{"product_id":"role-models","title":"Role Models","description":"\u003cdiv class=\"field\"\u003e\n\u003cdiv class=\"field-value\"\u003eWaters — the Pope of Trash, director of Pink Flamingos, the man who made Baltimore safe for filth and turned transgression into an art form — writes essays about the people he admires: Johnny Mathis, a Manson girl he believes has genuinely rehabilitated, underground novelist Jane Bowles, a strip club owner in Baltimore, a lawyer who defends death row inmates, Little Richard. The selection is the entire argument. Waters's role models are people who refused every available category — too strange, too committed, too completely themselves to fit anywhere the world had prepared for them — and who built their lives around that refusal with total conviction. The most P\u0026amp;P book about taste as politics ever written: the argument that what you love, and how completely you love it, and whether you love it without apology, is a form of resistance. Waters has spent sixty years proving that being enthusiastically, defiantly wrong by the standards of respectable culture is one of the most serious things a person can do. Every DoCR workshop is downstream of this argument.\u003c\/div\u003e\n\u003c\/div\u003e","brand":"Punk and Pedagogy","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45845110980806,"sku":null,"price":19.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0706\/9066\/8742\/files\/role-models.webp?v=1778796483","url":"https:\/\/punkandpedagogy.com\/products\/role-models","provider":"Punk and Pedagogy","version":"1.0","type":"link"}