Word.
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Can't beat Kerouac.
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Think different...
Link to video -
Think different...
Link to video -
Can't beat Kerouac.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in Word.:
Can't beat Kerouac.
On The Road was a huge influence on me. Also Manchild In The Promised Land and Steal This Book.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in Word.:
Can't beat Kerouac.
On The Road was a huge influence on me. Also Manchild In The Promised Land and Steal This Book.
@Aqua-Letifer said in Word.:
Can't beat Kerouac.
On The Road was a huge influence on me.
I can see that.
Fits right in there in terms of the time, too, I guess.
I'm a much bigger Hunter S. Thompson fan, if we're talking that time period. I always felt like he was being square with you that much of the time he was just dicking around. Sure his hyperbole always had a point to it, and he got serious often enough, but you were always in on the joke.
Kerouac, on the other hand, always sounded like it was his mission to SAVE you. I found him annoying in much the same way that I find Springsteen annoying. (Speculation broadens here, but it's my theory that Salvador Dali wasn't such a nut because he was an eccentric creative—I think he was a genius draftsman who hated the fact that he wasn't a genius at something he thought was cooler, and his persona was an overcompensation. Kerouac's tone always struck me as a little suspicious in a similar way.)
Still like Kerouac, though.
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Can't beat Kerouac.
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"As far as I'm concerned, it's a damned shame that a field as potentially dynamic and vital as journalism should be overrun with dullards, bums, and hacks, hag-ridden with myopia, apathy, and complacence, and generally stuck in a bog of stagnant mediocrity."
-- Hunter S. Thompson