Editing Interview:1999/02/26 Bam

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Sparrows, then, would delight in not only the demise of that threatening raven, but - in true Hollywood style - its resurrection several months later. That's the way the fame game works, sighs its most notorious contestant, the man who's returned rock music to its Kiss-glorious pedestal while simultaneously sending a creepy shiver up the spines of wholesome parents. Quoth the raven, what a bore. "It's all very Christlike, in a way - the media likes to see me fall," he faux-blasphemes. "When something really small and inconsequential happens to me, they make more of a big deal about it than if it happened to someone else." Take ''[[Mechanical Animals (album)|Mechanical Animals]]'', for instance. Creatively, he believes, it's a quantum leap forward from his previous industrial-strength, Nietzsche-themed ''[[Antichrist Superstar (album)|Antichrist Superstar]]''. The disc, Manson's third, also debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard chart, and "has sold more copies in five months than it took us two years to sell on the last album. But the media's on this big kick about rock music's not doing that well. I just think people would like to see me fail because they're afraid or insulted by my openness, or just my outspoken intelligence, the fact that I call the shots how they are. I think the same thing happens with Howard Stern - people like to see him fall, as well."
 
Sparrows, then, would delight in not only the demise of that threatening raven, but - in true Hollywood style - its resurrection several months later. That's the way the fame game works, sighs its most notorious contestant, the man who's returned rock music to its Kiss-glorious pedestal while simultaneously sending a creepy shiver up the spines of wholesome parents. Quoth the raven, what a bore. "It's all very Christlike, in a way - the media likes to see me fall," he faux-blasphemes. "When something really small and inconsequential happens to me, they make more of a big deal about it than if it happened to someone else." Take ''[[Mechanical Animals (album)|Mechanical Animals]]'', for instance. Creatively, he believes, it's a quantum leap forward from his previous industrial-strength, Nietzsche-themed ''[[Antichrist Superstar (album)|Antichrist Superstar]]''. The disc, Manson's third, also debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard chart, and "has sold more copies in five months than it took us two years to sell on the last album. But the media's on this big kick about rock music's not doing that well. I just think people would like to see me fail because they're afraid or insulted by my openness, or just my outspoken intelligence, the fact that I call the shots how they are. I think the same thing happens with Howard Stern - people like to see him fall, as well."
  
It's easy enough to spot the sensationalism - it's all outrageously documented in Manson's ''[[The Long Hard Road Out of Hell]]'' autobiography, which kicks off with the boy born Brian Warner in backwater Canton, Ohio stumbling upon his grandfather secretly whacking away in the basement. He and his teen pal watch with a mixture of horror and fascination, and the book - as far as twisted vice and sensual pleasures go - is one racy bobsled run downhill from there, leaving nothing to the imagination. Fact or fiction? Manson isn't saying. As Tenet Number 94 in Balthasar Gracian's centuries-old ''The Art of Worldly Wisdom'' states: "The wise person does not allow his knowledge and abilities to be sounded to the bottom, if he desires to be honored by all - He allows you to know him but not to comprehend him."
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It's easy enough to spot the sensationalism - it's all outrageously documented in Manson's ''[[The_Long_Hard_Road_Out_Of_Hell|The Long Hard Road Out of Hell]]'' autobiography, which kicks off with the boy born Brian Warner in backwater Canton, Ohio stumbling upon his grandfather secretly whacking away in the basement. He and his teen pal watch with a mixture of horror and fascination, and the book - as far as twisted vice and sensual pleasures go - is one racy bobsled run downhill from there, leaving nothing to the imagination. Fact or fiction? Manson isn't saying. As Tenet Number 94 in Balthasar Gracian's centuries-old ''The Art of Worldly Wisdom'' states: "The wise person does not allow his knowledge and abilities to be sounded to the bottom, if he desires to be honored by all - He allows you to know him but not to comprehend him."
  
 
The cover of ''[[Mechanical Animals (album)|Mechanical Animals]]'' features Manson adopting a new, more vulnerable persona, via a fleshy bodysuit he also tried out on the recent ''MTV Video Music Awards'' - that of an amorphous, asexual android from the stars dubbed [[Omega]]. But Manson in person is another animal entirely. In fact, if cheetahs could walk on their hind legs, they would not only resemble the elastic-limbed, long-framed fellow, but echo his regal feline stride as well. He thuds around his manager's Hollywood Hills home in black leather trousers, an ocelot-dappled black lycra shirt and imposing leather boots boasting six-inch heels. Spooky skull 'n' spider web tattoos peek from beneath his long sleeves, but his trademark colored-contact-lensed eyes are masked behind a goggle-huge pair of gold Chanel shades. The hair-parted on the side in Jennifer Aniston shag doesn't live up to Mechanical expectations; only a few streaks of magenta remain, and the rest is mousy brown. Catlike again, he curls up on a comfy couch, with a picture-window view of decadent, smog-basted Los Angeles to his right. And the 30-year-old speaks slowly, deliberately, measuring his thoughts carefully before dispensing them in concise conceptual capsules.
 
The cover of ''[[Mechanical Animals (album)|Mechanical Animals]]'' features Manson adopting a new, more vulnerable persona, via a fleshy bodysuit he also tried out on the recent ''MTV Video Music Awards'' - that of an amorphous, asexual android from the stars dubbed [[Omega]]. But Manson in person is another animal entirely. In fact, if cheetahs could walk on their hind legs, they would not only resemble the elastic-limbed, long-framed fellow, but echo his regal feline stride as well. He thuds around his manager's Hollywood Hills home in black leather trousers, an ocelot-dappled black lycra shirt and imposing leather boots boasting six-inch heels. Spooky skull 'n' spider web tattoos peek from beneath his long sleeves, but his trademark colored-contact-lensed eyes are masked behind a goggle-huge pair of gold Chanel shades. The hair-parted on the side in Jennifer Aniston shag doesn't live up to Mechanical expectations; only a few streaks of magenta remain, and the rest is mousy brown. Catlike again, he curls up on a comfy couch, with a picture-window view of decadent, smog-basted Los Angeles to his right. And the 30-year-old speaks slowly, deliberately, measuring his thoughts carefully before dispensing them in concise conceptual capsules.

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