to Oregon in, I think, when she's like five or six.
With her mom or her dad? Just with her mom. She barely, barely knows her dad. Okay. So, I know
her dad eventually came out and got on fucking Tom Grant's side. Oh no. Oh my god. Oh no.
That's dark, dude. My daughter killed her husband. That's bad. That's a very unkilled thing to do,
Mr. Dead Roadie. Very unchill. Very unchill. So, what's her childhood like in Oregon? So,
she moves to Oregon with her mom, who goes to the University of Oregon in Eugene to become
a psychotherapist. And she is kind of a troubled child. Her mom gets remarried and she suddenly
has like, I think, three step-siblings. And she's still the oldest. She actually has a really good
relationship with her step-dad, who sounds like he was a pretty nice guy. A nice step-dad is a
nice little bar of cherries. Seriously. The slot machine of life. Twist. So, she eventually gets
sent to reform school because I think she stole like a kiss t-shirt from a Walgreens or something
like that. And very on-brand. This is another story that has changed. There are so many different
accounts of it, but in one interview, she describes it in detail that she got busted for stealing a
kiss t-shirt, but it was after she was like, went to a kiss show and talked her way backstage
to meet the band. Of course she did. But anyway, she gets busted for stealing a t-shirt. And her
mom, I think, doesn't know what to do with her and sends her to reform school. And then her mom
moves to New Zealand without her. What? Her family moves to New Zealand and just like, leaves her
in boarding school. Oh, my God. New Zealand is so far away. Like, the farthest away you can get.
Did they discuss this in advance or were they just like, quick, Courtney's in reform school.
Let's go live with the hobbit. Who knows? I mean, like I said, there's so many, like, mixed accounts
of her childhood, but it seems like reform school is a thing that happened and that her mom definitely
moved to New Zealand. Okay. So anyhow, she's in reform school for a couple years, and she's
released at 16 and legally emancipated from her parents. I don't know how that works. Whoa. And
her grandparents, who I think were really wealthy, had set up a trust fund for her. Oh. So at this
time, she's just literally on her own with maybe like a $500 a month trust fund. Was not expecting
her to be a trust fund kid. Yeah, weird, huh? Yeah. So she starts to earn some extra money
stripping underage in Oregon. And Candice, did she go to our alma mater, Portland State at some
point? She did. I was just going to get to this. I'm very proud of this. She spent a couple semesters
at Portland State where Sarah and I met. Go Vikings. And also Portland is most famous
for its donuts and its strip bars. Yes. Was she stripping to get through college? Because that's
actually like a pretty lucrative college job. At the stake in the game, I don't know what other
job you're going to get that is going to help you pay for college if it's not like day trading.
Yeah. Yeah. Yes. Likely because it sounds like based on a couple accounts, all she had was this
like $500 trust fund. So I'm sure that stripping was paying toward college, but that wasn't really
working out. So she moves to Dublin, Ireland. Yes. Wow. And she does a couple more semesters at
Trinity. Okay. And then she's kind of just hopping around Europe for a while and still stripping kind
of on and off. This is when she starts to get really into the music scene. Has she talked about
this time in her life? Like is it, does she have sort of generally positive or generally negative
feelings about it or anything like that? I mean, she kind of talks about it the way that she talks
about everything else, which is just like, yeah, this is a thing I did for a while.
This is the interesting thing about Courtney Love. And I think this is one of the reasons
why she's unlikable to a lot of people. She doesn't do the thing that celebrities do when
they're past their like messed up years where they show some like extreme growth as a person or like
as like a growing up, you know, it's like, right. They're like, now I'm a mom. Like she's just kind
of like, yeah, I was kind of fucked up for a while. Or like, yeah, I lived in Liverpool on the street.
Or yeah, I stripped. Like the classic affectlessness of a Granger. Yeah. So she's between 16 and
aging. She's hopping around Europe, doing some stripping, listening to some music. She goes back
to Portland for a while, does some more stripping. That doesn't work out. She ends up in Japan
stripping for a minute. I'm impressed by how she's like, she's seeing the world, you know.
So she starts playing music with some other women who are actually women who end up in
other big bands like Capgelland, who was eventually in Bates in Toiland, which was another big Grunge
band. And Jennifer Finch, who was eventually in L7, which was like another big Grunge band.
I remember L7. I think of L7 whenever I remove a tampon. She also is the front person for
Faith No More before Faith No More was was famous. No way. Yes. For like six months or something.
Wow. But she claims they didn't know how to work with women. And so that, you know, she quits that
band. Wow. What a cameo. So then I think around like 1985 or 86, she decides to settle in LA
because she wants to pursue an acting career. And her first role, she has a very minor role
in Sid and Nancy, which was 1986. No way. Directed by Alex Cox. She went out for the part of Nancy,
but didn't get it. She got the part of like one of their friends. So that's her first kind of
visible acting role. And then she does his next movie. She had the lead role in his next movie
called Straight to Hell. I love Straight to Hell. Tell me if I'm wrong here, but is there also
some foreshadowing of the malignery of Courtney Love because she's demonstrating some level of
ambition. She wants to be an actress, but that didn't work out so she switched to music. Like,
I can just imagine all of these things being used as ammunition against her later.
