{"id":17358,"date":"2025-12-08T16:09:05","date_gmt":"2025-12-08T21:09:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/?p=17358"},"modified":"2025-12-08T22:46:18","modified_gmt":"2025-12-09T03:46:18","slug":"tables-turned-the-interview-with-alex-zander-originally-published-spring-1997","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/?p=17358","title":{"rendered":"&#8220;Tables Turned&#8221; an Interview with Alex Zander originally published Spring 1997"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter size-full\"><img fetchpriority=\"high\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"604\" height=\"405\" src=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-MKK-TEAM-1.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-17359\" srcset=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-MKK-TEAM-1.jpg 604w, https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-MKK-TEAM-1-300x201.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 604px) 100vw, 604px\" \/><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-center\">Crown Hill Cemetery Indianapolis IN The MK ULTRA Staff 1996<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>by Chris Weiler and transcribed by Ellen the Felon Marshall<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>I sat down with Alex Zander this crisp wintry evening in Indianapolis in his living<br>room at the \u2018Goth Manor&#8217;, amid candlelight and photographs. You can sense<br>Alex&#8217;s influences everywhere, from his video collection to the huge Warhol<br>image of Marilyn Monroe on the wall. An entire room is filled with signed 8X10<br>promo shots of various performers. I would say \u2018autographed<sup>1<\/sup>, but these are<br>different. They contain personal messages to Alex&#8230;and he cherishes them.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>There was the occasional visit from Sinclair and Nola (Alex&#8217;s two black cats), and<br>the darkness around us was more comforting that imposing. It was the typical<br>Alex Zander mood atmosphere. The type of surroundings that make you seek<br>pleasure in every dark, secret thought you\u2019ve ever had. It&#8217;s a large old house,<br>with ceilings and woodwork that remind you of old friends. Shadows danced<br>over the antique plaster. Somehow, it all seemed familiar&#8230;<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>It is a time during which Alex is facing great adversity in his life. His trust and<br>friendship have been violated. He is struggling to get the next issue of MK Ultra<br>out to his loyal readers. And again, he is finding his future to be uncertain and<br>very much out of his control. The music in the background was a testimony of his<br>feelings&#8230;the dark, emotional music that make you question your own sense of<br>being. But as usual, Alex is forging through without shedding a drop of blood.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>It should be noted that at first, Alex didn&#8217;t want to do this interview, for fear that<br>he might be perceived as self-serving. But just as his interviews get you closer to<br>the minds behind our favorite music and movies, I thought this would provide a<br>unique opportunity for MK Ultra readers to unearth the mind behind MK Ultra. He<br>reluctantly agreed, and sharing a couple beers, we spoke of MK Ultra.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Chris Weiler: Tell me about fhe birth of MK Ultra.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Alex Zander: I did freelance rock journalism for about ten years, and my musical<br>tastes were always changing. I was always open to something different, and the<br>publications that. I wrote for at first were really attracted to that, but I guess I just<br>got too weird for them. I was looking for more emotional music, more&#8230;! don&#8217;t<br>know if I want to say spiritual, but&#8230;there was just more to music than just image. I<br>was looking for something deeper, more emotional, and also intense at the<br>same time. And when 1 started interviewing bands like that, the stories would<br>either get refused-or censored, and they would censor the parts that I thought<br>were very important&#8230;things that might offend some people, whether it was the<br>use of a four-letter word, or talk of suicide. So when I did the first Type O<br>Negative interview in 1994, the magazine I wrote for wouldn&#8217;t run it, and the<br>one that wanted to take it said it was a mockery of Goth music, which is absurd.<br>And Rock Out Censorship, who wanted to run it, had gone bankrupt and<br>couldn&#8217;t run the story until about a year later.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: A mockery of Goth music?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: It was a Goth magazine, and they said they couldn&#8217;t run it because it was a<br>mockery of Goth music. So I had a fit, and I threatened that \u00cd would go and start<br>my own magazine, and everybody around me said, yeah, man, do it! And I<br>said, well, I can\u2019t do it and they asked, why not? I felt like I didn\u2019t know the first<br>thing about printing, about publishing, and they all said, sure you do, you\u2019ve<br>been doing it for so long. So it took a !ot of money, a lot of effort, and a lot of time,<br>and I created MK Ultra.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: And the name, MK Ultra?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I had no idea what I was going to call this thing at the beginning. I was<br>looking for something that was deep, something that I believed in, something<br>sarcastic, maybe something that people wouldn&#8217;t get. And I was watching<br>Dateline NBC or one of those news programs, and they had a story about the MK Ultra experiments, which were of the government\u2019s experiments with LSD from the \u201850\u2019s and late \u201860\u2019s, and what it did to the people who used the drug. And I thought well there you have it. The<br>all-powerful US Government doing sneaky bad things to people and saying that<br>if we do it, it\u2019s wrong. And those are like some of the same views they have on<br>rock music. So I thought it was a little sarcastic, and it meant mind control, but it<br>had a cool ring to it. So I wrote that down really quick so I wouldn&#8217;t forget it.<br>And that was the name that stuck on to me.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: You mentioned that there is more to music than image, but you seem to be<br>into some image-oriented bands like KISS and Marilyn Manson.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Yeah, but 1 really don\u2019t look at them as \u00a1mage-oriented, I mean, it is sort-of<br>cartoonish, but it&#8217;s different, and that is what I like. I like anything that\u2019s different.