Steven Hager Popular Books

Steven Hager Biography & Facts

Steven Hager (born May 25, 1951, Illinois) is an American writer, journalist, filmmaker, and counterculture and cannabis rights activist. He is known for his long association with High Times magazine. Biography Early life and education Hager was born on May 25, 1951, in Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, the son of Lowell P. Hager and Frances Faye Erea Hager. While a student in junior high, he established his first publication, the Cap'n Crunch Courier, a humor xerox zine that was given away free. Two years later, while a student at Urbana High School, he created The Tin Whistle, a monthly newspaper that was eventually distributed in four high schools in Central Illinois. Hager briefly visited Haight-Ashbury in 1968, and the following year he attended the first Woodstock festival. He obtained a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Theater (Playwriting), and a Masters of Science in Journalism, both from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. Early career After graduation, Hager moved to New York City, and worked for a number of magazines before becoming a reporter for the New York Daily News. Hip hop journalist During this time, he began researching the hip-hop movement of the South Bronx. His first article on this subculture was published in 1982 on the cover of the Village Voice, and was the first time the words "hip hop" appeared in a major publication. Hager based his article on interviews with Afrika Bambaataa, founder of the Universal Zulu Nation, and one of the three original hip hop DJs (the others being Kool Herc and Grandmaster Flash). Not too long afterward, Hager sold his original story, "The Perfect Beat," to Harry Belafonte, who took some elements from it, including the subject and some of the characters' names, to produce the film Beat Street, released by Orion Pictures in 1984. In 1984, St. Martin's Press released Hager's groundbreaking book, Hip Hop: The Illustrated History of Break Dancing, Rap Music, and Graffiti. Hager followed that book in 1986 with Art After Midnight, an examination of the New York nightclub scene and its influence on artists, primarily Jean-Michel Basquiat, Keith Haring and Kenny Scharf. (The entire text of Art After Midnight, including the much-quoted Basquiat interview, was reprinted in Hager's 2002 book Adventures in the Counterculture, as well as his 2005 book The Octopus Conspiracy and Other Vignettes of the Counterculture: From Hippies to High Times to Hip-Hop and Beyond.) High Times In 1988, Hager began a long relationship with High Times magazine, as he was hired as the magazine's editor-in-chief. He is most well-known for removing positive coverage of hard drugs (e.g., cocaine and heroin) from the magazine, and instead concentrating on advocating for the personal cultivation of cannabis. Hager became the first editor to publish and promote the work of hemp activist Jack Herer. Under Hager's leadership, High Times created the Cannabis Cup, a cannabis awards ceremony held every Thanksgiving in Amsterdam; and The High Times Freedom Fighters, the first hemp legalization group. The High Times Freedom Fighters were famous for dressing up in Colonial outfits and organizing hemp rallies across the United States. One rally, The Boston Freedom Rally, quickly became the largest political event in the country, drawing an audience of over 100,000 to the Boston Common. Hager created a garage rock revival band called the Soul Assassins. The band played many of the hemp rallies. Their biggest show was opening for the Butthole Surfers in front of 50,000 people in Washington, DC. As editor, Hager brought on a friend from high school, Jim Wilson, to become a columnist for High Times. Wilson became known as Chef Ra and contributed a cooking-with-pot article in every issue of the magazine for 15 years. Chef Ra was also a member of the High Times Freedom Fighters and became the featured speaker at many of the rallies. In 1990, Hager became the first person outside Marin County, California to promote 420; as a result, subsequent Freedom Fighter councils, Cannabis Cup ceremonies, and Whee! festivals were always scheduled for 4:20 PM. In September 1991, Hager wrote an article in High Times titled "Heritage of Stone," a comprehensive analysis of the assassination of John F. Kennedy that has been widely circulated on the Internet as a definitive article on the subject. The article indicated Kennedy was likely murdered because of his growing opposition to the Vietnam War, and implicated J. Edgar Hoover and Allen Dulles in the cover-up. Judge Jim Garrison cited it as "the best magazine article ever written on the subject." Hager created the Counterculture Hall of Fame in 1997 as part of the Cannabis Cup ceremonies. In the mid-1990s, Hager turned the membership list of the Freedom Fighters over to the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), and began concentrating on creating events that advocated the environmental benefits of hemp while also demonstrating the spiritual uses of cannabis. The World Hemp Expo Extravaganja, or WHEE! Festivals, were held in Oregon, Washington, Michigan, New York, and Ohio. Unfortunately, most of the promoters who held Whee! festivals found themselves subject to intense law enforcement efforts to shut down their venues. The primary focus of Whee! was a silent, Sunday, sunset meditation for peace in the war on drugs. During this period, Hager was contacted by the Waldos, the inventors of 420, and became the first person to interview them. Hager was fired as High Times editor-in-chief in 2003. His 2004 book, The Octopus Conspiracy and Other Vignettes of the Counterculture: From Hippies to High Times to Hip-Hop and Beyond, compiles some of his previously published work; the chapter "Nomenclature of an Octopus Cabal" theorizes that a network of secret societies manufactures war for profit and social control. By 2005, Hager was rehired at High Times, first as the creative director, and then in 2006, back in the position of editor-in-chief, but by 2009 had returned to the role of creative director. He was again let go by the magazine in 2013, eventually suing High Times for defrauding him of his ownership shares in the company. Documentary film work Hager learned to shoot and edit video, and started documenting all research on videotape. He has produced several feature documentaries, including Let Freedom Ring, Secrets of the Dutch Grow Masters, The Cannabis Cup, Saint Stephen, The Tom Forcade Story, and The 20th Cannabis Cup, assembling one of the world's largest archives of cannabis-related video. In 2002 he directed the video shoot that was later released as Live in Amsterdam. In 2004, he wrote most of the narration for a/k/a Tommy Chong, and also appears in the film. Hager appeared in Episode #12 ("Pittsburgh") of the Showtime series Weeds, playing himself at an event modeled on the Cannabis Cup. In 2007, he produced a reality television show based around his job at High Times magazine. Hager app.... Discover the Steven Hager popular books. Find the top 100 most popular Steven Hager books.