Oh yeah. I mean, she's a very ambitious person and people rail against her for it because if a man
is ambitious, that's the beginning and end of it. But if a woman is, that means she just like
destroys everyone in her path to get what she wants. And also that she dared to want to have a
career and to be, I don't know. I mean, the idea of conventional beauty is like so weird and poisonous
in itself because it really means marketable beauty. But like, you know, she had a normal body.
She didn't have like a perfect symmetrical face. She didn't have perfect teeth. And also like
growing and sort of like Alex Cox movies mean that like you just like really greasy all the time.
Yeah. Men can do that in a way that women can't. Totally. Well, the whole thing of beauty comes up
a lot with her in a lot of interviews as she starts to get famous because she seems to be
struggling between like, fuck you, I'm going to look however I want to fucking look. And also like,
she got a nose job. And yeah, like when she got a nose job, like before she was famous because
she felt like if I don't nothing will ever happen for me. Interesting. I've had that thought. Now I
work in podcasts. Well, and she constantly it's funny how she in a lot of interviews, like once
she is famous, she's always referring to this time when she was fat. I mean, she's just like a little
heavier than she is when she's really famous. It's really funny. Like you can tell that she's
trying to push against that by talking about it in the first place. She's always talking about her
zits. She's always talking about how she used to be fat. She talked openly about getting a nose job.
And so I think it sort of brought was starting to bring to light the fact that this is what women
have to do. Yeah. I think women who talk about having plastic surgery openly are also punished.
Oh, yeah. Totally. Yeah. I mean, this is part of the whole, the grunge aesthetic and the limitations
of the grunge aesthetic in that by talking about like her fat period and her zits and stuff,
she's sort of couching it as a critique of conventional beauty standards. Like I wasn't
always this quote unquote beautiful, but she's also talking about it in like a stigmatizing way.
Right. Right. Well, it feels like her personal insecurity is guiding her contribution to the
discourse, which is the worst sentence I've said all month. Or the most academic sentences
at all month, maybe. There you go. I mean, but I think if you think of it in the, I mean,
yes, like we can definitely slap that assessment on it now. But 30 years ago,
she's coming up against Madonna and Paul Abdull. It's a different world that she's entering.
Right. So we have talked about her little mini acting career, but then that wasn't really
going anywhere. So she decides, well, I'm going to go back to playing music. And so she moves to LA.
She puts an ad newspaper to recruit band members. And that's where she, that's how she meets Eric
Erlinson, who was like longtime whole guitarist. That's how John Kett found the black hearts.
I think they date for a while. She's briefly married to someone named James Moreland,
who was in a band called The Leaving Trains. Never heard of him. She had her marriage annulled.
There's not a whole lot about that out in the world. The band starts to get a little
more popular. She's still stripping at a place, and I think she's stripping at a place called
Jumbo's Clown Room, which is kind of a notorious place in Los Angeles. And it just sounds horrible.
Wow. Jumbo's Clown Room. Yeah. Yikes. No. It just sounds horrifying. That doesn't put me in the
right mood for what it's selling. So Hull starts to play a lot more. They're doing some touring.
They get noticed out in England is like where they start to have a following. But they're also
kind of coming up in the grunge scene, which is starting to come about in the early 80s,
early, very early 90s. And this is when she first meets Kurt. So there's mixed accounts of when
their first meeting was. There's one that has the meeting in 1989 at a club. There's one that has
a meeting in January 1990 in Portland. They run into each other at an L7 show in Los Angeles
in 1991. It's just kind of all over the place. But the one that I think is the most lasting. So I
think they've met a couple times. She sort of starts to develop a crush on him. And she starts
to send him letters, and he just is like ignoring her. But one of the things that she sends him
is a heart shaped box, which eventually becomes a very famous Nirvana song, right? According to
one account that I've read that they have a couple like long phone calls. So they definitely like
kind of know each other, but nothing is really happening with them. And in 91, this is when
she's dating Billy Corgan of the Smashing Pumpkins, who are also just kind of starting to get famous.
And she flies out to Chicago to see Billy. And she gets to his place and there's another girl
there. And there's a big fight, which seems to just happen with Courtney Love often. And they split
up in a very dramatic fashion. And then she's just kind of wandering around Chicago and sees that
Nirvana is playing at the metro. And so she shows up at the show, and she goes home with Kurt. And
that's the beginning of their relationship. So he's like a revenge fuck. Basically, yeah. Because
like we've all been in that mood. Yeah, I'm going out and the first person I see. I feel like Kurt
Cobain reminds me of like, there's footage that I love of Neil Young performing on the BBC when
he was like 25 or something. And he's like, totally shy, not making eye contact with anyone
or anything. And he's like, here's a song about a person on a ranch. And then he like plays old
man. And he's he like is Neil Young is is Kurt Cobain like that, you know, that sort of man
that's like, Oh, I don't I don't even know why I'm on this stupid stage. And then they like
start doing their act. And you're like, there it is. Sort of. I mean, Kurt just seems like he
had a personality that was very contradictory. Like he he was really ambitious, but
sort of presented himself as someone who didn't give a fuck. Right. It seemed like he gave like
every fuck. Yeah. There's also this like built in weird dichotomy in like grunge fame. Because the
whole thing with grunge is we don't care. We're authentic. We're greasy. But then also like,
you're then represented by like the same major record labels that are representing Britney Spears
and Jessica Simpson. And there's this entire machine. But you have to pretend the whole time
that you don't want that and that you're doing that reluctantly. And it's like a really fine line.
