Post by thunkerdrone on Oct 14, 2015 11:58:01 GMT -5
The '27 Club' rocker deaths were faked
All the 1960s `27 Club` rocker deaths were faked by the same psychological operations team which Hank Harrison and transgendered lesbian Col. Michael Aquino worked with during the 1960s. (and far more related-era musician deaths were faked than just the 27 year olds, namely Cass Elliott , Keith Moon, John Lennon )
The `hippie' archetype of the 1960s/1970s was created by military intel to put the absolute worst possible face on anyone who opposed the corporate military agenda, and especially to discredit legitimate political oppostion to the Vietnam War. Whether rejecting fundamental christian conformity or strict dress codes or rejecting forced military conscription, the free thinker was made to look guilty, by association, with the intentionally degenerate and hapless hippie archetype created for him by Big Brother (aka Mi6/NSA/CIA).
The `murder and mayhem hippie` theme of the NSA's Operation Chaos was created to distract,domestically, from the REAL body count and discord stemming from the Vietnam War. Operation Chaos involved numerous faked events such at the Manson hoax murders, faked, the stabbing at Altamont Free Concert festival, faked, the deaths of `degenerate hippie peace movement rockers`, faked. All done to create the illusion that the world outside the Vietnam war theater was just as violent and chaotic and , importantly , as morally bereft and insane as the war itself. So we had supposed `peace and love guru` Charles Manson suddenly, purportedly commanding an army of killers, and we had supposed `peace and love gurus` the Beatles, Mama Cass, Joplin etc. suddenly, purportedly, leading armies of protesters into battle and into mind-destroying drug use, social chaos, and into faked incidents like the obviously faked stabbing at Altamont Free Festival and the likely faked shooting of war protesters at Kent State.
In reaction to these false flags, the moral outrage of 'Christian America' was rising against `freedom of thought`movements nationwide. The same people even had Jefferson Airplane's Grace Slick sounding like an outraged parent in her song 'White Rabbit' ("and she`s just had some kind of mushroom!") of one of the LSD poisoned and drugged out kids that the Merry Pranksters had targeted with their concocted LSD subculture.
And then in 1967 we had all the heart-throbs and idols (27 Club) of the bogus Monterey San Francisco flower power movement suddenly start dropping like flies due to purported 'moral degeneracy' and drug addiction, further outraging respectable , Christian , 'die for god and country' mainstream America.
So 1967-1969 era Sally Soccer Grizzly is made to feel, courtesy of our Mi6/ NSA propaganda machine, that she has two choices when deciding the future of soon-to-be-drafted son.
1. The violence and death of war
2. The violence and death of 'peace' (drug overdoses, freakouts/LSD-induced schizophrenia,cults,random violence, godless anarchy,criminality,decadent promiscuity etc.)
Do the math on which she would choose, with USAF pilots becoming glorious astronauts on TV at the same time that Charles Manson is on TV and Riders on the Storm is playing on the radio (about a Manson-esque hippie serial killer no less). In the official video for Riders on the STorm, none other than the son of Pentagon war planner and Rr. Admiral George Scott Morrison , Jim Morrison, plays the role of a hitch-hiking hippie who murders the man who gives him a ride, and then steals his car. see the video here:
Mi6 psy-op artist Courtney Love with Amy Winehouse
Mi6 operative Hank Harrison and David Geffen knew every single one of these 27 club rockers right up to Amy Winehouse , who recently died at 27, and Amy Winehouse was hanging around with Harrison and his daughter Courtney Love in Britain right before she died. Hank Harrison`s Mi6 circle were huge figures behind Operation Chaos, and Hank Harrison helped organize all three of the biggest outdoor drug festivals of the time, namely Monterey Pop Festival, Altamont Free Concert, and Woodstock. (planned LSD drugging of the free punch made available to the teens there etc.)
