gonzo journalism

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gonzo journalism, a style of reporting that places the reporter at the centre of the story in a highly personal and participatory way. The gonzo journalist relays facts in a subjective manner and typically employs satire, hyperbole, scathing critique, and shocking descriptions as part of the story. The creation of gonzo journalism is credited to American writer Hunter S. Thompson, who first introduced this subjective style in an article for Scanlan’s Monthly magazine in 1970.

Origins

Thompson first achieved notoriety in the mid-1960s after infiltrating the Hells Angels motorcycle club and recounting his experience in the article “The Motorcycle Gangs: Losers and Outsiders” for The Nation magazine. In 1970 Thompson introduced gonzo journalism to the world with the article “The Kentucky Derby Is Decadent and Depraved,” which was published in the short-lived counterculture magazine Scanlan’s Monthly. Rather than report on the horse race or its winners, Thompson focused on the debauched drinking of the Derby’s high-society attendees and his misadventures with British illustrator Ralph Steadman, whose grotesque caricatures captured the raucousness of the event. After its publication, the article was described as “pure Gonzo journalism” by Bill Cardoso, an editor at The Boston Globe. Thompson embraced the term, and “gonzo journalism” became his trademark style, which he employed in his most famous work, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream (book 1971; film 1998).

In 1973 Thompson published his chronicle of the 1972 presidential campaigns of George McGovern and Richard Nixon in Fear and Loathing: On the Campaign Trail ’72. Thompson made no secret of his support for McGovern, going so far as to liken Nixon to a werewolf. His irreverent approach to facts and narrative was described by McGovern’s strategist Frank Mankiewicz as “the most accurate and least factual account of that campaign.”

Gonzo journalism since Thompson

Though gonzo journalism became synonymous with Thompson, who died in 2005, the style is evident in subsequent generations’ reporting on various topics, from rock music to war to feminism. In the 1970s and early 1980s, American music journalist Lester Bangs wrote confrontational criticism for underground and counterculture publications, including the American music magazine Creem. His 1979 article for The Village Voice on racism in the punk rock and new wave music scenes, “The White Noise Supremacists,” was searingly self-critical of the kind of offensive and racist verbal barbs that had been part of Bangs’ earlier style.

In the early 21st century, the gonzo influence continued in work by Generation X and millennial journalists who eschewed objectivity. In 2010 “The Runaway General,” a profile of U.S. Army Gen. Stanley McChrystal written by American journalist Michael Hastings for Rolling Stone, resulted in McChrystal being fired due to the profile’s inclusion of dialogue between the general and his soldiers containing disparaging, derisive remarks about top officials in U.S. Pres. Barack Obama’s administration. Hastings—who once declared that he did not believe in objectivity in reporting—in 2012 published The Operators: The Wild and Terrifying Inside Story of America’s War in Afghanistan, which recounted his experience covering the Afghanistan War, told from his own iconoclastic, outsider’s point of view. The gonzo style was also adopted outside the United States, as seen in the writing of British journalist Laurie Penny, who combined a hyperbolic style with outspoken left-wing views in articles and books on feminism, gender, and class politics.

René Ostberg