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All the Mae Brussel stuff is there because its seemed a simple (Ha!) way to explain to the audience
“Why is Paul going there?” Squeaky asking for the LSD rather than you bringing it was, again, an
easy and short way to explain to the audience why LSD was involved.
There’s a lot of my personal experience in the film. | *did* have a panic attack while on LSD and
passed out hugging a toilet. (I didn’t however go to a desert/beach and talk to futuristic Squeaky
Fromme, though | was in the desert when it happened.) | once had a very contentious creative
friendship with one of my best friends who is a friend no longer. That seemed to mirror some of
your relationship with Lenny Bruce. | also felt like your relationship with Lenny had so much to do
with your evolution as a writer, satirist, and comedian that it seemed proper to put that in there. |
wrestled a *long* time over even mentioning your daughter because it seemed more of a
personal invasion than you had bargained for. However, based on your memoir, it was obvious
how important that relationship and aspect of your life was to you.
The smooching with Squeaky isn’t meant to be any kind of bawdy Enquirer scandal. It’s tied to the
idea that by the end of the movie this “Paul” isn’t scared of her. The kiss is mentioned as being
symbolic of acceptance and despite all their philosophical differences, “Paul” and Squeaky in the
film find a way to “accept” each other. “We've got a find a way to love the people we hate.”
is the statement | always say at talkbacks when people ask me what the ending of the movie
means.
The movie was conceived and made as a response to my own feelings of doubt about myself, and
my growing social irrevelavance as | age. (I turned 40 while making it.) It’s about coming to terms
with the mistakes I’ve made and the hubris that caused them.
It’s also about resistance fatigue. It asks (in a roundabout way), “What happens if the good guys
*do* lose the war?" | saw similarities between how the protest wing of the counterculture may
have felt in the wake of RFK, the Weathermen and the SLA, and having the whole movement for
something bigger start to go sour as it mainstreamed. The similarities between Nixon and Trump
are so obvious, | feel like | don’t even need to mention them. | saw similarities in your spiritual
journey to mine. “Paul Krassner” in my script was in some ways a vessel to project all my own
hang-ups onto. | suppose that’s an unfair burden to put on you.
| don’t know if this all sounds like excuse-making, but it’s my way of saying that | certainly don’t
want to “break a legacy.” | think the work you did with "The Realist” is important and paved the
way for the Onion, The Daily Show, and society’s general acceptance of raw, cutting satire in the
world of politics and journalism. The last thing | would ever want to do is have that be tainted.
Film has that power of course. The medium by it’s nature hypnotizes, and has a funny way of
clouding up the truth. Fiction becomes history and vice versa.
More than anything, | don’t want you to feel taken advantage of or disrespected.
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