<br>There\u2019s only one KISS. There&#8217;s only one Marilyn Manson. I just like anything<br>original. For instance, with KISS, there were a lot of imitators, but they were the<br>only ones who stood the test of time. And maybe Marilyn Manson is a bit of an<br>Alice Cooper rip-off, but I think that they&#8217;re a lot ruder, and a lot nastier. They&#8217;re<br>doing what the New York Dolls couldn\u2019t do in the&nbsp;<sup>l<\/sup>70&#8217;s. They&#8217;re just completely<br>different. There&#8217;s no one right now that looks like Marilyn Manson or sounds like<br>Marilyn Manson, and no one looks or sounds like KISS. It&#8217;s just different and<br>original. I think originality is very cool.<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter size-full is-resized\"><img decoding=\"async\" width=\"722\" height=\"526\" src=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-GENE.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-17352\" style=\"width:555px;height:auto\" srcset=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-GENE.jpg 722w, https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-GENE-300x219.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 722px) 100vw, 722px\" \/><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-center\">Dayton OH with Gene Simmons Nov 1992<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Speaking of Marilyn Manson, it seems like you were into bands like Marilyn<br>Manson and Nine Inch Nails for years before they made it big. Do you have a<br>&#8220;sixth sense&#8221; about these bands?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: That&#8217;s a question I\u2019ve been asked even before I went into journalism when I<br>was a DJ on FM radio or in clubs. Again, it goes back to originality. Industrial<br>music has been around for a very long time, longer than I&#8217;ve been into it But<br>Nine Inch Nails represented something completely different. \u2018Nails was<br>emotional. I mean, here was a guy who wasn\u2019t afraid to admit that he had been<br>hurt in a relationship. Here was a guy who was man enough to say, yeah, I&#8217;ve<br>felt like killing myself, and lived through it. He was a survivor. And that\u2019s what I<br>got from \u2018Nails, and they didn&#8217;t make it for a long time. Their album sat on the<br>shelves for a long time before it took off like it did. And someone passed it on to<br>me and said, here, you&#8217;ll dig this. And I played it endlessly. That was a rough<br>time in my life, so I was able to relate to it. I got into Marilyn Manson through<br>Nine Inch Nails because, of course, they were on Trent\u2019s label&#8230;he discovered<br>them and produced them. And it was completely different. It was anarchy,<br>rage, and had all the high profile that punk never had the chance to get. And it<br>was meaner, nastier, and truer then punk because these guys were mutilating<br>themselves and were about mutilation. I don&#8217;t think that&#8217;s something that<br>everyone should do, but if you&#8217;re getting paid to do it, and enjoy it, and you<br>want to do that to yourself and watch it then that&#8217;s great. But I think they&#8217;re all<br>very good players, too. Trent Reznor\u2019s a great player, and everyone in<br>&#8216;Manson&#8217;s a great musician. I mean, you can&#8217;t sell two million records on a<br>look&#8230;you have to have some talent behind it. And they&#8217;ve made it without the<br>help of MTV.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Do you still listen to them?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I listen to \u2018 Nails alot, and not what people think that I listen to. I&#8217;d sooner<br>listen to \u2018Something I Can Never Have&#8217; rather than &#8216;Head Like A Hole&#8217;. I\u2019d rather<br>listen to \u2018Hurt* than \u2018Closer*.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: &#8230;the songs that aren\u2019t covered as much by MTV or radio.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Well not so much that. I just think they&#8217;re more emotional songs. They talk<br>to me more, and 1 can relate to them more. I don&#8217;t listen to them and feel like<br>killing myself. I just know where these guys are coming from, and what they&#8217;re<br>singing about. With &#8216;Manson, I can&#8217;t listen to their new album as much as I could<br> listen to their first album. Just because now it\u2019s so fucking commercial. You see a<br>frat kid with his ball cap and flannel with a Marilyn Manson t-shirt under it&#8230;these<br>guys are spoon-fed everything. They don&#8217;t know what it&#8217;s like to be rebellious at<br>anything. I guess that\u2019s why I\u2019m not so much into the new album as I was the first<br>one.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: The same thing that happened to bands like The Red Hot Chili Peppers?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: The Chili Peppers, as far as I\u2019m concerned, just completely sold out. You<br>listen to Blood Sugar Sex Magik, with \u2018Give It Away<sup>1<\/sup>&nbsp;and \u2018Suck My Kiss\u2019, and what<br>the fuck is this&#8217; Under The Bridge* crap? I mean, they had a hit with that, so they<br>put out a weak album. Sure they\u2019re good players, and there\u2019s still a lot of talent in<br>that band, but they\u2019re no fun anymore. They&#8217;ve turned serious. They pulled a<br>Van Halen on us.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: What up and coming bands are you into now?<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter size-full is-resized\"><img decoding=\"async\" width=\"892\" height=\"581\" src=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-AZ-SHIRLEY.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-17353\" style=\"width:597px;height:auto\" srcset=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-AZ-SHIRLEY.jpg 892w, https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-AZ-SHIRLEY-300x195.jpg 300w, https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-AZ-SHIRLEY-768x500.jpg 768w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 892px) 100vw, 892px\" \/><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-center\">Ft Wayne IN Shirley Manson Oct 1996<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: They&#8217;re not really up and coming anymore, but everyone knows I\u2019ve listened<br>to Garbage for a long time now. I don&#8217;t know, I&#8217;m into this band called Azoic<br>who don&#8217;t even have a CD out, they have a tape out and their CD is being<br>pressed now. But there\u2019s nothing commercial about them. As far as who I think is<br>going to make it, I always said that about Garbage. Mace, I think has the<br>potential to do something big. There&#8217;s a few major labels looking at them, and<br>they have the image that is marketable. Controversial or not, they still have<br>people like us who like them, the girls like them, and they\u2019re fun and dancey<br>enough to have a pop element there.