Because this was the time when like the worst thing that an artist could be was a sellout.
This is why I like Instagram influencers. Because like, everyone knows it's fake. Like no one
thinks these women are like cutting up eight kinds of fruit and putting it all on a rainbow
platter, you know, every morning to feed their four children just a rainbow fruit.
We're just like, thank you for making this useless picture for me. Yeah, it's
it's interesting that you bring up like Britney Spears and stuff. Because I think what the the
era that they were they were coming into was like a mix between Britney Spears type people like
Paul Abdull and Debbie Gibson, who were like big at that time, but also 80s hair metal, which was
like huge like guns and roses was the hugest band pre Nirvana. And there's a really there's a lot a
big feud between Kurt and Courtney and Axel Rose. Really? Which we'll get to. Okay, the world that
Nirvana was coming into was very much ruled by these like really misogynistic metal rock bands
where like all it was about was like getting wasted and fucking supermodels.
I feel like because I grew up watching VH1 in like the late 90s, and I feel like most of VH1 at
that point was like, because I watched the Motley crew behind the music like six times, I had never
heard a Motley crew song. Oh my god, me too. But like I knew all about how Nikki Sixx was like
injecting Jack Daniels into his veins. Can you hear about the groupies, the legions of groupies?
And you're like, well, that's what rock is, I guess. And I'm 11. Yeah. And Kurt was like an
outspoken feminist in a typical like early 90s way. But like what other people weren't doing at the
time. Totally. And the hair metal bands definitely weren't doing. Definitely not. Yeah. So do Kurt
and Courtney get really serious like immediately after Kurt Show in Chicago? Yes, they get they
get immediately serious. So this is this is October of 1991. And they're married in February
of 1992. Oh, wow. Oh, wow, like four, three, four months. Yes, kids. So they get they get really
serious really quickly. And heroin comes into their relationship very early. So neither one of
them were using before? No, they were both of them separately. Courtney had already had a problem
with heroin at some point and had gone through rehab and had cleaned up. Kurt had tried heroin,
I would say probably like eight to 10 times or something like that at that point. But what's
really interesting is that he had written in his journals that he wanted to become a junkie.
And this is really I'm gonna let me get this this passage up if you guys don't mind. I know
you like reading passages sometimes. We do like reading passages. So this is from this book called
heavier than heaven, which is a beautiful biography of Kurt Cobain. This passage is about right after
they met, they reunite at a pro choice benefit in Los Angeles backstage, they seem very much
together. And many remarked how they made the perfect rock and roll couple. Yet later in the
evening behind closed doors, their relationship took a more destructive bent. For the first time,
Kurt brought up the idea of doing heroin. Courtney paused for a moment but then agreed.
They scored dope, went to his hotel, the Beverly Garland prepared the drugs and he injected her.
Courtney couldn't stand to handle a needle herself. So Kurt, the former needle phobe,
handled things for himself and for her. After getting high, they went out walking and came upon
a dead bird. Kurt pulled three feathers off the animal and passed one to Courtney holding
the two others in his hand. This is for you. This is for me, he said. And then holding the third
feather in his hand, he added, and this is for our baby we're going to have. She laughed and later
remembered this as the point when she first fell in love with him. And then it goes on to talk about
how at that point heroin was no longer just kind of a recreational thing. Like he had already kind
of gotten it in his head. And I think part of it is that it helped his stomach problems. And let
me read this as well. So this is from Kurt's journal. When I got back from our second European
tour of sonic youth, I decided to use heroin on a daily basis because of an ongoing stomach ailment
that I had been suffering from for the past five years. And that had literally taken me to the
point of wanting to kill myself. For five years, every single day of my life, every time I swallowed
a piece of food, I would experience an excruciating, burning, nauseous pain in the upper part of my
stomach lining. The pain became even more severe on tour due to lack of proper and regimented
eating schedule and diet. Since the beginning of this disorder, I've had 10 upper and lower
gastrointestinal procedures, which found an inflamed irritation in the same place. I consulted 15
different doctors and tried about 50 different types of ulcer medication. The only thing I found
that worked were heavy opiates. There were many times that I found myself literally incapacitated
in bed for weeks, vomiting and starving. So I decided if I feel like a junkie as it is, I may
as well be one. Holy shit. Yeah. It's interesting that we guess we don't think of this as a chronic
pain story at all. Yeah. Well, emotional disorders are a chronic pain as well. Right.