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  • Dirty Money synopsis, comments

    Dirty Money

    Steven Hager

    Ever wondered about the real meaning of "The Wizard of Oz?" Who do you think really controls the banking industry? What are the connections between the intelligence agencies and or...

  • Bugging Out on the Endless Peak synopsis, comments

    Bugging Out on the Endless Peak

    Steven Hager

    The Fun House was a dance club in New York that reached a peak in the mid1980s. It was famous for underage patrons, rampant drug use, occasional fights, and nononsense bouncers (al...

  • Paradigms and Perception synopsis, comments

    Paradigms and Perception

    Steven Hager

    In popular culture many paradigms exist alongside each other, none of which are right or wrong. There is no one real meaning to life, only a set of possible paths leading in many d...

  • Looking for the Perfect Beat synopsis, comments

    Looking for the Perfect Beat

    Steven Hager

    I sold this script to Harry Belafonte and a movie got made using the characters names, but nothing else from my original story survived. Someday I hope a producer will actually pro...

  • My Chomsky Critique synopsis, comments

    My Chomsky Critique

    Steven Hager

    Noam Chomsky is both the whipping post of the radical conspiracy community and the voice of reason for the intellectual left. The conspiracy community refers to Chomsky as "a gatek...

  • Nothing is Everything synopsis, comments

    Nothing is Everything

    Steven Hager

    Bugsy first appears in my short story "East Village" as a 16yearold runaway living near Tompkins Square Park in 1967. Here we meet him again exactly one decade later and his circum...

  • The Steam Tunnels synopsis, comments

    The Steam Tunnels

    Steven Hager

    Two sides of a Generation War assembled their forces for battle, in the homes, the schools, and eventually the streets of America. Blake Moore is a young man on fire: in love with ...

  • True Ghost Stories synopsis, comments

    True Ghost Stories

    Steven Hager

    In 1981, I was a reporter for the New York Daily News, when I investigated three haunted houses. The most compelling case came from Dr. Karlis Osis, a wellknown researcher who freq...

  • East Village synopsis, comments

    East Village

    Steven Hager

    In the mid1960's, a teenage, hippie crashpad scene developed in New York's East Village. Many of the arrivals were escaping repressive or abusive home environments. During this tim...

  • The Pied Piper of Hip Hop synopsis, comments

    The Pied Piper of Hip Hop

    Steven Hager

    On September 21, 1982, when my first Village Voice feature story was published, many in the media thought rap music was a fad that would soon disappear. Meanwhile, I was already pr...

  • The Great Phase 2 synopsis, comments

    The Great Phase 2

    Steven Hager

    Phase 2 was one of the creative forces that helped birth hip hop. He was a master writer and is often credited with inventing the bubble letters that evolved into Wild Style. He wa...

  • My Tragic Love Affair synopsis, comments

    My Tragic Love Affair

    Steven Hager

    I met a girl while in graduate school and we ended up moving to New York City together. I found a job with Leo Shull's sleazy Showbusiness Newspaper and was making less than $150 a...

  • The Stockholm Manifesto synopsis, comments

    The Stockholm Manifesto

    Steven Hager

    After burning most of my bridges in the States, I fled to Sweden in the winter of 1972 to avoid the draft. I had just enough money to buy an old used typewriter and was heavily inf...

  • The Doomsday Brigade synopsis, comments

    The Doomsday Brigade

    Steven Hager

    I'd been recently hired as a reporter for the New York Daily News when I submitted this article. It ended up being featured at the top of the Sunday paper, which had the largest ci...

  • The I Hate L.A. Campaign synopsis, comments

    The I Hate L.A. Campaign

    Steven Hager

    When I first arrived in New York City in 1978 with a Masters degree in Journalism, I was hoping to get a job with the New York Times. So the first thing I did upon arrival was spel...

  • The Bitcoin Revolution synopsis, comments

    The Bitcoin Revolution

    Steven Hager

    I came late to Bitcoin and have zero understanding of the technical complexities of cryptography, but I do realize Bitcoin is open source and completely transparent and completely ...