DICKLESS IN BABYLON: THE JOE CHRIST STORY
BY MARK KRAMER

P   A   R   T     I I I .
PENECTOMY, PENECTO YOU

"I grew up on porn--and I'm OK."
Joe Christ, Aug. 6 1986, The Dallas Times Herald.

Amid the unlicensed erotopaths, freelance scatologists and assorted glandular wannabees hawking their wares in the summer of 1988, nothing in Screw editor Mark Kramer's in-basket does more to essentialize porndom's mood that August than Joe Christ's Communion in Room 410 promo-pak.

Kramer is not slow in arriving at the opinion that Communion's revulsive spectacle of amphetamine-drenched, peroxide-blondined Joe Christ lapping blood from the lacerated breasts of an overweight female retardate seems somehow an apt expresson of the times. And the times, as seen from within the Screw's tobacco-stale, crumb-flecked workplace, are inseparable from the industry-wide aftershock caused by the recent death of donkey-dicked porn legend John Holmes from AIDS-related encaphalitis--the latest rejoinder to Screw's ethos of unbridled sexual activity as the key to a better life.

"My childhood, really, I think of as normal", reflects Joe Christ in the thumbnail autobiography that accompanies His PR blitz. "I once tricked a girl into drinking a glass of piss. I don't see anything traumatic about it other than a few trips to the state hospital as a teenager."

These remembrances of a Philadelphia cardiologist's troubled offspring are augmented by a clip from the Dallas Times Herald, which notes: "...Christ mentions faking a bomb scare in junior high, which pretty much put an end to his formal education. Christ admits to being a juvenile delinquent who ran away from his [sic] Philadelphia home "30 or 40 times", and who was "put away" on several occasions. But he defends a lot of his [sic] troubles by saying, "Mainly it was just dope-related things", adding, "I might have had indiscriminate sex in the past, or I might have done every drug there is. But I'm not afraid to admit it. And because of that, I won't have my Chappaquiddick."

There follows a mangled tale of rootless cosmopolitanism at its most rootless as the agitative out-patient known to authorities as Joseph W. Linhart, Jr, is firmly invited to leave Philly, Chicago and Washington, DC. Evocatively inscribed with crudely self-administered institutional tattoos--He wanders America's vanishing pre-corporate landscape in search of stardom, or at the very least, somewhere to sleep. In 1979, He materializes in Tulsa, Oklahoma, where His father is employed by Oral Roberts University. Joe Jr. changes His name to Joe Danger, and with the local punk band Los Reactors collaborates in creating two zeitgeistly 7" singles, "Dead in The Suburbs" (1981) and "Be A Zombie" (1982).

In one of His incessant follow-up calls to Screw, Joe Christ confides, "Sometimes my father and I would appear in the same newspapers--He for something going on at Oral Roberts University, myself for assaulting an officer."

Inevitably, Tulsa's amphetamine-steeped phallotopia proves too impermissive for the man who would be Christ.

In 1983, He flees to Dallas, where oil prices are high, amphetamine are cheap, the complimentary chalupa buffets are plentiful, and there is a long, if not noble, traditon of ersatz-Texan carpetbaggers and out-of-town opportunists running the gamut from Jack Ruby to George Bush. Soon Joe Linhart and his bleached, high-visibility coif are fronting the local bar band G-Spot--less memorable for their 7" single "Idle Worship" than for a November 22, 1983 publicity stunt that consists of disrupting downtown Dallas' 20th anniversary Kennedy-assasination memorial service with a drive-by prank involving JFK masks and a rented "Texas Taxi" Cadillac convertible with a steer-horn hood ornament. Kramer takes note of how this abundantly satirical series of gestures seems only to hightlight the shift of Dallas' urban identity from the heartland's transshipment center for cheaply manufactured goods to America's loading zone for cheap manufactured ideas. And there are few ideas cheaper than those actuating Joe Linhart's next shift of identity.

"A of people want to know why I call myself Joe Christ," He tells the Dallas Times Herald. "As I see I, pop culture has taken the place of religion for a lot of people. People worship pop figures like it's a religion [sic]...."

Self-annointed as the swaggering, preening vocalist for a combo called The Healing Faith--whose "Wonderful Life" is later heard on the Communion in Room 410 soundtrack--"unk-macho braggart Joe Christ" is lauded in a Dallas Observer review as "ego-bloated floatsam", "self-absorbed, self-impressed".

This market research only serves to inflame His ambitions, and in November, 1985, Joe Christ announces His candidacy for the governorship of Texas.

"I'm really offended by people who find the need to enforce their beliefs on me" He reveals. "That's what's great about America. People like me can run."

Texas gubernatorial races are traditionally famous for their comedic fringe candidates. And the "Joe Christ Is No Christ" campaign is no exception. He electioneers in the punk clubs and scrounge lounges of Dallas on a pro-pornography, pro-drug, pro-prostitution ticket that emphasizes harsh restrictions on welfare recipients.

Despite this populistically minded formula--and what He estimates to be 1,000 write-in votes--Joe Christ is roundly defeated at the polls, possibly by the very same forces of philistinism that are already plotting to elect George Bush Jr. to Texas' highest office. It is thus that Joe Christ renounces politics, and shortly thereafter, His penis as well.


Coming soon: "Uro Trash"


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Photo by Bill Chance / The Daily Epiphany