The purportedly dead rockers of the time Brian Jones, Jimi Hendrix, Janis Joplin, and Cass Elliot all played Monterey Pop Festival together in 1967 and all knew Hank Harrison as one of the main organizers of Monterey Pop Festival. Monterey Pop Festival was even staged on a military base, the exercise grounds of Presidio Monterey, the western wing of Fort Ord. Hank Harrison managed the band `The Grateful Dead`and band leader Gerry Garcia was one of the Spanish-Portuguese speaking operatives who helped relocate 'dead' narcs and agents/spies regularly under the Witness Protection Program (relocated to Argentina and Brazil). The thin-on-talent band itself was little more than a traveling front for intel ops, primarily drug distribution and witness relocation. Hence the name 'The Grateful Dead'.
The 27 Club rockers (and of course the Mi6 'British invasion' bands the Who, the Stones . the Beatles) were installed as spies/psy-ops agents atop the 1960s 'peace movement' , and after serving their purpose some of their deaths were faked to create a body count , a pall of death and decay around the 'peace , love, and freedom' movement.
Freedom was intentionally associated with degeneracy, drugs, and self destructiveness by Operation Chaos and the many psy-ops pulled. Hank Harrison and the same team faked the death of John Lennons' close friend Keith Moon, and two years later faked the death of John Lennon. Hank Harrison worked with Keith Moon at Monterey Pop Festival (Moon was drummer for another Mi6 'British Invasion' band The Who when they played the same 1967 Monterey Pop Festival 1967) and Hank Harrison knew John Lennon. Lennon signed with Hank Harrison's close friend David Geffens' record label just before his (John Lennons) staged and faked murder. Geffen made out well on insurance policies and royalties, as did Lennon himself of course.
see this convincingly researched link on John Lennons faked death and his surprising new persona as Mark Staycer:
mileswmathis.com/lennon.pdf
Kurt Cobain was installed as spy/psy-ops artist atop the anti-Gulf War movement of his time, and his death was faked by the same Hank Harrison/David Geffen team who had faked the deaths of the original '27 Club' rockers of the 1960s, faked the death of Sharon Tate, and later faked the deaths of Marc Bolan, Keith Moon and John Lennon.
Cobain was married to Hank Harrison's daughter Courtney Love and when his band Nirvana fell starkly out of favor and last record flopped, his death was faked and Cobain was relocated. All of the Nirvana royalties were legally given over to Cobain before his death was faked. In preparation, Courtney Love is known to have staged fake heroin-related incidents[/a] andand likely fake arrests etc. She also staged a faux feud with her good friend Axl Rose (whom she herself got signed to her father's closely connected record label Geffen Records), in which Axl Rose publicly called Cobain and Love junkies.
As if two bands on the same record label would be publicly bickering at each other for any reason other than to generate publicity for themselves.
see 'Courtney plants a story in the Associated Press today that she overdosed. She claimed the reason she did this was to scare Kurt and get his attention so he'd try to contact her.
and Courtney returned to the Peninsula Hotel and promptly O.D'ed. From her hotel room, a call was made to either 911 or the front desk of the hotel, claiming allergic reaction to a prescribed drug. She was rushed to the hospital and later released, at which point she was immediatly arrested for possession of a controlled substance, drug paraphernalia, and stolen property. She was released on $10,000 bail.
there is a mountain of evidence that Cobain was not even a junkie
QUOTE www.brendanhunt.com/uploads/6/3/4/2/6342789/kurt_cobain_-_murdered_first_edition_pdf.pdf
Referring to the days prior to Kurt Cobain's death, Courtney later told the media,
"Everybody knew he was going to die!" (1, pg.18) She wanted people to believe Kurt had
an out-of-control drug dependency during the last days of his life. (2) Of all the phony
stories concocted and spread by Courtney Love, this particular lie blinded the eyes of
the authorities, the media, and most of the public. It helped make Courtney Love a very
rich
widow. Let’s see what Cobain, and those close to him, had to say about these so-called
“suicidal tendencies” during the days, weeks and months leading up to his untimely
death. (1, pg.68)
"I’ve been asked repeatedly if Cobain was on drugs while I was there [during
sessions for the In Utero album]. And I’ve been around people who use dope a lot, and
on the one hand I know how they behave and on the other I know how deceptive they
can be. And my best estimate was that, no, he wasn’t, he was being very productive.