And we don't necessarily think of that either. Right. They end up getting married in February of
1992. But before that, Courtney learns that she's pregnant. And because they had been doing drugs,
they're both worried about the baby. And Courtney is more like, oh, I'm fine. I mean,
she thinks of herself as this huge, sturdy, like, curculean figure. And she kind of is. I mean,
she's kind of like an Amazon woman. She talks about herself that way a lot. So she thinks of
herself as really resilient and didn't seem worried about it at all. But they go to see a doctor,
and they both go through detox. She goes to multiple doctors who say, it's fine. Don't worry
about it. Just stop from now on. Kurt does not stay clean during her pregnancy, but she does
the rest of her pregnancy. So this is throughout 1992. So they get married in February 1992 in
Hawaii. And this year, Nirvana is recording a new album, Courtney's pregnant. And the big thing that
happens is that she gets interviewed by Vanity Fair. This is a huge deal for her because she
thinks this is going to help her career. And she's really trying to, you know, support her band and
get the word out about them. But she also knows the image of her and Kurt at the time. And they
make jokes constantly about how they're John and Yoko. Like, they're totally aware that they're
that trope. It comes out variously in interviews with them. And they're also really aware of,
like, the sit and Nancy thing. And it's this thing that people are constantly like, oh,
are they the next John Yoko? Or are they the next sit and Nancy, you know?
Well, what I learned from the 100 most shocking moments in rock,
sit and Nancy had a tumultuous relationship. This is Sid Vicious and Nancy Spongen.
And Sid apparently had a blackout during which he stabbed Nancy to death. And shortly thereafter
killed himself. And it was this terrible punk rock murder suicide. So like, if it's like the John and
the Yoko or the sit and the Nancy, I feel like it's like the natural conclusion to a relationship
is that only one of us will make it out alive. Right. So this is kind of signaling that people
are starting to know who Courtney Love is. And to have a cover story in Vanity Fair is a pretty
big deal. Yeah. And Courtney is just historically obsessed with celebrity. She wants to be famous.
And she's not secretive about that. But their daughter is born on August 18. And the profile
comes out shortly before that. And the Vanity Fair thing is really pivotal for them. Because
basically this article paints her like a junkie who was doing drugs the entire time she was pregnant.
Cool. But I have to say, it's like, I've read it like three or four times when I was doing this
research. And it's a really well written article that seems to get Courtney Love like really well.
But at the same time, it includes a ton of quotes from anonymous people who are saying
things about Courtney Love and her drug use. Well, so what gets included? Can we hear excerpts?
So in the circles she travels in, Kurt Cobain is regarded as a holy man. Courtney,
meanwhile, is viewed by many as a charismatic opportunist. There have been rampant reports
about the couple's drug problems and many believe she introduced Kurt to heroin. They are expecting
a baby this month and even the most tolerant industry insiders fear for the health of the child.
It is appalling to think that she would be taking drugs when she knew she was pregnant,
says one close friend. We're all worried about that baby. 20 different sources throughout the
record industry maintain that the Cobains have been heavily into heroin. Earlier this year,
Kurt told Rolling Stone that he was not taking heroin, but Courtney presents another extremely
disturbing picture. We went on a binge, she says referring to a period last January when Nirvana
was in New York to appear on Saturday Night Live. So this would be the January before they got married.
We did a lot of drugs, we got pills, then we went down to Alphabet City and Kurt wore a hat,
I wore a hat, and we copped some dope. Then we got high and went to SNL. After that,
I did heroin for a couple months. It's murky because it would have been right around the time
that she was like about to get pregnant, but no one knows exactly when she found out she got
pregnant. We do know that she found out she got pregnant. She knew after that that she had done
drugs when she was pregnant before she realized she was pregnant and then got off. It's complicated.
We said at the very beginning, she is a complicated person who has done some bad things.
It's easy to say, oh God, if you knew that there was a chance you might be pregnant,
if you were having unprotected sex, you shouldn't have been doing drugs. I think it's really easy
to say those things. It's not a responsible thing for someone to do drugs when they're possibly
pregnant, but I think the levels to which this was bad for them get so severe. Firstly,
Kurt, who is someone who is so worried about his reputation and what the world thinks of him and
now his family is devastated by this article. Courtney is just whatever, blow it off, and he
is just so angry. Courtney, a number of times, cites this as the beginning of like the end for
him, the Vanity Fair article, because she just thinks it's a sign that he can handle what
the media is going to do to him and them as a family. Part of that is that Kurt and Courtney,
typical Gen Xers, grew up in broken families, like children of divorces, latchkey kids.
Yeah, totally latchkey kids. And that was just a really heartbreaking thing for Kurt. And I think
they really wanted to have some kind of normal family. And I'm laughing when I say that because
I'm like, what kind of normal family? It just has two parents that are like on drugs all the time.
