The Kentucky Derby Is Decadent and Depraved
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"The Kentucky Derby Is Decadent and Depraved" is an article by Hunter S. Thompson that first appeared in a June 1970 issue of Scanlan's Monthly magazine. Though not known at the time, the article marked the first appearance of gonzo journalism, the style that Thompson came to epitomize through the 1970s.
Accompanied by Ralph Steadman's sketches (the first of many collaborations between Thompson and Steadman) the genesis of the article has been described by Thompson as akin to "falling down an elevator shaft and landing in a pool of mermaids"[citation needed]. Faced with a deadline and without any coherent story for his editors, Thompson began tearing pages from his notebook, numbering them, and sending them to the magazine. The resulting story, and the manic, first-person subjectivity that characterized it, were the beginnings of the Gonzo style.
The article's focus is less on the actual race itself - indeed Thompson and Steadman could not actually see the race from their standpoint - and more on the celebration and depravity that surrounds the event. Thompson provides up-close views of life in the Derby infield as well as the grandstand, and a running commentary on the drunkenness and lewdness of the crowd.
The article was not widely read at the time, but Thompson did garner attention from other journalists for its unusual style. In 1970, Bill Cardoso (editor of The Boston Globe Sunday Magazine), wrote Thompson praising the "Kentucky Derby" piece in Scanlan's Monthly as a breakthrough: "This is it, this is pure Gonzo. If this is a start, keep rolling." It is considered the first use of the word Gonzo to describe Thompson's work. Cardoso had first met Thompson on a bus full of journalists covering the 1968 New Hampshire Primary. Thompson took to the word right away, and according to illustrator Ralph Steadman said "Okay, that's what I do. Gonzo."[1]
Shortly after Thompson's suicide in 2005, Steadman recalled their meeting at the Kentucky Derby to the British newspaper The Independent. In the article Steadman remembered his first impression of Thompson that day:
"I had turned around and two fierce eyes, firmly socketed inside a bullet-shaped head, were staring at a strange growth I was nurturing on the end of my chin. 'Holy shit!' he (Thompson) exclaimed. 'They said I was looking for a matted-haired geek with string warts and I guess I've found him.' "
Steadman continues: "This man had an impressive head chiselled from one piece of bone, and the top part was covered down to his eyes by a floppy-brimmed sun hat. His top half was draped in a loose-fitting hunting jacket of multi-coloured patchwork. He wore seersucker blue pants, and the whole torso was pivoted on a pair of huge white plimsolls with a fine red trim around the bulkheads. Damn near 6-foot-6 of solid bone and meat holding a beaten-up leather bag across his knee and a loaded cigarette holder between the arthritic fingers of his other hand."
The article was later reprinted in The Great Shark Hunt (1979), a book collecting several of Thompson's earlier works.
[edit] External links
- "The Kentucky Derby Is Decadent and Depraved", copy of original article