That was a period of his life where he was very focused. He was focused on making this
record and he didn’t want to let the other guys down. He was committed to the task. He
was as sober — and I use that adjective to mean serious — as anybody I’ve ever
worked with in the studio.” [27]
"If Cobain was using heroin while he was around me, he hid it well. In Seattle last
summer (of 1993) he was alert and happy..." (Gavin Edwards, June 1994 edition of
Details magazine).
"After trying everything for his stomach from pills to a vegetarian diet to a
chanting regime, Cobain is ecstatic to have found a doctor who’s prescribing him an
experimental gastrointestinal medicine that works. He says he doesn’t want to give the
name because the medicine hasn’t actually been approved by the FDA, but it’s reduced
his stomach episodes almost as effectively as heroin. 'But now if I take heroin it makes
me vomit right away, so that doesn’t do any good'." (Details, November 1993. This
interview dates to July 1993.)
“I never went out of my way to say anything about my drug use. I didn’t want
some 15-year-old kid who likes our band to think it’s cool to do heroin. I think people who
glamorize drugs are f*cking not very nice people and if there’s a hell, they’ll go there”.
(Cobain, Melody Maker’s Aug 28 1993 edition).
“I’m not in anyway afraid of death...I’m afraid of dying now, I don’t want to leave
behind my wife and child, so I don’t do things that would jeopardise my life. I try to do as
little things as I can to jeopardise it. I don’t want to die”. (Cobain, The Face, Sept 1993
edition)
"He [Cobain] was very open, very honest and seemingly very happy. He also
seemed clean. I know it seems strange in the light of Cobain’s Rome overdose and I even
asked photographer Mark Leialoha if he thought the same. He agreed that Cobain seemed
happier and cleaner than we’d seen him or known him to be." said Steffan Chirazi,
commenting on his meeting with Cobain at the Omni Arena, Atlanta, November 1993
(Kerrang’s April 23 1994 edition). “Cobain did not seem even mildly depressed, let alone
suicidal...The whole evening in Atlanta turned out to be one of the best nights of the
year; a great show, a relaxed post-gig atmosphere, no bullnuts, just a good vibe.”
Steffan Chirazi interviewed Cobain in November 1993, resulting in an article
published in Kerrang’s December 11 1993 edition. Chirazi reported that at Nirvana’s
November 1993 gig at the Omni Arena in Atlanta he met Cobain backstage: 'Frances Bean
is wandering the premises with a beaming smile for everyone. Soon Cobain will lovingly,
patiently, feed her some macaroni cheese dinner for a late night snack, before cuddling
her and talking quietly in her ear...."I’m not going to say a d*mn word about it being
tough; I’m having the best time of my life!” laughs Cobain...'
In an interview with Cobain published January, 1994 in Rolling Stone, David Fricke
asks, “One of the songs that you cut from ‘In Utero’ at the last minute was ‘I Hate Myself
And Want To Die.’ How literally did you mean it?” Cobain answers:
“As literal as a joke can be. Nothing more than a joke. And that has to do with
why we took it off. We knew people wouldn’t get it; they’d take it too seriously. It was
totally satirical, making fun of ourselves. I’m thought of as this pissy, complaining,
freaked-out schizophrenic who wants to kill himself all the time. ‘He isn’t satisfied with
anything.’ And I thought it was a funny title. I wanted it to be the title of the album for a
long time. But I knew the majority of the people wouldn’t understand it.”
(1, pg.68) In this
interview, it is evident that Cobain was concerned about his fans getting the wrong
impression from such a provocative title.
“It has been a year, almost to the day, since I interviewed Cobain. At the time, he
told me he was happier than he had ever been. And frankly, I believed him.” David
Fricke, Rolling Stone’s December 14 1994 edition.
In the March 12th edition of Melody Maker, Everett True commented on Cobain’s
drug an alcohol consumption as follows: “Although it’s no secret that in the past Kurt
Cobain has taken drugs, sometimes to excess, the last time we met (in Seattle, last
December -1993), he seemed completely “clean”. That is, he was clean, optimistic and
happier than he’d been for years....I knew that he’d cut down on his drug taking for a
while....He hadn’t taken alcohol in any serious quantity for several years, that’s for sure.”