But they really did like love their child so much and were so tender with her and so tender with
each other. And I think that he really wanted to break that cycle of them having such bad
childhoods with their parents and wanted to have a good childhood. And this, before she even has the
baby, this article comes out. There's also the thing, I mean, there's so much shame associated
with addiction too. Most people that are addicted to substances are not like super wild about it
and like, I'm an addict and it's awesome. Most of them go through the cycle of telling themselves
that they're never going to do it again and then giving into their cravings. And especially with
heroin where the cravings are so bad and the withdrawal is so bad. I mean, seeing yourself
and your wife depicted as heroin addicts and having the country like debating your heroin habit,
which is probably something you're really ashamed of, is just like triply upsetting.
Yeah. So shortly after this comes out, they have the baby. And a representative from the Los Angeles
Department of Family Services, Family and Child Services, comes to the hospital with a copy
of Vanity Fair and says, we have to investigate this. Oh my God. Oh, wow. Sort of the authorities
take Francis Bean away? Yes. They aren't allowed to take her home. And I think a week later,
there's a court hearing and it's ruled that they have to have supervised visits with Francis
Bean for six months. Is there any evidence other than the Vanity Fair article? Not that I'm aware of,
but possibly. Wow. That's really heartbreaking. Because on some level, you would think like,
well, yes, like this is why we have service agencies like this is to protect children from
like really, really dangerous home situations. But on the other hand, it's weird to sort of
focus that on celebrities. And it's weird to focus that on a case where the only evidence
is a journalistic account. It's a case where celebrity journalism is suddenly being held to
the same standards as like actionable information given to social workers. When we know that one
of the hallmarks of tabloid celebrity journalism in tabloid journalism, if someone said it,
you can print it. And I don't know if Vanity Fair is on a completely different and higher
scale of ethics than that in this moment. They might not be. So this kind of, yeah,
like that was a really bad, bad moment for them. It also feeds the cycle of like resentment of the
media, resentment of the cops, like this kind of this sense of like it's me and you against the
world. Yes. Which is a kind of sit and Nancy thing. Yeah. But I mean, what I find really charming.
So, you know, they always joke about the, the John and Yoko and the sit and Nancy, but the
guy who directed that documentary montage of heck and an interview, he said he likes to describe
them as the Lucy and Ricky on heroin because they loved each other so much.
That's sweet. Yeah. Yeah. And like, what are the, what are the good parts of the relationship?
Like, can we talk about that a little bit? It's really sweet. They send each other love faxes.
Which I thought was like the most charming like nineties thing ever. Yeah. Yeah. Like sometimes
X rated. Yeah. The only thing I can think of more nineties than that would be if they fed each other's
Tamagotchi's. But yeah, I mean, it seems really sweet. You know, they both, they both come from
the same place, kind of poor backgrounds from the Northwest, broken families, like they really
understood each other in that way. And they're both really ambitious. You know, at the same time,
this is all going on, you know, she has whole and whole first album came out in 91 pretty on the
inside. And they're working on their second album while they're in this relationship. This is a
good time to bring up another rumor, which is that Kurt Cobain wrote all of Courtney loves music.
Oh, yeah. And it's a belief that like women aren't biologically able to rock. Oh, yeah. I mean,
okay, so as someone who's in a relationship with another creative person, you know, my husband
and I are both writers, we talk about our writing all the time. We share ideas all the time. That's
just part of the process. And if we're getting down to the nitty gritty, like, yeah, he probably
did come up with like a riff or two on the album. But also she helped him write a heart shape box,
like, you know what I mean? And not just because she sent him a heart shape box, like literally,
like there's there's a journal entry of him talking about how they wrote her, you know,
that's what people in relationships do. It's interesting that this is a theory that takes
something that is really like romantic and turns it into something sinister. And also turns it
into something one way, right? That it's like, yeah, she's this fraud, because she's taking
his ideas and putting her name on them. Whereas he, of course, the genius of the relationship
is just like spouting these ideas everywhere and is 100% responsible for his own creations.
And like 50% responsible for hers, like there's no cross mixing. Yeah, yes. I mean, it's such a
simple rumor too, because it's just like she had a career before she met him. She had an album,
she wrote songs. There's a book. Yeah, it's called Dirty Blonde. And it's the Diaries of Courtney
Love. And it's just all these like scraps of paper, you know, from her childhood and
adolescence. And there's just like, you can see the through line of like the whole lyrics
in her writings, through her adolescence and her twenties, as you can with most musicians,
as you can with Kurt, if you look at, you know, if you look into people's diaries and journals,
like you're going to see that stuff. And right, I just want to read something in, you know, that
little 30 33 and a third book series about albums. So I read the one about live through this, which
is really good. It's written by a female music critic named Ann Wynne Crawford. Courtney's talking
about when they got their first major record contract. So for their first album, they were on
like a small indie label. And then once she starts to get more famous, she's starting to get all these
these deals offered to her. And so she when she's in a meeting with Geffen, who she ends up on,
which is also Nirvana's major record label, she says, I made them pull out Nirvana's contract
and everything on there. I wanted more said Courtney of Holes deal with DGC records. I'm
up to half a million for my publishing rights, and I'm still walking. If those sexist assholes
want to think that me and Kurt write songs together, they can come forward with a little more.
