Fear And Loathing In Aspen !exclusive!
A deeper look at for Rolling Stone
By 1969, Aspen was undergoing a rapid transformation. The quiet mining town turned ski resort was attracting massive corporate investments. Wealthy developers were buying up land, raising property values, and threatening the local ecosystem. fear and loathing in aspen
The saddest sight in Aspen is not the empty bottle of Château Margaux left on a park bench. It is the ghost of the Gonzo past. You can almost see him, a fat, sweating ghost in a Hawaiian shirt, lurking at the edge of the Jerome Bar. He is watching the young heirs and heiresses snort perfect, pharmaceutical-grade lines off their Breitling watches. They are performing a hollow pantomime of rebellion, mistaking a high credit limit for high spirit. They are the "Wave" generation—not the Third Wave of utopian anarchy, but the final, pathetic wave of a late-capitalist society cresting over a bowl of overpriced chili. A deeper look at for Rolling Stone By
This is where the loathing begins, a slow, hot bile rising in the throat. It is the loathing of the spectator at the world’s most expensive funeral. Because this place, this beautiful, high-altitude morgue, was once the high-water mark of the counterculture. In the late 60s and early 70s, Aspen was a strange, beautiful zoo. It was a place where Hunter Thompson ran for sheriff on the Freak Power ticket, promising to tear up the streets and turn them into grassy bike paths, to ban cars, and to decriminalize drugs. It was a place where a man could be judged not by the size of his trust fund, but by the quality of his cocaine and the ferocity of his commitment to the madness. The saddest sight in Aspen is not the