|
November 16, 2003 - The New York Times
Who's Smoking Now?
By John Leland
WHEN Forbes Magazine splashed a marijuana leaf on its
cover last month, John Buffalo Mailer weighed the propriety of
flaunting such images in public. Mr. Mailer, who is just starting
out in journalism, said he hoped never to run such a cover. "It's
a personal thing, but I don't believe we should be throwing that
in people's faces," he said. "I don't think that's
our role."
Mr. Mailer, 25, the son of Norman Mailer and Norris Church
Mailer, speaks with the self-assurance of the handsome and intellectually
well born. Yet his words begged a little clarification. Looming
over him was a blowup of a magazine cover with Snoop Dogg holding
a water pipe in each hand, accepting the honor of 2002's Stoner
of the Year. Mr. Mailer, you see, is the new executive editor
of High Times.
On a recent afternoon, he sat in his tastefully corporate-looking
Madison Square office flanked by what might be called Forbes-like
covers on one wall and his dry cleaning on another. He wore neat
jeans, a black button-down shirt and what appeared to be a permanent
layer of dark stubble. Not to put too fine a point on it, he
has also been named one of the sexiest men alive by People magazine.
In conversation he is a good sport.
"The only way I can look at that is, it's making consciousness
sexy," he said of the People plug. "It helps. It gets
the name out there."
Mr. Mailer's first issue of High Times, which reached
some Manhattan newsstands last week and will be available nationwide
on Nov. 25, begins a total makeover of the magazine. The cover
has a photograph of the actor Mark Webber, a question about education
reform and zero references to marijuana. Inside are a long essay
on outlaw politics by the actor Peter Coyote, who was in the
1960's anarchist group the Diggers, and a first-person account
by a drug smuggler.
"We're trying to get away from just being a pot magazine,
which is what it's been for the last 15 years," Mr. Mailer
said. "It was never supposed to be just that."
(Full disclosure: I wrote about music for High Times in the
1980's.)
In sober and idealistic tones, Mr. Mailer, who smokes marijuana
"occasionally," he said, described his plan to wean
the magazine off its dependence on "the plant" - not
to eliminate coverage, but to make it part of a broader diet
of lifestyle articles.
"With the new High Times we're using it as a metaphor,"
he said. "So it's not a magazine about pot, it's a magazine
about our civil liberties, and our tag line is `Celebrating Freedom.'
Our feeling is it's patriotic to be in High Times."
Norman Mailer, reached by telephone, said he had given his
son little advice in the new job, but volunteered that he was
not unfamiliar with the subject matter. "I used to be a
heavy marijuana smoker in the 50's," he said. "I loved
it, but one paid a heavy price for it. It could leave you good
for nothing for two days afterwards." Finally, he gave it
up, he said. "Not a stick of pot in 10 years."
Predictably, his son's new job does not come without a good
ribbing. "Yeah," John Mailer acknowledged. "Then
they see the look in my eye and figure I'm not the best person
to have that conversation with. I don't want to say it offends
me, but it's just pointless to judge what I'm doing off the old
magazine."
As an institution that will celebrate its 30th anniversary
next year, High Times has done what magazines like Smart
Set, American Mercury, Lingua Franca, the Evergreen
Review, Ramparts, Punk, Spy, Manhattan
Inc., Talk, George and numerous others have
failed to do: it has kept on keeping on. But over those three
decades the magazine's core constituency has moved ever farther
from what might be called cultural leadership positions. The
alternative culture of 2003 is not that of 1974.
Mr. Mailer admitted that he has not been the magazine's most
devoted reader over the years. "Honestly, I didn't know
it was still in publication until Richard and I started talking,"
he said, referring to Richard Stratton, the publisher and editor
in chief.
|