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: MK Ultra features and has featured bands that might be considered<br>\u201cunderground\u201d. What draws you to that type of music?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: That goes back to what we were talking about earlier. It\u2019s original and<br>something different. Y&#8217;know, alternative music used to mean Devo or A Flock of<br>Seagulls, just a wide spectrum. But I just don\u2019t even like the term \u2018alternative\u2019,<br>because it&#8217;s not anymore. I\u2018d rather see a band in a theater or club than in an<br>arena. The more people there are, I think it just takes away from it unless it&#8217;s<br>something like KISS, which is really built on the show. I mean, Nine Inch Nails did a<br>nice big show, but I don&#8217;t want to see Marilyn Manson in an arena filled with<br>50,000 people. It gets boring to me once it\u2019s played, and I hear it all the time,<br>and I&#8217;d rather be around 500 kids who are really really into it,<br>than around 5,000 who are just sheep that are followers. I like the<br>underground element, I like something that&#8217;s different, something that&#8217;s original.<br>Once it\u2019s marketable, then you have a lot of spin-offs. Right now you have a lot of<br> Nine inch Nails rip-off bands. You&#8217;re going to have a lot of Marilyn Manson rip-off<br>bands. It\u2019s like when you had all those glam-rock, cock-rock bands in the &#8217;80S<br>and then you had a dozen or two Pearl Jam bands. It was cool when there was<br>only one. So as long as it&#8217;s different and cutting-edge, it interests me. I get<br>bored very easily with something that\u2019s overplayed and just pounded into my<br>head.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Do you think the term \u2018industrial<sup>1<\/sup>&nbsp;has replaced the term \u2018alternative&#8217;?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: No, I think the term &#8216;industrial&#8217; was coined before alternative.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: What\u2019s the difference?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Oh wow&#8230;you really want me to answer that? Industrial music is just taken<br>from sounds, where alternative music was supposed to be just anything different. I mean, I can\u2019t even answer that. It&#8217;s just two completely different forms of music. Industrial is as different to Goth as Goth is to punk. It\u2019s just completely different, so I just can\u2019t answer that question.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: What kind of music do you listen to when you\u2019re not doing reviews for MK<br>Ultra? I mean, what does Alex Zander listen to when he\u2019s at home and doing<br>dishes, or&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter size-full\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"578\" height=\"428\" src=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-AZOIC.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-17356\" srcset=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-AZOIC.jpg 578w, https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-AZOIC-300x222.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 578px) 100vw, 578px\" \/><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-center\">Indianapolis IN Kristy Venrick of The Azoic May 1997<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: &#8230;(laughs) when I&#8217;m not in the limelight? I think people tend to see me as<br>someone who would listen to bands like Ministry, or they look at me and think,&nbsp;&nbsp;<br>\u2018biker\u2019 or \u2018vampire\u2019. But I like emotional music. I like&nbsp;Azoic a lot&nbsp;right now. I love<br>that band. I&#8217;ve never heard anything that&#8217;s moved me like it since Type O<br>Negative. I listen to Mortiis 1 like that dark wave music that comes out of<br>Norway. A lot of instrumental stuff, a lot of choirs, stuff where the synthesizers<br>make it sound like an orchestra. I like classical music. I listen to Vanessa Mae,<br>the violin player, because it\u2019s modern. But as far as vocalists go, I listen to a lot of<br>Leonard Cohen. I prefer slow, dark, beautiful&#8230;and you can use those words<br>together, dark and beautiful, because it can be. I don\u2019t listen to a lot of fast<br>music when I&#8217;m at home. I get enough of that when I&#8217;m out in the clubs or at the<br>shows. It&#8217;s nice to get away from it, when I can come home, light some candles,<br>and just get into it. I like a lot of music that I don&#8217;t even understand, like the<br>chants. Just very slow, emotional music.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: As far as cutting-edge bands, like Type O, and Mace out of Pittsburgh,<br>radio seems to have dropped the ball on them, and on spotlighting those kinds<br>of bands&#8230;<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: &#8230;what do you mean?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Well, like Enigma, who&#8217;s had three albums out now, which I\u2019m assuming is<br>the type of music you like to listen to yourself&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: &#8230;yes, definitely&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: They\u2019re a great band, they continue to put out CD&#8217;s, but at the same time,<br>you&#8217;re talking about a band that doesn\u2019t get a great deal of radio airplay. Why<br>do you think radio shuns these types of bands?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Because you can&#8217;t turn an Enigma or Type O Negative song into a sneaker<br>commercial. Because it\u2019s not the type of music that sells cars. Radio is total<br>bullshit anymore, and it used to be great. When I worked in radio, it was<br>wonderful. Everybody doesn&#8217;t relate to Type O Negative or Enigma&#8230;it\u2019s not<br>happy music, they aren&#8217;t happy guys. It\u2019s not all peace and love, unfortunately,<br>and these are bands that reflect the truth about life or death, and who sprinkle a<br>little bit of fantasy in, like Type O does. People would rather sing&nbsp;&nbsp;&#8216;Rock and Roll<br>All Nite&#8217; or \u2018Let Love Rule\u2019 or \u2018I\u2019m Just A Girl\u2019. It\u2019s silly. It\u2019s catchy. 1 mean, I don&#8217;t<br>mean to call KISS silly, but &#8216;Rock and Roll All Nite&#8217; is a silly song.