When Thompson was a child, he loved sports and sports, and joined the Louisville Castlewood Athletic Club in high school. He performed well in baseball, but he never joined the high school. . Thompson went through elementary school, middle school, then Atherton High School, and transferred to Louisville High School for Boys.
After his father's death in 1952, he was accepted as a member of the Assinam Literary Society. Members generally came from Louisville's wealthy upper-class families, including Porter Bibb, who later became the first singer of the Rolling Stones. publisher. As a member of Arsenal, Thompson often wrote articles and helped edit the club's yearbook, but the group revoked Thompson's membership in 1955 due to violations of law and discipline. He was convicted of robbery and sentenced to 60 days in the Jefferson County Jail in Kentucky. He was released after 30 days and joined the U.S. Air Force a week later. Thompson began his basic training at Lackland Air Force Base in San Antonio, Texas, and later transferred to Descott Air Force Base in Illinois where he studied electronics.
In 1956, he transferred to Pensacola, Florida, near Eglin Air Force Base, where he served in the information department and became the sports editor of the base's newspaper. In this position, he covered a wide range of areas including the Eglin Eagles, the base football team, which also included future stars such as majors Max McGee and Bratkowski.
In 1957, he also wrote a series of sports stories for a local newspaper in Fort Walton Beach, Florida. Thompson retired as a pilot first class in 1958. His commander spoke highly of him, saying: "In short, this pilot is very talented and will not be misled by rigid policies." "His rebellious and superior attitude sometimes inspired other pilots," Colonel William Evans wrote to Eglin's personnel office, chief executive of information services.
Gang's reporting style "was based on Ford's Kerner's idea that the best novels are far more truthful than any form of news" clearly opposes the principles of objectivity, neutrality and truth in traditional news reporting concepts and believes that there can be no truly "objective" reporting. For a reporter, he should try his best to write his own personal experience into the news, and strive to carry out pioneering thinking and practice in the selection of reporting topics and the reconstruction of the relationship between subject and object. Thompson said that the most important thing is a good reporter. The left reporter "requires the talent of a great reporter, the vision of a painter and photographer, and the versatility of an actor"
For a generation of American students, it was Hunter S. Thompson who made journalism a reality. It's a dangerous and weird profession. The original journalists were unsophisticated, gentle white boys wearing short-sleeved shirts and bow ties. The guy who all wore sunglasses. It's all thanks to him -- or blame -- that many aspiring journalists show up again and again at their local town hall in tracksuits, cheap sunglasses and interview pads. For him.
And Thompson's "Heisenberg's Law": The presence of the observer not only changes the course of the event, but its presence is often more important than the event itself, and it is also important to all bloggers today. The movie "Casino" starring Johnny Depp is adapted from a report of the same name written by Thompson in 1971 under the guise of sports reporter "Raoul Duke", describing his relationship with his lawyer friend- -Dr. Gonzo went to Las Vegas to report on the desert motorcycle race, but under the influence of drugs and psychedelics, he hysterically searched for the experience of the American dream. After Thompson's death, many Western media The etymology of gonzo journalism is attributed to the Samoan lawyer Dr. gonzo in "Gonzo", but Christine Othitis, the founder of gonzo, wrote in her article "The Origin of Gangzo Journalism" and Ideas" said that gonzo came from a letter from Thompson's friend Bill Cardoso, which is a misspelling of the Canadian French word gonzeaux. After "La Casino Hate" was published in "Rolling Stone" magazine in 1971, it attracted countless attention. There are many leftist imitators, but none of them can be as consistent as Thompson. The various farcical styles of his articles, his political attitude and fierce life practice are combined into one.
From sports. For decades, Thompson has penetrated into the heart of American culture and grasped the pulse of society. Not only was he not neutral, he was also full of anger. Like an avenging angel, he used bomb-like language to expose the ugly aspects of American society and politics. The dark side. In his "Fear and Loathing" series he wrote that "Nixon represented the dark, corrupt, and hopelessly violent side of America." In "Pig of the Century," you can read: "The Sins of Bush Seriously, he can make even Nixon look innocent; Clinton is a pig, but he is our pig. "Perhaps his greatest strength was honesty. After Thompson's suicide, Telles told the Associated Press that Thompson was not immune to moral deviance from time to time. "In this era of political correctness, he was never politically correct.
"Ostis said in the article that there is some wisdom in Thompson's distortions, and truth can be seen in lies. However, if someone takes everything he writes seriously, they will miss the left-leaning journalism The point is that it is not anti-government, but a kind of anti-journalism.
Although Thompson's humorous talents such as "cursing" and "spicy" are unparalleled in the history of American literature, it really makes people think. He ranks among humorous masters like Mark Twain because the sophistication and elegance of his writing complement the true wisdom expressed behind it. Some people call him the conscience of the United States and the true American spirit.
He wrote an article titled "Fear and Loathing in the United States" twenty-four hours after the September 11 tragedy in the United States. In addition to truly capturing the grief of the American people and their concerns for human peace, he also accurately captured Whether he is writing a column for the rock music magazine "Rolling Stone" or in recent years for the sports magazine ESPN, his articles are always very readable. "The language of "The Book of Revelation" is doubly appreciated, which can also be used to describe his own language style. He said that he most likes to recite and quote the sentences in "Revelation", not because of any religious beliefs, but because of its language. Magic, because "it was guided by a purity that bordered on madness, and gradually became music."
Although Thompson felt that the title "writer" suited him better than "journalist", his legacy is still there. The work is not a literary work like weaving fairy tales in an ivory tower, but he uses his own unique vision to grasp the vivid and real details of a certain side of society, and gives them a logical and subjective backbone of thinking, and grows them. A lush text full of poetic rhythm, he never shied away from using strong words to express his love and hate. It is known that Thompson's pursuit of writing has always been serious and respectful, and compared with writing, Thompson's personal life has always been serious. It's more like an actor's indulgence in causing trouble, deliberately setting off and highlighting his writing career.