The pieces in the book were created by regular contributors to the National Lampoon including Michael O'Donoghue, Henry Beard, Doug Kenney, Sean Kelly, Tony Hendra, P.J. O'Rourke and Ed Subitzky as well as Terry Southern and William Burroughs.
University of Southern California | Southern California | Terry Gilliam | Southern United States | Southern Methodist University | Southern Hemisphere | United States District Court for the Southern District of New York | Terry Pratchett | Southern Rhodesia | Terry Riley | Terry Bradshaw | Terry Jones | Southern Railway | Southern Nations, Nationalities, and People's Region | Terry Wogan | Southern Pacific Transportation Company | Southern League | Southern Metropolitan Football League | Southern Football League | Ellen Terry | Southern Illinois University | Southern Christian Leadership Conference | Southern rock | Southern Province | Southern Poverty Law Center | Southern Baptist Convention | Southern Africa | Southern Italy | Southern France | Terry Richardson |
In a collaboration between Burroughs and director Howard Brookner the film explores Burroughs’ life story along with many of his contemporaries including Allen Ginsberg, Brion Gysin, Francis Bacon, Herbert Huncke, Patti Smith, Terry Southern, and Lauren Hutton.
After finishing the set of The Loved One (1965), Gilmore met writer, Terry Southern, and left Hollywood in 1966 where she lived with him in New York then Connecticut where she remained his longtime companion until his death thirty years later.
Gonzo journalism has now become a bona-fide style of writing that concerns itself with "telling it like it is", similar to the New Journalism of the 1960s, led primarily by Tom Wolfe and also championed by Lester Bangs, George Plimpton, Terry Southern, and John Birmingham—in fact, gonzo journalism is considered a sub-genre of new journalism.