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: It&#8217;s an anthem.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Yeah, and it&#8217;s catchy. And Enigma doesn&#8217;t play the type of songs that<br>you&#8217;re going to sing in a drunken stupor, the way that you would sing \u2018Mony<br>Mony&#8217; or crap like that. Radio gears away from it. You just can\u2019t call up a radio<br>station and request Type O Negative&#8230;you\u2019ll get, &#8216;we\u2019ll play it tomorrow\u2019. I<br>mean, what\u2019s that? What do you mean tomorrow? It&#8217;s a request isn&#8217;t it?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: You mentioned the term &#8216;catchy&#8217;.  Do you think that Trent Reznor could<br>attribute Nine Inch Nails\u2019 success to songs like \u2018Closer&#8217;&nbsp;and \u2018Head Like A Hole\u2019<br>that are catchy and that you can dance to?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I don&#8217;t think he was trying to write a hit with &#8216;Head Like A Hole&#8217;, but I&#8217;ve got<br>to wonder what he was thinking when he wrote \u2018 Closer&#8217;. I mean,&#8217; I want to fuck<br>you like an animal&#8217;&#8230;of course, people are going to sing that. I liked it when it<br>came out because it was offensive. I was like, yeah, I like to fuck like an animal.<br>But then again, every frat-fuck college-boy mama&#8217;s-boy is going to sing it too<br>because they think it\u2019s cool. The thing that gets me is that the video is incredible,<br>and they bleep out the word fuck, like we don&#8217;t know what he&#8217;s saying, like<br>we\u2019re stupid. It\u2019s no different. Why don&#8217;t they just go ahead and say I want to<br>fuck you like an animal? Instead it\u2018s like, 1 wanna f&#8211;&#8230;and you&#8217;re like what? 1<br>want to&nbsp;<em>eat<\/em>&nbsp;you like an animal? Maybe Trent smelled a hit there, or maybe he<br>did&nbsp;<em>it<\/em>&nbsp;because he thought it would be so controversial that they wouldn&#8217;t play it.<br>But either way, it&#8217;s not his fault that junior\u2019s listening to it I\u2019m sure he didn&#8217;t mean<br>it for junior to listen to.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Getting back to MK Ultra. basically, you&#8217;re talking about a publication that<br>has  alot of interviews, a lot of reviews&#8230;what do you think sets MK Ultra apart from<br>more &#8220;mainstream\u201d publications like Spin or Interview?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Let me first answer that by asking you if you think that it is different&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Well, I was going to interject in there &#8220;besides the obvious.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: (Laughs) Well, I would hope that it is different. Spin is one incredible rock-n-<br>roll magazine, and I guess that\u2019s why they went under and bankrupt the first year<br>because big Bob [Guccione] took the money away from little Bob. Spin, as far<br>as rock-n-roll goes, is what&#8217;s it\u2019s all about. I mean, I could give a fuck about<br>Rolling Stone, and their charts. Spin doesn&#8217;t ignore anybody, and they really<br>don&#8217;t spend a lot of time trashing bands. Interview has always been a big<br>influence on me as a publisher because I&#8217;ve always been fond of anything Andy<br>Warhol has ever written or created. Interview is packed full of a lot of really short<br>interviews. I think MK Ultra&#8217;s interviews can be a little long, but when I\u2019m editing, I<br>don&#8217;t want to do what my former editors did to me. I don\u2019t want to cut the guts<br>out of an interview if it means something. I\u2019d rather make it a long interview than<br>cut something out that&#8217;s going to make a point, and 1 think the people that we<br>talk to make a lot of points. But I think it&#8217;s darker, I think that there&#8217;s a large<br>market out there for readers that, before MK Ultra, didn\u2019t really have a voice or<br>an outlet or a source of information. Spectre magazine called us &#8216;quickly<br>becoming the guide to alternative\/underground music. That was a huge<br>fucking compliment. The review of our first issue in the Pittsburgh Post Gazette<br>said that we were the voice of underground metal. And at that point we didn&#8217;t<br>know where we were going, so we can&#8217;t blame them for not knowing the<br>difference between heavy industrial music and hard rock. But I think that\u2019s what<br>we&#8217;re trying to do. In a newsprint format, there&#8217;s not a lot of pictures, there&#8217;s a lot<br>of text. There&#8217;s not a lot of money behind it, like Spin and Interview have, so we<br>fill those spaces with guts, with thoughts. I mean, I can\u2019t afford to pay a great<br>photographer, so we fill it with words. And I think the problem with a magazine<br>like Interview now is that it&#8217;s alot of advertising. It&#8217;s alot of pretty pictures of<br>pretty people. As much as I&#8217;d like to do that, I\u2019d rather have a magazine that\u2019s<br>twice as big, going from 48 to 120 pages before I\u2019d ever cut away any of the<br>text. And I think that&#8217;s what it&#8217;s all about. Somebody said once that when you<br>pick up an issue of MK Ultra, you want to read it, not look at all the pictures. You<br>don\u2019t often see a copy of MK Ultra in a garbage can, like you see a lot of other<br>free city publications, like Nuvo. We\u2019re not a restaurant guide. We hope to give<br>you something you won\u2019t read anywhere else, and that was always the intent.<br>We let you read it here because you probably can\u2019t read it somewhere else in a<br>publication that might offend people. When someone&#8217;s laughing at my friends<br>or even me because we don&#8217;t look like them, I\u2019m offended by that. I&#8217;m<br>offended when I see a million people that look the same ridiculing two people<br>who might look a little off.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: So it&#8217;s original?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I hope so. I want to be original. That\u2019s why I&#8217;m getting rid of the UFO<br>section. Man, that was great. When the guys from The Monitor and Rock Out<br>Censorship came to me and said, wow, UFO&#8217;s, Roswell, Project Blue Book, that&#8217;s<br>MK Ultra, isn&#8217;t it? And I was like, yeah, that&#8217;s government&#8217;s big secret, so it was<br>fun. But now, with The X Files, it&#8217;s fucking everywhere. There are alien t-shirts and<br>hats all over the place. It&#8217;s mainstream, so until it goes underground again? I&#8217;m<br>not going to talk about it. Sorry to people who enjoyed that, and we do get a lot<br>of letters about those articles, but it\u2019s too commercial now.