And so she just was like, fine, if you think that he writes my music, then you got to give
me this big record deal. Yeah. And she got it. Also, I was like too young for any of the grunge
stuff. I like, despite growing up in Seattle, like slept through the entire grunge thing because
I was like 13 and really into Pink Floyd. But was like one of the better bands of the grunge wave
too, right? Like it's not like they were some B list thing. Like my understanding is that Holes
albums have held up very well. Oh, absolutely. Live through this is a really freaking good album.
And it won one album of the year from Rolling Stone in 94 when it came out. And I mean, that
that's a tragic thing is that Live Through This came out four days after Kurt's body was found.
Oh, is that true? I didn't know that. Wow. And so that's another thing that's like rolled into the
conspiracy theory was that, oh, she just like wanted to marry him to make a successful album.
And like, oh, isn't that convenient that he died like right before the album came out.
So the theory is that she like decided to become a grunge musician, found a successful
grunge musician to seduce, got him to write songs for her. And then when he had written all the
songs she wanted, she murdered him. Essentially, yes. It's just like it's not human behavior,
you know? Can I share the rumor about Courtney Love that I heard in high school? Yes. So tell me
if you've heard this, I do not know where this comes from. But apparently, Courtney Love was
playing a show. Some guy in the crowd was like trying to grope her, like grab her legs or her
thighs or something. And so she had her period all over his hand. Okay, Sarah, you want to take
this one, Sarah? Okay, I truly want to know what you know about how menstruation works. Like,
what is your understanding of the way the blood exits the body? By force. The story is really
about the lack of sex ed in our public schools. It really is. Because I remember people, I remember
people repeating that story to me like into my twenties. Wow. It's just, yeah, I don't buy it.
Candice? We now go to Candice. No. Have you heard this one before?
I have not heard this rumor. Maybe this was like specific to the Pacific Northwest,
or that it was just one of those things that guys didn't tell girls. But I don't think you can shoot
it out with force. This has been Anatomy Corner with Mike. Yeah. Thanks, Mike. I did actually
know this. Okay. But it's funny to me that I didn't know that at like, you know, 14 or something
when I definitely would have heard this story. And then it's one of those stories, you know,
the stories that you hear them when you're young, and then you find yourself like retelling them
10 years later, and halfway through telling them, you're like, oh, this is a fucking lie.
Like, why did I? You're like, wait a minute. Why do I believe this? Yeah. And you're like,
I'm realizing that I once had to believe a lot of other things to be true in order for this thing
to be true. Should we go to the, should we go to the Axel Rose feud now? Where should we go?
Yeah. So I think the Axel Rose feud happened shortly after this. And Axel might have been
angry because they really liked Nirvana, and Nirvana continued to refuse to go on tour with
them or play any shows with them because Kurt thought he was such a dick. Oh, that's interesting.
But Axel made some comments about Courtney being a junkie mom after that article came out.
They're backstage at the MTV Music Awards with Francis Bean, by the way,
coolest baby of the 90s. Axel walks by with Stephanie Seymour, who I think was a model.
Yes, supermodel. She was in the November rain video, which I have seen 40,000 times.
So, you know, Axel's walking by and Courtney just goes, hey, Axel, will you be the godfather
of our child just to start a fight? Yeah. Just because that's Courtney love. So Axel ignores her
and turns to Kurt and says, you shut your bitch up, or I'm taking you down to the pavement.
What? No way. Axel. So Kurt just smiles and laughs. But he's just so aware of the fact that like,
Courtney's just so big and like, so like, unflappable. Right. And so used to conflict,
maybe. He just turns to her and he goes, okay, bitch, shut up. Everyone starts kind of laughing
and Axel gets kind of pissed and looks at Courtney and he goes, are you a model? What? Nice.
With Stephanie Seymour standing next to him. Oh my god. Courtney goes, no, are you a brain surgeon?
This is like 14 year old kids about to just like have a fight with each other. Totally. So I think
that was like the crux of the feud. I feel the worst for Stephanie Seymour. I know. She's like,
Axel, go ahead and leave me on out of this. I'm just kidding. But anyway, I mean, like, just to kind
of wind back up to the death, you know, so they had like a rough relationship from the start. A lot
of love, but a lot of drugs. There was one really sad thing I read about how like, she just got so
good at dealing with him overdosing that she would like, put needles in his balls to wake him up.
Like, just so she didn't have to call the police or like, you know, it's just the sad story of how
normalized drugs get in a family. And I think for a long time, she wanted to believe that like,
they could just deal with it and not have to do rehab and everything. He had overdosed
six to eight times or something in the last year that he was alive. I mean, it was just very common
place for them. So he's like unraveling basically. Yeah, he's totally unraveling. And a lot of that
wasn't seen in the media, despite him being portrayed as kind of a junkie. Like, no one really knew
the extent of that. It's also interesting how sort of the way that we know how to process that
is by boiling it down to this binary of like, did Courtney Love kill him or not?