Singer, Pete Shelley, whose band The Buzzthingys opened some of the early
dates on Nirvana’s 1994 European tour, said that, contrary to rumours, Cobain had
appeared to be in good health and reasonably high spirits. “On the first date in Lisbon,
he came into the dressing room and started chatting. If anything, while the rest of us
were getting into all sorts of debauchery, he would just wish us a good night and go off
for an early night,” Pete remarked.(18) "He seemed really clean when we were on tour.
In some ways it was a bit awkward because he wasn't really joining in the very mild
debauchery that went on." (5)
Bassist Tony Barber told Melody Maker, "I know he was not taking drugs on that
tour. He was walking around drinking Evian water and looking clean every time I saw
him. He didn't seem to consider himself a star...He seemed like a shy bloke who didn't
have many friends. Often when I was talking to him, I felt like saying something like,
'Look, if you need a mate just to go for a drink with or anything, I'm here.' And then I
came home last night and saw it on the news. I couldn't believe it. It's just so sad." (5)
"When he talked to me he seemed to be happy," said Cobain's grandmother Iris
Cobain, remembering a phone conversation she had with him 2 weeks before his death.
In this call, Kurt arranged to go fishing with his grandfather the following week. (3,
pg.91).
In a September 1996 edition of Photostory (French publication) Cobain's
photographer friend, Youri Lenquette explains how he showed Cobain his pictures of
Cambodia. Cobain became interested and Lenquette asked if he would like to go to
Cambodia when the In Utero European tour of Feb/March 1994 ended. Kurt was very
enthusiastic and asked Lenquette how he could go about getting a visa. Youri said that
people shouldn’t believe Cobain was always sad, because he had a lot of humor and
never mentioned suicide to Youri.
A doctor who purportedly treated Kurt in Rome allegedly said, "The last image I have of him, which in
the light of the tragedy now seems pathetic, is of a young man playing with the little girl
(Frances). He did not seem like a young man who wanted to end it all." (1, pg.75). For
more information on the Rome incident, see Chapter 2.
Charles Peterson, a photographer and associate of Cobain, was quoted in an
interview about Nirvana's
Smells Like Teen Spirit
music video. "What sticks in my mind
is actually running into him on the street about 2 weeks um, before he, he killed himself.
And it was just, you know, I guess in relation to events, I'm glad that I did, I'm glad that I
saw him. We talked and he, we exchanged phone numbers and he was really happy
about the fact the book, my book of photographs that I'm doing, he was like; 'Alright, at
last,' you know, 'get the real thing.' And he was--we chatted and he was concerned
about my wife's illness and just really, you know, that sticks in my mind." (‘Nirvana, Teen
Spirit, A Tribute to Kurt Cobain’ Video)
In an AOL Chat Room on March 27th, Cobain posted a message to his fans:
"So this is the Information Highway our illustrious VP has been jawing to
the nation about. Well, my manager told me some kind of fan-thing was going down
here and that I should come over and check it out. Well, here I am. I'd be lying if I said
I'm not surprised to see the band's popularity reaching even into the depths of the
electronic underworld. Cool.
"Well I won't keep you people long, but I thought you might be interested in what
the band is up to. Last month Chris, me, and Dave came out of London Bridge finishing
up a revamped "Pennyroyal Tea" (I didn't much care for how we did the album version
and thought we could've done much better with the song). Geffen should have that out
shortly, knowing the speed with which their money machine rolls.
"We're all taking a break from the music and touring for a bit. I'm still a little
freaked over the Rome thing and need some time to rest and get over it, you'd think they
could make a good milkshake, but no. Hope you people are ready for a calmer moodier
album. Yep, Nirvana's going back into the studio at the end of the summer. I'm already
working on the new songs and artwork for the new album. If you're expecting the same
verse-chorus-verse, well, I suppose you have but two choices, don't buy the new album
when it's released in early '95 or get used to the fact that the band is changing.
Longevity folks."
(6, pg.11)
In this final message his fans, Cobain expressed excitement that Nirvana's music
was being discussed online. He mentions a song he just re-recorded with his
bandmates. He was working on the artwork and songs for a new album with a unique
sound.
