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United States News Title: P.J. O’Rourke was America’s greatest satirist and coolest conservative: P.J. O'Rourke dead at 74 P.J. ORourke, who has died at the age of 74, once hosted a small New Years party at his apartment in Washington. The year was 1990. Hed just returned from Germany, where he had covered the fall of the Berlin Wall. I expressed my sorrow that I hadnt been there to see it. He went into his bedroom and returned with a small tin of mints. Hed emptied it and hed put a shard of the wall hed pickaxed himself with his own hands inside it. Happy New Year, he said. That was P.J. Though he and I liked each other, we werent intimates. And yet he gave me something of inestimable value just because he could. P.J. ORourke was maybe the nicest person Ive ever known, which is an interesting thing to say about a man who made his name and his reputation as a take-no-prisoners cynical wit and observer of political foibles. His passing after a short illness is devastating, not only because it robs us of his gimlet eye but because it reduces the store of kindness in the world, which is more precious than rubies. It isnt an exaggeration to say that P.J. was, for a long time, the only cool conservative writer in America. His pieces for Rolling Stone and Harpers and other mainstream outlets gamely featured his horrified takes on elite cluelessness and liberal-Puritan malfeasance against ordinary American playful fun. Young right-wingers had never seen his like. Neither had young left-wingers or anybody else, for that matter. He skewered clueless old leftists taking a cruise on the Volga River to celebrate the glories of Soviet Russia in a Harpers essay that served as the centerpiece of an essay collection called Holidays in Hell. The book made him a star. Before that, he had been a key staff member of National Lampoon in its 1970s heyday, when it was the greatest comedy magazine this country had ever seen. Matty Simmons, the Lampoons publisher, called him the magazines cohesive force and described him as tough and dedicated and talented. Other staffers hated him. Given how impossible he was to hate, Id guess these pseudo-counterculturalists sussed out his politics early on and were scornful of his BA from Miami University of Ohio. P.J. emailed me this about Matty Simmons, whom I knew, upon Mattys passing in 2020: He gave me a shot at the Lampoon when everybody else was being Harvarder-than-thou. Harvarder-than-thou a perfect P.J.ism. Born and bred in Toledo, Ohio, P.J. was a champion of the great American middle. Indeed, his final book, from 2020, was titled A Cry from the Far Middle: Dispatches from a Divided Land. He loved this country and reveled in it even in its fatuous mediocrity. His ability to satirize affectionately was at its most triumphant in the two wildly successful projects he conceived and edited in the 1970s. National Lampoons High School Yearbook and National Lampoons Sunday Newspaper the two greatest long-form works of parody ever produced in this country would revolutionize American publishing, as humorous books that followed their model would dominate the high-end paperback world for the next decade. Poster Comment: Greg Gutfeld commemorates the conservative political satirist and journalist, who died Tuesday at 74. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 1.
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P.J. ORourke on covering the '88 presidential campaign and 2 yrs of researching his first book: "I'm not sure I learned anything except that giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys."
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