For The Late
Mad- Hatter Journalist Benny Sachem
From The
Pen Of Frank Jackman
There was a time when I would read everything that the mad-
hatter journalist Benny Sachem wrote just like I did with the late "Doctor
Gonzo," Hunter S. Thompson. Benny’s passing represents the end of an era. Not
because I agreed with his (or their) political perspectives, or his cultural
critiques but because, as a guy I respect, Kevin Callahan, a columnist for The Portland Gazette, pointed out one
time he represented that little space in the bourgeois press reserved for those
who could thumb their noses at the bosses, and walk away still standing.
Thompson as everybody knows, everybody from the back pages of the 1960s and
1970s knows, gored more oxen that one would think possible. But Benny did too.
Benny, like Thompson, went after, viciously went after which
was the only possible way to do the thing, and do it right, one Richard Milhous
Nixon. Yah, the guy who lost to Jack Kennedy in 1960, went away bleeding over
everybody who would stand for it and spilled that same blood on everything he
could get his grabby little hands around and came roaring back as the second
coming of Count Dracula. In short as a President of the United States and
common criminal who will forever replace guys like James Buchanan and Warren
Harding as the bad boy of the White House. But see here was the beauty of a guy
like Sachem, and Thompson too, he went after the thug Nixon when he was riding
high during his first term back in the late 1960s when he was like some Madonna
figure and most journalists were finding ways to take a dive for the duration
and bury their heads in the sand and as well when he was almost sanctified in
1972 when he beat a bush league politician like George McGovern like a gong. Sachem
was merciless in dragging Nixon down in the pits, into the pits of what a
famous politician, one of the Kennedy boys, maybe Bobby of blessed memory I
think, called Nixon the “dark side “of the American experiment. And he never
let up beating Nixon like a gong while he down in the gutter with the common
crooks, dope dealers, and hookers. Benny treated him rightly as just another
night court denizen.
That wasn’t all though like Thompson Benny took on even
bigger game in the American cultural night. Sacred mobbed up Las Vegas and its
vengeful seeking of the American disposable dollar, the big hatted, bourbon-soaked
untouchable Kentucky Derby from Thompson’s home state, and, Christ, this took
real cojones, dismissing the football Super Bowl as so much bad hubris. And
Benny Sachem, maybe a little less famously than Thompson always did the same
thing on his various beats, mostly at the Kansas
City Herald Tribune. Benny, from the same no holds barred school of
journalism as Thompson, the notorious Gonzo school where a reporter actually
reported stuff he thought about as well as the just the facts jack, not only took
on old punching bag Nixon but he also skewered guys like Hubert Humphrey and
that bush league George McGovern whom Thompson gave a pass to. See Benny,
unlike Thompson, had no ill-defined political agenda so he didn’t have to give
passes to those he was trying to influence, or in order to get some cozy one-on-
one interview. One can hardly forget the time when Benny and the usually
unflappable McGovern almost went mano y mano on national television when Benny
asked about his hidden young mistress back in Fargo, or one of those dank Dakota
places. That was pure Benny, go for the jugular, and take no prisoners
Benny was even better as being the thorn in side of lesser
politicians, the guys who wanted to make it to the top but didn’t, didn’t in
more than one case because of some Benny expose. Like that time that Muskie,
the guy from Maine who ran as Humphrey’s running mate in 1968 was riding high
before Benny got to his doctor who was issuing him morphine prescriptions.
Jesus, a stone-cold junkie as President. Thanks Benny on that one. Or like the time he
stopped Jerry Brown, yah, the California guy who has been running for some
office since Hector was a pup, in his tracks when he exposed the Mexican cartel
cocaine connection that was funding his presidential bids back in the 1980s.
And who was caught sampling the merchandise as well, right in public, claiming
it was just a snuff box like it was about 1750 or something. Kudos Benny.
But Benny was best known for his sports columns, for his
disassembling of the disassemblers who people that industry, including some of
his fellow sports- writers. Who can forget that expose of the famed football writer, Grantland Stevens,
who it turned out was stealing his copy straight from the publicity department
of the Chicago Bears and claiming it was his stone-cold own work. Or the time
he dismissed the New York Yankees, a team he loved from childhood having grown
up in the shadow of the stadium in the Bronx, as nothing but candy asses and
pretty boys, overpaid as well. He even out bad hubris-ed [sic] Thompson on the
Super Bowl calling it a worse show than some low rent drag queen review in the
Village. There were too many individual player stories that he wrote to mention
here but as a measure of his power by the end of his career he was persona non grata in most American
sports locker rooms, including that of the saintly PGA. That is to his credit.
And of course, as well, you had to read Benny for his love
of language, language that curled around an idea. Not some academic-trained use
this word here and that word there and please, not too many syllables because
someone might either not understand the word or become offended by use of the
reference. He took more heat than one could shake a stick at for calling George
Stevens, the baseball owner, a troglodyte, which of course he was (and Benny
tracing his habits proved that to be true but everybody thought it was some off-the-wall
sexual reference). One could go on and on.
Of course some of his characterizations would not be politically
correct these days, and probably rightly so, as when he called one professional
lady golfer a daughter of Sappho and another a daughter of Lesbos, or some pleasing
and pleasant black ball player an Uncle Tom, or ditto some Latino player Tio
Taco. Worse was when he would call about every guy not hunkered down with
weight and muscle “light on his feet,” or a hermaphrodite. Fortunately most people
who read his stuff were clueless on his references but in those days you could
say that stuff an and not get called on the carpet for it since nobody wanted to
have to prove they were, or were not, what he characterized them as. Not in court
anyway.
Those mad-hatter days are gone in the 24/7/365 minute news flash
world. A world I miss, and am not afraid to say so. Adieu Benny, warts and all.
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