He was looking forward to the future.
This post was made just a few days before
he died.
"Everybody knew he was going to die!" (1, pg.18) She wanted people to believe Kurt had
an out-of-control drug dependency during the last days of his life. (2) Of all the phony
stories concocted and spread by Courtney Love, this particular lie blinded the eyes of
the authorities, the media, and most of the public. It helped make Courtney Love a very
rich
widow. Let’s see what Cobain, and those close to him, had to say about these so-called
“suicidal tendencies” during the days, weeks and months leading up to his untimely
death. (1, pg.68)
"I’ve been asked repeatedly if Cobain was on drugs while I was there [during
sessions for the In Utero album]. And I’ve been around people who use dope a lot, and
on the one hand I know how they behave and on the other I know how deceptive they
can be. And my best estimate was that, no, he wasn’t, he was being very productive.
That was a period of his life where he was very focused. He was focused on making this
record and he didn’t want to let the other guys down. He was committed to the task. He
was as sober — and I use that adjective to mean serious — as anybody I’ve ever
worked with in the studio.” [27]
"If Cobain was using heroin while he was around me, he hid it well. In Seattle last
summer (of 1993) he was alert and happy..." (Gavin Edwards, June 1994 edition of
Details magazine).
"After trying everything for his stomach from pills to a vegetarian diet to a
chanting regime, Cobain is ecstatic to have found a doctor who’s prescribing him an
experimental gastrointestinal medicine that works. He says he doesn’t want to give the
name because the medicine hasn’t actually been approved by the FDA, but it’s reduced
his stomach episodes almost as effectively as heroin. 'But now if I take heroin it makes
me vomit right away, so that doesn’t do any good'." (Details, November 1993. This
interview dates to July 1993.)
“I never went out of my way to say anything about my drug use. I didn’t want
some 15-year-old kid who likes our band to think it’s cool to do heroin. I think people who
glamorize drugs are f*cking not very nice people and if there’s a hell, they’ll go there”.
(Cobain, Melody Maker’s Aug 28 1993 edition).
“I’m not in anyway afraid of death...I’m afraid of dying now, I don’t want to leave
behind my wife and child, so I don’t do things that would jeopardise my life. I try to do as
little things as I can to jeopardise it. I don’t want to die”. (Cobain, The Face, Sept 1993
edition)
"He [Cobain] was very open, very honest and seemingly very happy. He also
seemed clean. I know it seems strange in the light of Cobain’s Rome overdose and I even
asked photographer Mark Leialoha if he thought the same. He agreed that Cobain seemed
happier and cleaner than we’d seen him or known him to be." said Steffan Chirazi,
commenting on his meeting with Cobain at the Omni Arena, Atlanta, November 1993
(Kerrang’s April 23 1994 edition). “Cobain did not seem even mildly depressed, let alone
suicidal...The whole evening in Atlanta turned out to be one of the best nights of the
year; a great show, a relaxed post-gig atmosphere, no bullnuts, just a good vibe.”
Steffan Chirazi interviewed Cobain in November 1993, resulting in an article
published in Kerrang’s December 11 1993 edition. Chirazi reported that at Nirvana’s
November 1993 gig at the Omni Arena in Atlanta he met Cobain backstage: 'Frances Bean
is wandering the premises with a beaming smile for everyone. Soon Cobain will lovingly,
patiently, feed her some macaroni cheese dinner for a late night snack, before cuddling
her and talking quietly in her ear...."I’m not going to say a d*mn word about it being
tough; I’m having the best time of my life!” laughs Cobain...'
In an interview with Cobain published January, 1994 in Rolling Stone, David Fricke
asks, “One of the songs that you cut from ‘In Utero’ at the last minute was ‘I Hate Myself
And Want To Die.’ How literally did you mean it?” Cobain answers:
“As literal as a joke can be. Nothing more than a joke. And that has to do with
why we took it off. We knew people wouldn’t get it; they’d take it too seriously. It was
totally satirical, making fun of ourselves. I’m thought of as this pissy, complaining,
freaked-out schizophrenic who wants to kill himself all the time. ‘He isn’t satisfied with
anything.’ And I thought it was a funny title. I wanted it to be the title of the album for a
long time. But I knew the majority of the people wouldn’t understand it.”
