Jann Wenner and Rolling Stone: a Legacy Built on Solid Rock




Here's The Thing with Alec Baldwin show

Summary: <p>There was no such thing as serious rock journalism when Jann Wenner borrowed money to ink the first issue of <em>Rolling Stone</em> onto cheap newsprint in 1967.  His creation changed the landscape of both music and magazines.  It also put Wenner, a suburban middle-class kid, into the heart of the counterculture.  He tells Alec about his complicated relationships with the greatest stars of their generation, from Dylan to Jagger to Lennon -- and about the brilliant writers like Hunter S. Thompson whom Wenner found to document their lives and times.  In the 1980s, Wenner became a media mogul, too, acquiring titles like <em>Us Weekly</em> that brought unprecedented wealth and thrust him even further into the public eye.  That exposure was a mixed blessing as he dealt with coming out of the closet and, this time with his new husband, becoming a father to young children again in his 60s.</p>