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Tuesday, April 15, 2025

A Sense of Doubt blog post #3710 - David Cassidy, Annie Liebowitz, and Rolling Stone


A Sense of Doubt blog post #3710 - David Cassidy, Annie Liebowitz, and Rolling Stone

My childhood.

I have been sitting on this post for a while.

I was a huge David Cassidy fan.

Seeing him was my first concert as I wrote about here:

I may reprint that post as it looks like things in it need fixing.

I was ten years old when this Rolling Stone issue was published, so I did not buy or own it.

David Cassidy RIP.



Rolling Stone May 11, 1972

I hauled this out the other day to look at the adverts in it, and The Rolling Stones were probably the only artists featured who are as recognisable today as they were then.

This was one of only three issues of Rolling Stone that sold out – the first one, the one covering the death of John Lennon, and this one.

I really love the typography of the 1960s and 1970s. It was so free and so different from everything that came before it – particularly in terms of fashion and music. I feel lucky to have grown up in the 60s and 70s.

This was the reason I bought it (quelle surprise!). The poster is actually enormous. Annie Liebowitz has really done amazing celebrity portraits – my favourites are Whoopi Goldberg, Demi Moore, John Lennon and Yoko Ono. For the 1970s, this photo of a teen hearthrob was actually quite alarming.

The article is here

This paragraph is so sad.

This link is broken, but just in case it gets fixed, here it is:






David Cassidy: A Brief and Belated Eulogy

Kate H
Feb 5, 2018

“David Cassidy is exhausted, stoned and drunk” reads the opening of a 1972 Rolling Stone cover story. Cassidy viewed the cover story as a way to shed his reputation as a weightless pretty boy. The magazine viewed a cover story as a way to explore the counter-cultural staff’s complicated feelings about the most popular star and consumer product in America. Titled “Cassidy’s Naked Lunch Box” the article hovers someplace between a hit piece and empathetic portrait of teen icon. Written by Robin Green, the article is a rare early Rolling Stone article to be written by a woman, and the article’s content reflects Green’s ambivalence at being assigned (undoubtedly because of her gender) to highlight an artist who serves as a reflector of culture rather than a creator. True to its title, much of the article focuses on the kitsch products with Cassidy’s face on them, or as the article puts it “Cassidy lunch boxes; Cassidy bubblegum; Cassidy coloring books and Cassidy pens; not to mention several millions of teen magazines, wall stickers, love beads, posters and photo albums.” The listing of products is meant to cast suspicion on Cassidy’s connection to the anti-establishment music Rolling Stone regularly profiled. This suspicion is something Cassidy is well-aware of, telling Green “The magazine is very anti-me and anything I have going for me — like commercialism and all that stuff.” The fact that ABC executives made sure that Cassidy was still barely receiving any profits from these commercial items does nothing to separate him from his reputation as a crass commercial product.

When not focusing on Partridge Family advertising, Green focuses on Cassidy’s reputation as an object of lust. The article is explicit in its discussion of the sexual reaction Cassidy elicits from his teen girl audience. There are mentions of the teen girls’ “twitchy thighs” and at one point Cassidy declares “This is very filthy, but when the hall empties out after one of my concerts, those girls leave behind them thousands of sticky seats.” Once again, Green’s descriptions are ambivalent and detached. Green’s article is unusually open in her depiction of budding teen girl sexuality, but this sexuality is cast as embarrassing and crass. The article acknowledges young female sexual desire as real, but refuses to take this desire seriously.

Cassidy’s sexual appeal is made most evident in the controversial photographs that accompany the article. The cover photo, shot by famed rock and roll photographer Annie Lebowitz depicts a naked Cassidy lying on the grass with his arms outstretched above his head in casual relaxation. The title “Cassidy: Nature Boy” emblazoned by his head gives the image a distinctively Summer of Love feel. Forty-Five years later, and the Lebowitz image remains striking and somewhat shocking. There are many reasons for the image’s lasting impact — the fact that twenty-two year old Cassidy still looks like a teenager, the fact that exposed pubic hair still remains taboo — but ultimately, I think the most shocking element of the photograph is Cassidy’s explicit femininity. Cassidy is small and lithe, his hair is long. In the cover photo he has his arms outstretched above his head, while he looks outwards in pleasure. He looks like the receiver of sexual desire rather than the aggressor. One of the most significant aspects of Cassidy’s image and appeal is that unlike many other teen idols, he is overtly sexual, but he is sexual in a passive way that our culture reserves only for women.

Cassidy’s visual femininity ties into the counterculture’s then disdainful belief that he exemplified the most shallow and consumerist elements of girlhood. It’s an opinion of which Davis Cassidy is acutely aware. In the article, Cassidy talks about his struggle to be taken seriously as a real musician instead of a pin-up boy. He talks about how a snide remark about him from a previous issue of Rolling Stone affected him. “It put a knife into me..And I bled. I went omph, that hurt.” “So I’m very defensive about Rolling Stone,” he elaborates. “I guess that’s kind of a fucked way to be [..] but I would really dig reading something about me that wasn’t, you know, the same old bullshit.”

If Rolling Stone was so dismissive of Cassidy why did they chose to make him the cover boy of their May 1972 issue? Why did they assign their most celebrated photographer to shoot Cassidy in a pose that was meant to provoke? Rolling Stone probably made these decisions for the same reason ABC refused to give Cassidy the sizable profits from his highly successful TV show. Rolling Stone and ABC wanted to exploit Cassidy’s image without acknowledging his personhood or autonomy. Rolling Stone was happy to mock the usage of Cassidy’s face to sell products, but ultimately the magazine chose to use him for the same exact purpose. As I re-read Green’s depiction of Cassidy I wonder if maybe her detailed depictions of “sticky seats” and “twitchy thighs” missed the point. The teen girl attraction to Cassidy wasn’t just about of lust; it was also about identification. Much like the girls who adored him, Cassidy was an object to fetishize, but he was never allowed to take control of his own life.











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- Bloggery committed by chris tower - 2504.15 - 10:10

- Days ago: MOM = 3575 days ago & DAD = 230 days ago

- New note - On 1807.06, I ceased daily transmission of my Hey Mom feature after three years of daily conversations. I post Hey Mom blog entries on special occasions. I post the days since ("Days Ago") count on my blog each day, and now I have a second count for Days since my Dad died on August 28, 2024. I am now in the same time zone as Google! So, when I post at 10:10 a.m. PDT to coincide with the time of Mom's death, I am now actually posting late, so it's really 1:10 p.m. EDT. But I will continue to use the time stamp of 10:10 a.m. to remember the time of her death and sometimes 13:40 EDT for the time of Dad's death. The blog entry numbering in the title has changed to reflect total Sense of Doubt posts since I began the blog on 0705.04, which include Hey Mom posts, Daily Bowie posts, and Sense of Doubt posts. Hey Mom posts will still be numbered sequentially. New Hey Mom posts will use the same format as all the other Hey Mom posts; all other posts will feature this format seen here.

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