(1, pg.68) In this
interview, it is evident that Cobain was concerned about his fans getting the wrong
impression from such a provocative title.
“It has been a year, almost to the day, since I interviewed Cobain. At the time, he
told me he was happier than he had ever been. And frankly, I believed him.” David
Fricke, Rolling Stone’s December 14 1994 edition.
In the March 12th edition of Melody Maker, Everett True commented on Cobain’s
drug an alcohol consumption as follows: “Although it’s no secret that in the past Kurt
Cobain has taken drugs, sometimes to excess, the last time we met (in Seattle, last
December -1993), he seemed completely “clean”. That is, he was clean, optimistic and
happier than he’d been for years....I knew that he’d cut down on his drug taking for a
while....He hadn’t taken alcohol in any serious quantity for several years, that’s for sure.”
Singer, Pete Shelley, whose band The Buzzthingys opened some of the early
dates on Nirvana’s 1994 European tour, said that, contrary to rumours, Cobain had
appeared to be in good health and reasonably high spirits. “On the first date in Lisbon,
he came into the dressing room and started chatting. If anything, while the rest of us
were getting into all sorts of debauchery, he would just wish us a good night and go off
for an early night,” Pete remarked.(18) "He seemed really clean when we were on tour.
In some ways it was a bit awkward because he wasn't really joining in the very mild
debauchery that went on." (5)
Bassist Tony Barber told Melody Maker, "I know he was not taking drugs on that
tour. He was walking around drinking Evian water and looking clean every time I saw
him. He didn't seem to consider himself a star...He seemed like a shy bloke who didn't
have many friends. Often when I was talking to him, I felt like saying something like,
'Look, if you need a mate just to go for a drink with or anything, I'm here.' And then I
came home last night and saw it on the news. I couldn't believe it. It's just so sad." (5)
"When he talked to me he seemed to be happy," said Cobain's grandmother Iris
Cobain, remembering a phone conversation she had with him 2 weeks before his death.
In this call, Kurt arranged to go fishing with his grandfather the following week. (3,
pg.91).
In a September 1996 edition of Photostory (French publication) Cobain's
photographer friend, Youri Lenquette explains how he showed Cobain his pictures of
Cambodia. Cobain became interested and Lenquette asked if he would like to go to
Cambodia when the In Utero European tour of Feb/March 1994 ended. Kurt was very
enthusiastic and asked Lenquette how he could go about getting a visa. Youri said that
people shouldn’t believe Cobain was always sad, because he had a lot of humor and
never mentioned suicide to Youri.
A doctor who purportedly treated Kurt in Rome allegedly said, "The last image I have of him, which in
the light of the tragedy now seems pathetic, is of a young man playing with the little girl
(Frances). He did not seem like a young man who wanted to end it all." (1, pg.75). For
more information on the Rome incident, see Chapter 2.
Charles Peterson, a photographer and associate of Cobain, was quoted in an
interview about Nirvana's
Smells Like Teen Spirit
music video. "What sticks in my mind
is actually running into him on the street about 2 weeks um, before he, he killed himself.
And it was just, you know, I guess in relation to events, I'm glad that I did, I'm glad that I
saw him. We talked and he, we exchanged phone numbers and he was really happy
about the fact the book, my book of photographs that I'm doing, he was like; 'Alright, at
last,' you know, 'get the real thing.' And he was--we chatted and he was concerned
about my wife's illness and just really, you know, that sticks in my mind." (‘Nirvana, Teen
Spirit, A Tribute to Kurt Cobain’ Video)
In an AOL Chat Room on March 27th, Cobain posted a message to his fans:
"So this is the Information Highway our illustrious VP has been jawing to
the nation about. Well, my manager told me some kind of fan-thing was going down
here and that I should come over and check it out. Well, here I am. I'd be lying if I said
I'm not surprised to see the band's popularity reaching even into the depths of the
electronic underworld. Cool.