It's that's not really the right question. And like, it doesn't mean that we're like, Courtney Love
acted perfectly in all scenarios, right? It's not that like, she's the good guy of the story,
but she's not the bad guy either. Like, there just kind of are no good guys and bad guys in this.
Or are there like two people who would really like to have a good relationship with each other,
but, you know, have some of the skills and the capacities, but lack others? Yeah. And just,
yeah, like an illustration of how like really dire circumstances can become part of daily life.
Yeah, what seems so sad to me is that I think they so badly wanted to have like,
a kind of happy little household with their family and they loved their daughter so much.
I don't know. Kurt just couldn't reconcile like his life and his stomach pains and his
psychic troubles and just everything. You know, we should talk, we should talk for a minute about
like what happened after he died. So Kurt's body's found on a Friday and the news breaks and goes
big really quickly. Two days later, there's a vigil held in Seattle, 7,000 people show up.
Band members speak. There's people from suicide prevention organizations that come and speak and
the purpose of the vigil is not really about Kurt, but about like, let's talk about suicide and why
suicide is messed up and why you shouldn't do this because there was such a fear immediately that
teenagers all across the world were going to start dying by suicide because they idolized Kurt so
much and so it was just kind of like this big public dose of suicide prevention and a huge part
of that was that Courtney decided that she wanted to read his suicide note to people and I don't
think she did it with like suicide prevention in her mind, but it turned out to be what people in
the suicidology community consider to be like a really effective method and it's something that
no one had really done before in such a public way for a celebrity and she recorded it in advance
and it was played for the people at the vigil and it's really sad to hear her read it and it's just
kind of interspersed with her talking about how messed up it is and how it's not better to burn
out than fade away and don't think you should do this and it's just raw. It just feels very much
like her reading this and her in her grief and her in this moment just like putting this out there
for people because she knows how much his fans care about his music and that are going to be
completely lost and not knowing what to do and then she shows up there later in the day she
shows up at the vigil and is like talking to fans and giving away his stuff and like just telling
people like I don't know what this means but something good can come of it and she's so
disheveled and she's like clearly hasn't slept in days and she's like kind of in a slip and like
her hair is like up in these messed up pig tails and like she just looks like a total mess which
makes complete sense but when you think of that image of a widow next to like what people had
in their mind of a public widow which is like the Jackie O you know it's the complete 180 from that
right and so right I think it's easy to look at those images now 30 almost 30 years later and
and be like yeah that's Courtney love or yeah that was the 90s or whatever but at the time it was
it was kind of revolutionary and then I mean what happened to like whole and stuff I mean the next
time I became aware of Courtney love was when she was in the people versus Larry Flint lived through
this comes out four days after Kurt's body is found she's obviously taking a pause from promoting
the album and I think she takes like three months off or something before they they go on tour to
promote the album but during that time her bassist her name was Kristen Pfaff and she she does her
heroin overdose two months after oh wow so this is a bad year for Courtney but she gets a new
bassist they go on tour they promote the album the album does really well I think they're touring
for a while then she has these couple acting gigs in the people versus Larry Flint and Man on the
Moon Hull's next album Celebrity Skin comes out in 1998 so that's four years later and you know
it's good but it's definitely like poppier and I think that disappointed a lot of people who really
liked how raw and grungy live through this and then they kind of fall off yeah yeah she becomes
after that point I think she just becomes kind of more of a celebrity than a musician or an actor
she's just like a personality this was also I mean I remember after those movies came out Courtney
loved becoming this figure that I always kind of cringe when I saw her just because it was clear
that she was like quite erratic and she oftentimes seemed like she was sort of like high or something
and she's just become like more sort of difficult to see around right or at least for me right
no for me too definitely and I think that just having you know in the last like six weeks
like rewatched or watched for the first time many interviews with her I've been thinking a lot about
like do I actually like Courtney love like do I and there's a difference between liking someone
and and like supporting the work that they do you know but like I just like like I love whole I love
live through this I like love that Courtney kind of set the bar for like many women like after her
to get into rock music and and how like she was inspiring for people and I think that's huge
even though like she's definitely one of those people who identifies as a feminist but hates the
feminist in fighting and like in the 90s she very much didn't openly identify as a feminist because
it was such a taboo thing back then I feel like yeah especially as a woman trying to get into a
traditionally immense field yeah she was afraid I think that identifying as a feminist would mean
that no one take her seriously or would stereotype her that way right which is a very interesting
trajectory of that word since then too because I remember that too that nobody identified publicly
as a feminist oh yeah there was actually a there's a so there's sort of a notorious interview
that she did with Barbara Walters not long after Kurt died it's really kind of cringe where they I
think partly because it's Barbara Walters and that's kind of how I feel about many of her interviews
she goes on there and Barbara Walters is like Courtney I'm going to ask you all the questions