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: What surprises you most about your readers?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I&#8217;m&nbsp;<em>amazed<\/em>&nbsp;that most of our readers are college-educated, professionals,<br>and over thirty. I had no idea. But I guess I&#8217;m college-educated, and over thirty<br>myself, so&#8230; I just never thought&#8230;! thought it was going to be kids. I thought<br>college kids were going to be the readers, club kids. I didn&#8217;t know that there<br>were people over thirty and forty that were buying the music that we are into,<br>and there are&#8230;al ot. Some of these people listened to the music before I did.<br>And I get these letters from these people&#8230;parents who write to me and subscribe<br>because maybe their daughter brought it home from a record store&#8230;that just<br>blows my mind.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Do you feel any responsibility toward your readers?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Sort of. To always give them something different. I got a letter from a girl in<br>Cleveland who said that they finally found a voice, and it was MK Ultra. So I<br>hope to never let them down, and I don&#8217;t think I have because I haven&#8217;t<br>received a negative letter yet, except for people being smart-asses about Shirley<br>Manson. So I feel responsible to always give them something different, to not<br>repeat anything, to try to keep every issue different and entertaining. And<br>according to feedback, it has been. I will try to keep them happy in their<br>miserable lives and their inner sorrow. When people are looking forward to it, I<br> feel responsible. And i get letters from people all of the time  time asking about the next<br>issue, or I\u2019ll get a new subscriber who can&#8217;t wait to get that first issue because<br>they think it\u2019s so different. So yeah, 1 feel responsibility to always keep it fresh.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: You do receive a great deal of mail from your readers all over the world,<br>some of which, you publish. Is there much of your mail that\u2019s critical of MK Ultra?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Honestly, it\u2019s all been great. In the beginning, it was like, oh it&#8217;s a really good<br>magazine, but there were some typos. But again, at the time, 1 didn\u2019t know what<br>I was doing. We were doing alot of if on a typewriter, copying it on a Xerox<br>machine, and just pasting it onto paper. So there wasn&#8217;t alot of time. But you<br>know, we&#8217;ll get letters from people at radio stations in Connecticut Maine,<br>California, Spain, Australia, and it keeps me going. It\u2019s all really positive. The one<br>thing people say over and over, and I think in this issue we&#8217;ll print some of these<br>letters, that they\u2019ve read it cover to cover, and couldn&#8217;t find one thing they<br>could bitch about. Man! I think that says it all. That&#8217;s about as critical as it\u2019s<br>gotten so far. I mean, I do try to do things to raise controversy and piss people<br>off, but I haven&#8217;t done it. We ran phony abortion coupons, we have these<br>pseudo-personal ads that are just fucked up, and everyone likes them. So I think<br>I&#8217;m going to lay off the shock. Actually, I think I&#8217;ve quit doing the shock stuff,<br>and I\u2019ll try to get more into the writing. But everything we\u2019ve gotten has been<br>just praises, but then again, we\u2019ve only gotten mail from people who read it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: It&#8217;s pretty obvious that your readers are part of your motivation in<br>publishing MK Ultra&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: &#8230;I&#8217;d say 99 percent of it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: What&#8217;s the other one percent?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: !&#8217;m never satisfied with anything that I do. I don\u2019t think that anything that I<br>do is good enough. And when I do get the praise, I want to do something<br>better. You look at the first issue and the second issue, then you look at the last<br>issue and this issue, and there&#8217;s a world of difference. Any money that I make off<br>this thing goes right back into it to make it better. 1 mean, I would have one hell<br>of a nice fucking car right now if it wasn\u2019t for MK Ultra. But it\u2019s more important to<br>me to publish MK Ultra than it is to be able to drive to a nicer restaurant and<br>spend more money. So that one percent is just me&#8230;l&#8217;m always pushing myself,<br>and I think I\u2019ll always do that. I\u2019m very driven, and I\u2019m driving myself fucking<br>mad.<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: You\u2019ve been called an asshole to work for. Do you consider yourself<br>demanding?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: If a demanding person is an asshole, then I guess I&#8217;m guilty. I&#8217;m a very<br>giving person of people on my staff, and those who have been on my staff can\u2019t<br>say otherwise. I think MK Ultra is in a cool position right now where we can pretty<br>much do anything we want to with bands&#8230;with any band. There are people<br>who definitely take advantage of that position and don\u2019t want to do their jobs.<br>Of course, when they come on, they want to give it all, but once they&#8217;re part of<br>it it seems like they want to slack. What it comes down to is that I&#8217;ve got<br>subscribers who pay money, and who expect to see something in their mailbox<br>every other month. I\u2019ve got advertisers who are paying us money for our readers<br>to buy their product. I\u2019ve got people out there with a lot of expectations. All I<br>expect is someone to turn their articles in on time, or if I send someone to a show<br>to do an interview, 1 expect them to come back with something down on paper,<br>and when someone doesn&#8217;t, I have to let them go. It\u2019s the same as anybody<br>going to a job. You don&#8217;t work at a restaurant to eat the food, you don&#8217;t work at<br>a record store because you want to hear the music, you don&#8217;t work at a clothing<br>store just to wear the clothes. You have a job to do, and at MK Ultra, they have<br>jobs to do, too. I have no use for dead weight, and that&#8217;s why you see staff<br>changes all the time. That&#8217;s why now we have writers on the east and west<br>coasts, because they get their stuff in on time, where someone here in<br>Indianapolis who practices the Generation X midwestern work ethic is just total<br>fucking bullshit I don&#8217;t know what&#8217;s with these people. 