Editing Interview:1998/09 Kerrang The Man Who Fell To Earth

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'''MANSON:''' "Def Leppard?" he says, arching a shaved eyebrow.<br>"That's such a strange comparison. I guess I'll have to hack off my arm and beat my wife with my good one!"  
 
'''MANSON:''' "Def Leppard?" he says, arching a shaved eyebrow.<br>"That's such a strange comparison. I guess I'll have to hack off my arm and beat my wife with my good one!"  
  
<br> '''KERRANG!:'''&nbsp;New Manson, same outrage. Some things, it seems, will never change. The evening after Twiggy's barbie sees a suited Mazza mingling with A-list celebs like Gwyneth Paltrow and Ben Affleck at Rose McGowan's birthday party, yet he remains a sick boy at heart. He might not act like a circus freak 24 hours a day (at Rose's do, he is a dapper, welcoming host), but it's difficult to imagine the actress' parents glowing with satisfaction when told that their young daughter is dating a gender-bending rock pig named Marilyn Manson. Unless, of course, they know him as Brian.<br>The real Manson, or Brian, is not easy to fathom. During interviews, Manson is sharp, witty, even charming. Always dry and controlled. Manson knows precisely what he wants to say to the press, and sick jokes about Def Leppard's one-armed drummer Rick Allen are part of the fun; part of what makes him the most controversial and enigmatic figure in rock music. Ditto his autobiography [[The Long Hard Road Out of Hell|The Long Hard Road Out Of Hell]], which was published earlier this year. It offers some compellingly ugly insights into the Manson/Warner psyche, but the author is not telling all. He dishes the dirt, but he does not let us in.<br>Manson claims that he has grown more compassionate since he finished the book, but he remains unrepentant over the damage it may have caused to the family, friends, lovers and fans humiliated within its 269 pages.  
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<br> '''KERRANG!:'''&nbsp;New Manson, same outrage. Some things, it seems, will never change. The evening after Twiggy's barbie sees a suited Mazza mingling with A-list celebs like Gwyneth Paltrow and Ben Affleck at Rose McGowan's birthday party, yet he remains a sick boy at heart. He might not act like a circus freak 24 hours a day (at Rose's do, he is a dapper, welcoming host), but it's difficult to imagine the actress' parents glowing with satisfaction when told that their young daughter is dating a gender-bending rock pig named Marilyn Manson. Unless, of course, they know him as Brian.<br>The real Manson, or Brian, is not easy to fathom. During interviews, Manson is sharp, witty, even charming. Always dry and controlled. Manson knows precisely what he wants to say to the press, and sick jokes about Def Leppard's one-armed drummer Rick Allen are part of the fun; part of what makes him the most controversial and enigmatic figure in rock music. Ditto his autobiography [[The Long Hard Road Out Of Hell]], which was published earlier this year. It offers some compellingly ugly insights into the Manson/Warner psyche, but the author is not telling all. He dishes the dirt, but he does not let us in.<br>Manson claims that he has grown more compassionate since he finished the book, but he remains unrepentant over the damage it may have caused to the family, friends, lovers and fans humiliated within its 269 pages.  
  
 
'''MANSON: '''"Sometimes I thought about people's feelings," he muses, "but most of the time I thought that, for the sake of entertainment, brutal honesty was best.<br>"I wrote it without describing how I felt, because a lot of the times I wasn't feeling anything. I also thought if I described the events well enough, with a lot of detail and sarcasm, then people would feel how I felt and I wouldn't have to tell them. They'd feel it for themselves.&nbsp;  
 
'''MANSON: '''"Sometimes I thought about people's feelings," he muses, "but most of the time I thought that, for the sake of entertainment, brutal honesty was best.<br>"I wrote it without describing how I felt, because a lot of the times I wasn't feeling anything. I also thought if I described the events well enough, with a lot of detail and sarcasm, then people would feel how I felt and I wouldn't have to tell them. They'd feel it for themselves.&nbsp;  

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