that that I know people are going to ask and and this was she's a grieving widow this is Barbara
Walters excuse for just saying whatever has popped into her head
Courtney did you have your period on somebody who tried to grab you yes or no Courtney are you able
to shoot menstrual blood out of your vagina she asks her what are what are the worst perceptions
people have of you or the most mistaken perceptions people have of you she says that I'm not smart
and that I'm not clean and Barbara goes clean off drugs or physically clean and Courtney goes both
you know then Barbara starts to talk about Courtney's struggles with drugs and she says
are you on drugs right now and Courtney says no and she says are you on heroin let's clarify what
kind of drug you're not on for a second you see Courtney kind of break character and like go like
no and then oh my god it gets so much better then she goes are you on prozac
as though prozac is on the same level as heroin yeah prozac and heroin the two hot drugs of the
90s yeah and then Courtney's like no the prozac didn't work but like but I mean it's just it's
embarrassing it's embarrassing for both of them it's embarrassing for the viewer too also that
little comment no the prozac didn't work is like kind of insightful and she's kind of trolling
Barbara Walters and like daring Barbara Walters to go in deeper and ask a real question yeah this is
what I mean by like she's so smart and it's clear that she understands in layers what exactly is
happening but it expresses itself in like these little phrases and you're like Courtney let's unpack
that like just I want to know more yeah and I think that she has had enough bad experiences with
journalists that she yeah that's the thing doesn't trust them yeah there's an interview she does with
Howard Stern in 98 that feels very sincere and I think that maybe Howard Stern does a good job of
getting that out of people but I think she just feels like here's a person who's not trying to
throw me under the bus who just like wants to talk to me and even though he makes like dumb
you know boob jokes the whole time it's like he actually is asking her good questions and they
like she seems to be acting herself she she is really intelligent it doesn't have a lot to say
and has had quite an extraordinary life seriously and yet no one seems to really know about it
well that's the thing from like abandoned child to like 16 year old stripper to aspiring 80s actress
to rock star to lingering celebrity it's like she's had like six different lives and someone
in the last few years hadn't been writing a a bio she sold a biography like someone was writing
a biography about her and it was supposed to come out because she was on several talk shows
talking about it and then she pulled it she got into some I think there was some fight that she
got into with a writer over some of the content or something and and pulled it but it's so hard to
pin down who she is because she for someone who seems to be telling you everything and and you
know forcefully having her period all over people she's she's very maybe private yeah I think having
a sort of an intense public persona often is a way of maintaining privacy totally and also I
think there's a lot of people that hide behind the sort of the overshare yeah that's like a
personality type of like deflecting through over intimacy is actually a way of like not letting
people in because you're sort of pushing people away by telling them too much yeah yeah and at the
risk of sounding really like basic and simplistic like she just she had a fucked up childhood her
parents divorced her dad clearly is a terrible person who tried to like call her a murderer like
you know without ever even knowing her yeah I can understand if she doesn't trust adults yes I
think there's something very Gen X about thinking the whole world is adults and like you need to
protect yourself right I mean like I I'm gonna be 40 years old this year and I still like think
of myself as like a 15 year old kid and the rest of the people are adults me too like who don't get
me you know who don't trust me or like and I don't trust that you know I mean it's such a Gen X thing
yeah I knew you were gonna bring it back though Candice I knew that I knew you'd take us back
back to Gen X yeah I also I mean another thing with Courtney Love is also like she has the right
to be fucking weird yes right it's like she's a rock star her husband killed himself she's been
accused of insane conspiracy theories you can be unlikable and not a murderer yeah exactly and like
if anybody is allowed to be weird in public it's Courtney Love and like she's not like a person I
necessarily want to have at my like dinner party or whatever but like I have no interest in like
throwing anything more onto her than she's already had no just the idea that people are going to end
up in public while they're working through some really difficult stuff is inevitable and we as the
public can work on relating to that in meaningful ways yeah we don't have to necessarily like
celebrate those people we don't have to denigrate them either what there's a space in the middle I
mean what do we want to call that it's like a media demilitarized zone like a weird like truth
space of just like we're just gonna let them do their thing it's fine yes yes I just keep doing
back to the fact that these are just like two people who who loved each other and now this one
person has to live the rest of her life with the world thinking that she killed her husband right
right when it's so obvious that it was a suicide right and that she gets put into the box of villain
like because she was there and maybe because she couldn't save him and do the impossible you know
the thing that one person can't do for another person and that I don't know like maybe to me the
lesson is that like we shouldn't take out our grievances on how relationships work on their
survivors ooh Sarah you found it thank you that's the zone that's the zone that's it it's the we
shouldn't blame the way relationships work on their survivors autonomous zone boom yes so thank you
for coming on Candice thank you guys this was awesome so follow Candice on the internets and
pre-order her book we'll leave a link in the description and next time somebody grabs your leg
have your period on them period all over them just you know it just shoots some kind of a liquid
that's no that's no I think that's bad advice don't do that