"Well I won't keep you people long, but I thought you might be interested in what
the band is up to. Last month Chris, me, and Dave came out of London Bridge finishing
up a revamped "Pennyroyal Tea" (I didn't much care for how we did the album version
and thought we could've done much better with the song). Geffen should have that out
shortly, knowing the speed with which their money machine rolls.
"We're all taking a break from the music and touring for a bit. I'm still a little
freaked over the Rome thing and need some time to rest and get over it, you'd think they
could make a good milkshake, but no. Hope you people are ready for a calmer moodier
album. Yep, Nirvana's going back into the studio at the end of the summer. I'm already
working on the new songs and artwork for the new album. If you're expecting the same
verse-chorus-verse, well, I suppose you have but two choices, don't buy the new album
when it's released in early '95 or get used to the fact that the band is changing.
Longevity folks."
(6, pg.11)
In this final message his fans, Cobain expressed excitement that Nirvana's music
was being discussed online. He mentions a song he just re-recorded with his
bandmates. He was working on the artwork and songs for a new album with a unique
sound.
He was looking forward to the future.
This post was made just a few days before
he died.
Notice the sheer volume of fluff, the 'warm and fuzzies' and publicity that the 'justice for kurt'
movement created. Every bit of this stuff is crammed with details, cloying anecdotes of how wonderfully sensitive Cobain was about his baby, his image, his radical left causes, and as filler we even got documentaries and music obsessing on his childhood, his food, his laxatives. ...Overkill, and of course all of it calculated to push product, in the final analysis.
Now are we getting a sense of why a guy with one hit record whose career lasted about two years and committed suicide because he was constipated is god? .......there is money to be made, and if anyone knows how to do that, its the Beatlemania team behind Hank Harrison , Mi6 and Courtney Love.
Nothing in history has come close to the concerted/contrived effort to build Cobain up, find me one celeb who has had anything like it expended on them, not even Michael Jackson. Elvis was a legitimate superstar, as was MJ. Cobain, by comparison, is a paper tiger, a concoction.
Courtney Love and her father Hank Harrison and Tom Grant have been maintaining fake fan club sites and murder conspiracy sites (like 'jusiticeforkurt.com') churning out 'Cobain was murdered' documentaries and publicity stunts to keep the Nirvana brand alive for decades. One of their biggest lies is that Cobain was murdered by a contract killer hired by Courtney Love, and that Courtney's friend El Duce (real name Eldon Hoke) was murdered for exposing Courtney Love's hand in hiring the killer. The Eldon Hoke 'El Duce' thing was another publicity stunt. Eldon Hoke was a friend of Courtney Love's and Cobain's. Hoke was from Seattle and his bandmate Eric Carlson was common law boyfriend to Courtney Love's bandmate Caroline Rue. Hoke was a staple of tabloid television before the whole fake Cobain death thing. Even El Duce's death would have been faked in this case.
Courtney Love and Cobain were desperate to keep Cobain's name in the news and to keep earning royalties off the Nirvana music, so they cooked up the 'Cobain was murdered' videos and PR stunts to keep publicity coming in. Hoke was an actor and TV personality and probably CIA long before the Cobain murder conspiracy propaganda emerged. Hoke was probably going to be relocated under Witness Protection for unrelated intel machinations anyway, so at a guess they decided to have him lie and say that Courtney had tried to hire him to kill Cobain etc. Then Hoke (el Duce) was relocated and the story of the El Duce 'death' used to inflame controversy and sales for Nirvana. This was all in 1996/1997, a couple of years after Cobain's fake death and they were still desperately milking the fake death for all the airplay and publicity that they could get. What does a fake death take? if you are CIA you go through channels. You get a CIA run news story and order up a relocation for so and so. The same team handles the whole thing. Fake coroner report , its all routine, you have the same team handling all of these cases in Los Angeles,it is not that difficult. Eldon Hoke was purportedly hit by a train, but no paparazzi pics of his body , come on, it should be all over rotten.com, El Duce's mangled body, El Duce corpse etc. He was a tabloid circus act embroiled in controversy and that is a spectacular way to go,hit by a train in paparazzi central L.A., and yet no pics.Nothing, just yet another convenient death surrounding Hank Harrison and Geffen .