Null quotes the queen bee haiku from Fight Club, claiming he bases his entire personality around... a book written by a gay man from Portland:
Fight Club however was inspired by the Cacophony Society, the culture jamming artist group that founded Burning Man, of which Palahniuk was a member at the time.
Cacophony Society members would seek out extreme experiences (for example, urban exploration in sewers, or performance flash mobs) meant to shock and offend, which is arguably the opposite of the far-right moralism of KiwiFarms. So how does Null reconcile being inspired by Fight Club-as-an-analogue-for-Cacophony-Society with the kind of culture he actually fosters on his forum?
Why Chuck Palahniuk Enjoys Making People Uncomfortable
Fight Club however was inspired by the Cacophony Society, the culture jamming artist group that founded Burning Man, of which Palahniuk was a member at the time.
Possibly the most widely known Cacophony member is novelist Chuck Palahniuk,[4] who has mentioned his experiences with the Society in his writings, notably the book Fugitives and Refugees: A Walk in Portland, Oregon.[14] He used the Cacophony Society as the basis for the fictional organization Project Mayhem in his novel Fight Club.[15][11] Palahniuk himself was pranked by a gang of Cacophonist waiters at one of his book readings in San Francisco.[16]
Cacophony Society - Wikipedia
en.wikipedia.org
Cacophony Society members would seek out extreme experiences (for example, urban exploration in sewers, or performance flash mobs) meant to shock and offend, which is arguably the opposite of the far-right moralism of KiwiFarms. So how does Null reconcile being inspired by Fight Club-as-an-analogue-for-Cacophony-Society with the kind of culture he actually fosters on his forum?
Why Chuck Palahniuk Enjoys Making People Uncomfortable