1 don&#8217;t have these<br>problems with people who write in Pittsburgh, Columbus, New York, Chicago, LA,<br>or Phoenix. I have the problem with people right here. And if you don\u2019t want to<br>work, then go write for the Star or Nuvo.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Do you see yourself, someone who started MK Ultra as carrying out a threat,<br>changing into a businessman?<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter size-full\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"600\" height=\"424\" src=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-EHC.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-17354\" srcset=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-EHC.jpg 600w, https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/Z-EHC-300x212.jpg 300w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 600px) 100vw, 600px\" \/><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-center\">Louisville KY The Electric Hellfire Club July 1997<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: No. I mean, I hope that eventually I can have better equipment and a<br>better working environment. But again, being that I\u2019m driven and not satisfied, I<br>think that I\u2019m always going to be pushing. Y&#8217;know, I can\u2019t wait to see the next<br>thing that moves me.\u201el can&#8217;t wait to write about it. Type O Negative did that for<br>me. Electric Hellfire Club did that for me. Marilyn Manson&nbsp;at first, did that for<br>me. 1 think that as long as there\u2019s a voice, there&#8217;s going to be something to talk<br>about, and I hope to always be the one. I mean, I don&#8217;t think Larry Flynt&#8217;s ever<br>slacked. And he\u2019ll get the credit he deserves when this movie comes out. I<br>don\u2019t think Andy Warhol ever slacked, and I don\u2019t think Hunter Thompson<br>slacked. And he does more drugs than ever, or so he says. So businessman, no, I<br> just hope to have better tools to work with&#8230;that way I can build a bigger<br>machine.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: The people that you just mentioned, Hunter Thompson, Andy Warhol&#8230;even<br>as long as they\u2019ve been around, they\u2019re still considered artists, rather than<br>businessmen like Bob Guccione would be. Do you consider yourself more an<br>artist than just the publisher of this underground magazine?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I don\u2019t know. I guess it&#8217;s an art form. But I don\u2019t think I\u2019m good enough to<br>be considered an artist, although there is a lot of crap out there created by<br>people who think they are artists. But there\u2019s nothing romantic about being a<br>starving artist. I think I\u2019m from the same school as people like Warhol, Thompson,<br>Tim Burton, Quentin Tarantino, something different, Avant Garde, I don&#8217;t know.<br>I\u2019d rather see myself as a person who exploits artists and exposes artists\u2019 work<br>rather than an artist myself. Writing is an art, and I suppose I would hope that my<br>contemporaries would see me as an artist. I would be flattered.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Would you rather be known for your creativity, rather than your actual<br>product? For instance, when you think of Tim Burton, you don&#8217;t necessarily think<br>of &#8216;Batman&#8217;, or &#8216;Edward Scissorhands&#8217;. You might think more of the common<br>mood projected In his creations.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: When I think of Tim Burton, I think of someone different. I think of the oddball<br>that made it. People finally came around and recognized what he was doing. I<br>would rather people see MK Ultra than the man behind it. It\u2019s 100 percent me. I<br>mean, \u00a1 have a great deal of help, but if someone writes something that I don\u2019t<br>agree with, I won&#8217;t print it, because I might not feel it&#8217;s cutting edge enough, or it<br>exploits women, &#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: &#8230;because when it comes right down to it your name&#8217;s on it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: When it comes right down to it, I&#8217;m the one holding the checkbook. I\u2019m the<br>one paying the bills.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: And your name\u2019s on \u00a1t.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: My name&#8217;s all over it<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: The first time that I read MK Ultra, I was struck by the passion and creativity<br>of you and your contributors. Where do you find these people? And do you do<br>anything to encourage and\/or influence their imput?<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Well, for the first part, they find me. I have not gone out, although I wish I<br>could&#8230;I wish there was a way to find these people, but they seem to have found<br>me, and I\u2019m happy with the people who have stayed with us, that I can tolerate,<br>because I&#8217;m not very tolerant. I guess it\u2019s something within them that moves<br>them. Gail from New York, and Colin from LA, they&#8217;re the very passionate writers.<br>I&#8217;ve got to meet these people. I mean, right now, we just talk on the phone. I<br>met Colin once in Wisconsin at an Electric Hellfire Club concert, and Gail Worley<br>flew in from New York for our Halloween show. And these people are intense. Very<br>normal people to be hanging out with me,  but they\u2019re a little off in the head.<br>And we all believe so much in what we do that we will do it for nothing. Just<br>having our work out there is satisfying. I mean, I don\u2019t make anything off of MK<br>Ultra. Nothing. Gail gets nothing. Colin gets nothing. But they do a bunch of<br>work, and it is passionate. I think it\u2019s encouraging for them when they see it in<br>print. And MK Ultra isn&#8217;t just regional, it\u2019s all over the world now, which shocks<br>me. But I think that that&#8217;s where they get they&#8217;re satisfaction, and they think it\u2019s<br>cool. Gail said that she got some calls from different record companies like<br>Warner and Elektra who were excited to hear that she worked for MK Ultra. I<br>mean, these people respect what we do? That\u2019s fucking amazing. I mean,<br>they\u2019re all about money, while I&#8217;m about the people who make their money&#8230;or<br>(laughs) where they lose money. But they\u2019re passionate because they believe in<br>it, and they believe in what they do. And I believe in what they do one hundred<br>percent and I&#8217;m sure that they will write for me for a very long time.