'Please Kill Me' writers Legs McNeil and Gillian McCain talk to us about the Manson family, why the “Helter Skelter” theory is (mostly) bullshit and more
the best-selling true crime book of all time. Since then, that interpretation of events has been crediblyMcNeil and McCain say the story they’ve found challenges this prevailing mythology of Manson as a criminal mastermind and his followers as bloodthirsty murderers — the interviews they’ve done reveal Manson to be more of a loser who made a series of fatal decisions.
McNeil and McCain spoke with Rolling Stone about the lonely process of reporting on creepy subject matter, why the “Helter Skelter” theory is bullshit, and how if you give someone enough acid you can make them believe anything you want.Well, because it is so big and we didn’t think people would talk to us. Plus, going back and talking to everybody seemed like a very daunting project. And it proved to be that!Yes, it has. I mean, there are still some people we want to interview.
We spent a lot of time with Peter Coyote, who was in the Diggers [an anarchist collective and offshoot of the San Francisco Mime Troupe], and a lot of people around San Francisco and the Haight, and Vito [Paulekas] and Carl Franzoni [performers and fixtures of the LA hippie freak scene], and the Byrds and Love. Did you know Ed Begley Jr. smoked a joint with Charlie? That was shocking!Have more empathy. Is that a stupid thing to say?No, no.
It couldn’t have been just the drugs, though. What other factors do you think led them to follow Manson without questioning him?Once you isolate people and convince them the world’s coming to an end, they’re not getting any outside information.You’re eating from garbage cans.You’re living like animals. What no one realizes is Charlie got out of prison in March of 1967. It wasn’t until January of ’69 that Helter Skelter came into play.Pretty much up until that it was a real family commune.
Do you think they were trying to send producer Terry Melcher a message when they committed the Tate murders?I don’t think it really mattered who was there. Charlie was just getting so frustrated and so unhappy, he just wanted people to go out and kill people.
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