Elvis Presley

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DrNickNichopoulos-ElvisPresley

Dr. George Nichopoulos wasn’t the first nor the last doctor to open his prescription pad too liberally to the rich and famous. A year after Howard Hughes’ skeletal remains forced Wilbur Thain to face scrutiny, and long before Conrad Murray ever met Michael Jackson, Nichopoulos was called into question (and eventually placed on trial) for indulging Elvis Presley’s medicinal habits. He was acquitted on all counts, but two decades later the man known as “Doctor Feelgood” had his license revoked for overprescribing, which he acknowledged doing. “I cared too much,” he said in his defense.

Nichopoulos just died. The opening of a NYT report of his 1981 trial:

MEMPHIS, Oct. 30— Dr. George Nichopoulos took the witness stand today in his own defense and flatly denied criminal charges that he overprescribed controlled drugs to Elvis Presley, Jerry Lee Lewis and seven other patients. He asserted that his healing duties as a physician were always uppermost in his mind.

Dr. Nichopoulos acknowledged that, as Mr. Presley’s personal physician, he prescribed numerous narcotics, sedatives and stimulants for the singer. But the doctor insisted he did this in the hope of gaining control of a drug dependence that was already established in Mr. Presley and the others. All those named in the indictment had been getting drugs from other sources, Dr. Nichopoulos testified.

”The goal with all these people was to control the medication,” he said in a quiet voice from the witness stand. Prosecutors have produced prescriptions written in Mr. Presley’s name over the last 31 1/2 months of his life, calling for more than 19,000 doses of narcotics, stimulants and sedatives.

However, the defense attorney, Jim Neal, has asserted that many of these drugs were thrown away and that placebos, or inactive pills, were substituted for others. The prescriptions were written, the attorney said, to convince the entertainer that he was receiving real drugs when he was in fact receiving many placebos. Relief of ‘Pain and Suffering’

And there were valid medical reasons for Dr. Nichopoulos to prescribe many of the drugs to Mr. Presley, the lawyer added. ”Did you try to relieve the pain and suffering of Elvis Presley?” Mr. Neal asked. ”Yes,” replied the physician. ”Did you in good faith try to reduce Mr. Presley’s drug habit?” ”Yes.” ”Dr. Nichopoulos, are you guilty of the charges in this case?” ”No.” Over the last seven months of Mr. Presley’s life, Dr. Nichopoulos testified, he wrote seven letters to drug manufacturers ordering placebos. The last of these letters was dated Aug. 12, 1977, four days before Mr. Presley died inhis Memphis mansion, Graceland. The Shelby County medical examiner ruled officially that heart disease caused his death.

Dr. Nichopoulos also testified that Mr. Lewis, also a singer, and the seven other patients named in the indictment were in better condition today, mentally and physically, than they were when they first came to see him.•

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1972 footage of Elvis, already pretty much ruined, five years before dying.

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“He was all alone…in a long decline…thinking how lucky John Henry was that he fell down dyin’.”

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"...or crying."

Black Velvet Crying Elvis- $40 (Williamsburg)

Vintage/antique/collectible black velvet crying Elvis “painting” for sale. Wood frame, amazing condition. Great gift for fans of Elvis or crying.

Bedbug-free home.

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Are you too afraid to debate me, Woodrow Fucking Wilson? (Photo by Gage Skidmore.)

Glenn Beck: I have to tell you, I hate Woodrow Wilson with everything in me.

Decoder: I will dig up Woodrow Wilson’s grave and fuck his skeleton. Seriously, I’ll do it. I’m that nuts.

Glenn Beck: (Writes “Progressivism” on the chalkboard.) This is the disease. This is the disease in America.

Decoder: It caused an outbreak of Abolitionism, civil rights, workers’ rights, voting rights, women’s rights, gay rights, disability rights, Medicare, public education, public libraries, consumer protection, etc.

Glenn Beck: Somebody just sent this to me this week. (Holds up book.) It’s “Progress and Democracy for Rhode Island.” You can’t read the date here but it’s 1938.

Decoder: I’m going to read from an arcane book nobody read even back then and pretend it represents all contemporary progressives.

Glenn Beck: It is big government–it’s a socialist utopia. And we need to address it as if it is a cancer. It must be cut out of the system because they cannot co-exist. And you don’t cure cancer by–well, I’m just going to give you a little bit of cancer.

Decoder: Oh, crap. My colonoscopy is scheduled for Thursday afternoon. I might have to get Janet to have them move that.

Glenn Beck: (Reacts to a towel being placed at the podium by staff.) I’m like Elvis.

Decoder: I mean Old Elvis: bloated, senseless, weepy, embarrassing. I just need a karate outfit. I’ll ask Janet to order me one of those.

Glenn Beck: I’m a–I’m a recovering alcoholic. I’m a recovering alcoholic, and um, I screwed up my life six ways to Sunday,

Decoder: Tough to believe I ever had a drinking problem, huh?

Glenn Beck: I mean, you know, if drinking wasn’t causing me a problem in my life I’d be drunk right now.

Decoder: Instead of just acting drunk right now.

Glenn Beck: When the Republican Party says, wow, I’ve got a problem, please don’t say you’re just like me. Oh, and I’m just like you. No you’re not. Because I would never go to Washington. You will.

Decoder: And then you’ll have to deal with the realities of governing. You won’t be able to hop around on stage in front of a blackboard like a brainless demogogue. You’ll have to think and reason and compromise like adults. I would never stoop to that.

Glenn Beck: America is not a clown show. America is not a circus.

Decoder: Of course, that makes it tough to explain my success.

Glenn Beck: America is an idea. America is an idea that sets people free.

Decoder: Free to think just like me–or else.

Glenn Beck: (Attempts to erase blackboard but eraser doesn’t work well.) This isn’t going to work out well.

Decoder: I mean erasing the blackboard but my life also.

Glenn Beck: When did it become something of shame or ridicule to be a self-made man in America?

Decoder: It never did, but it sounds really populist to say that. Also: I have personal issues about my lack of academic credentials.

Glenn Beck: The Roaring Twenties–it was the largest expansion of the middle class ever. It–people started having telephones, and that evil electricity, and cars, and radios.

Decoder: I really believe electricity is evil. It silently mocks me.

Read other Decoders.

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