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: I&#8217;ve read and listened to some of the interviews that you&#8217;ve done&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: &#8230;very jolly, right? Shining happy people!<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Do you enjoy Interviewing?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I \u00a1ove it. I love interviewing because I&#8217;m a shy person. A lot of people may<br>find that very hard to believe, but I&#8217;m a very shy person by nature. And in interviewing, you<br>have a reason to talk to these people number one, number two is that I&nbsp;<em>want<\/em>&nbsp;to<br>talk to these people&#8230;+hey are very hard to get to in the business, I guess unless<br>you\u2019re a groupie, which I\u2019m not. I don&#8217;t have the tits for it. As much as I have<br>lost faith in the human race, there are a number of people who make it worth<br>living, and that&#8217;s why I\u2019m still here. I love meeting people, and these people are<br>so interesting to me because their music moves me, and although I don\u2019t let on<br>that I&#8217;m a fan, I think that by the time we&#8217;re finished talking, they sense it<br>because  i know what they are singing about. I get it. I won&#8217;t talk to people who<br>don\u2019t move me. I\u2019m not assigned to interviews anymore, so I don\u2019t have to go<br>out and talk to boring, bullshit artists like that. I don&#8217;t have to go talk to Pearl<br>Jam, or Black Crowes&#8230;like I was sent to talk to them. I mean, 1 enjoyed talking to<br> them, and i enjoyed talking to Blind Melon. But their music did not do for me<br>what Type O Negative, Hellfire Club, and Garbage did for me. I enjoy being<br>around those people, and establishing friendships with them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Has anyone ever intimidated you? Either you were afraid to approach<br>them, or while you were interviewing, you were like, oh shit&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n<div class=\"wp-block-image\">\n<figure class=\"aligncenter size-large is-resized\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" width=\"1024\" height=\"771\" src=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/AZ-PPETER-1024x771.jpg\" alt=\"\" class=\"wp-image-17355\" style=\"width:454px;height:auto\" srcset=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/AZ-PPETER-1024x771.jpg 1024w, https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/AZ-PPETER-300x226.jpg 300w, https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/AZ-PPETER-768x578.jpg 768w, https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/AZ-PPETER-1536x1157.jpg 1536w, https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2025\/12\/AZ-PPETER.jpg 2048w\" sizes=\"(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px\" \/><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n\n\n<p class=\"has-text-align-center\">Columbus OH Peter Steele Dec 1994<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I was worried about interviewing Peter Steele from Type O. My God, and<br>that interview will stand the test of time. I wish every interview could be that<br>intense because I was inquiring on everything, and I asked every question I<br>wanted to. And he answered every question with intensity and passion&#8230;it was a<br>wonderful interview, and we see each other now all the time, whenever we can,<br>and it\u2019s fun. An interview I dreaded doing&#8230;I was so disappointed with Scott Ian<br>from Anthrax that I ripped the tape out of the case and threw it in the trash can<br>in Pittsburgh because I guess I woke him up too early, and we went to have<br>coffee, and he was a dick. But I guess that comes with the territory. Intimidated&#8230;um, more like embarrassed&#8230;my face was-beet red the first time I met Shirley Manson, just because I wrote that thing naming her as the most desirable artist of *95, and there she was standing next to me after I knew she had read that. But intimidating, well I\u2019m not that easily intimidated at all. I<br>don\u2019t get nervous anymore, and I was nervous&#8217; at first. My first interview was with<br>Gene Simmons years ago, and he was childhood idol. And I guess it k\u00ednda did it<br>there, because once you realize that he\u2019s just another man, just a person that\u2019s<br>making a living, then it\u2019s no big deal.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: You mention artists like Shirley Manson, Peter Steele, and Gene<br>Simmons&#8230;these are all people with whom you\u2019ve formed somewhat of a<br>relationship with&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: &#8230;I like to think so.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: What do you think of when things happen, like when Peter Steele posed<br>nude for Playgirl?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I laughed my ass off. I mean, to see that, and I confess, I saw It&#8230;I mean, how<br>could you miss it? (Laughs&#8230;) To talk to him and then see him do that, to me, I<br>was like, hey Pete&#8217;s making the money. And he admits it, he did it for money.<br>But I don\u2019t see that as him. But 1 don&#8217;t look at Peter and think of him doing a<br>layout either 1 would much rather see Shirley Manson do something like that.<br>(Laughs)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: What feature or interview are you the most proud of?<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I&#8217;m still very very proud of the first Peter Steele interview. I think it broke alot<br>of ground and covered alot of territory, and I think it set the pattern that<br>hopefully MK Ultra will always follow. We touch on a lot of subjects that are<br>personal, dark, and humorous. And we try to expose a lot of bands that people<br>have never seen or heard of. But more recently, as far as a feature goes, we<br>have this cover story with Shirley Manson that I think just comes full circle. It starts<br>out at twelve o&#8217;clock and by the time you go around the&nbsp;it comes back to twelve o\u2019clock. I wish that I could write like that all the time. And I didn&#8217;t mean for it to come out that way. 1 was just writing about an experience, and about my problem with insomnia that plagues me. Maybe people won&#8217;t like it, but l\u2018m very happy with it, and I hope that Garbage likes it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: You mentioned that you\u2019re somewhat shy&#8230;would you consider MK Ultra<br>your alter ego?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I wouldn\u2019t say so much an alter ego. I mean, I am a very shy person, and<br>when I\u2019m Alex Zander on stage at an MK Ultra event, I\u2019m out there representing<br>the magazine, and I&#8217;m more approachable. There&#8217;s a reason for people to<br>come up and talk to me. But if I&#8217;m out somewhere where people don\u2019t know<br>who I am, they look at me and think that I&#8217;m either a biker, or a lunatic or<br>something. But with MK Ultra, I get into character at events, and it\u2019s fun. So it\u2019s<br>not so much an alter ego as it is an extension of myself&#8230;it\u2019s my voice saying, hey,<br>come and talk to me and look at me.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: So you&#8217;re originally from Pittsburgh, and you went to the University of<br>Pittsburgh. What brought you to Indianapolis?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: A woman. And I&#8217;m not going to make her ego any bigger by saying who<br>she is. It was the stupidest thing 1 ever did&#8230;the most stupid reason to move<br>anywhere. I\u2019m as romantic as a person can be, but I\u2019ll never make that mistake<br>again, and 1 don\u2019t advise anyone else to do so, either.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Who are some of your influences, and what about them influences you?<br>Not so much in influencing MK Ultra, but who influences Alex Zander in publishing<br>it in creating your articles, in who you interview, in the way you look&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: In Pittsburgh, when I was part of Delta Helter Skelter, our anti-fraternity, we<br>were saying that we were the prodigal sons of, y&#8217;know,&nbsp;<em>these people.<\/em>&nbsp;And they<br>said that I was the prodigal son of Dr. Johnny Fever, Jim Morrison, and Dracula. I<br>can say that Dr. Johnny Fever, the character, was a great influence on me, as far<br>as turning me on to radio. When I was young, at 13 and 14, and saw WKRP, I<br> didn&#8217;t know that he was stoned. I just thought that he was cool. So I guess as far<br>as being outrageous from fictional influence, it was Dr. Johnny Fever. Not<br>Howard Hesseman, but the character that he played on WKRP. Jim Morrison, I\u2019II<br>tell you what. f I had never read that biography, or never heard the song &#8220;The<br>End\u201d, I don\u2019t know what the fuck I&#8217;d be doing right now. I\u2019d probably be playing<br>clarinet or saxophone for some fledgling symphony in the city, with barely<br>enough money to support myself. And Andy Warhol is a huge influence. After<br>reading his books, 1 got in the habit of always taking a camera with me wherever<br>I went. Warhol said that you could be weird and successful too. And I would<br>say Hunter Thompson, Dr. Gonzo himself. I hope to be as intense a writer as he is<br>someday. And that is one hell of a goal to live up to, because he\u2019s legendary as<br>far as I&#8217;m concerned. And these people are all very intense people. I mean,<br>Morrison, intense. Warhol intense.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: You\u2019ve got a pretty impressive vampire film and literature collection&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Have you been talking to Tommy Victor\u2019s ex-wife? (Laughs)<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: What it is about vampires that you find so intriguing?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: What makes you ask me that?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Well, when you look at your movie collection, and you look at your book<br>collection, it&#8217;s hard to overlook the subject matter.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: It just happens that I like fiction and fantasy as much as other people might<br>like football and cars. You can go into somebody&#8217;s house and they might have<br>a million Sports Illustrated videos and back issues, plaques, helmets and shit. But<br>you walk into somebody\u2019s house and they have twenty books on vampires, and<br>they\u2019re a freak. I would say that it\u2019s not so much just vampires, but the undead. I<br>never consciously meant to build a collection of these things. I have just as<br>many movies on zombies. There\u2019s something about life after death, and a<br>vampire just happens to be the most romantic, the most legend of these<br>legends. And I should say these fictitious legends, because I don&#8217;t want anyone<br>to think that 1 believe that there are vampires. If there were vampires, I&#8217;d love to<br>be one, because I\u2019d love to go around making people&#8217;s lives miserable&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: &#8230;you are really opening it up there.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: (laughs) Payback. I have an amazing collection of zombie movies. I<br>mean, &#8220;Night of the Living Dead&#8221;, every version made.\u201dDawn of the Dead\u201d,<br>every version made.\u201dDay of the Dead\u201d, except that I don&#8217;t have that in a box.<br>&#8220;Return of the Living Dead&#8221;, &#8220;The Evil Dead&#8221;, &#8220;Dead Alive\u201d, &#8220;The<br>Reanimator&#8221;,&#8230;there\u2019s something about it. I don&#8217;t think that it ends here, or at<br>least I hope that it doesn&#8217;t. I don&#8217;t believe that we&#8217;re all going to grow wings<br>and float around in the clouds. l\u2018d live to believe, or I wish, that we could go on<br>living as a Frankenstein monster, or a vampire or zombie. It\u2019s just fun to think that<br>you could come back, and do what whatever you want, or whatever you have<br>to do. And I think that vampires are cool. They wear the coolest clothes, they<br>come out at night, they seduce women and the women can seduce men, or if<br>you&#8217;re into Anne Rice novels, the men can seduce each other. But I like Marilyn<br>Monroe, Jim Morrison, and Andy Warhol just as much, and they\u2019re all dead, too. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>I guess it\u2019s easier to have fascination and faith in the dead than it is the living.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Nevertheless, you have quite a few horror films in your collection. What, if<br>anything, do you find shocking?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Somebody sent me some coprophilia videos&#8230;coprophilia is people who<br>l&nbsp;have a fascination with feces, people who like to have themselves defecated  and who like to defecate on other people, and they\u2019re sexually aroused by&nbsp;this. It was shocking, and as sick as this my seem to people, I thought it was funny. Not because I was amused by the defecation and feces&#8230;it was more the fact that someone would feel so little of themselves that they would let&nbsp;themselves be videotaped having a huge loaf pinched on their face. My friend Bart turned me on to the movies of Jim Van Bebber and Mike King. They\u2019re<br>graphic, and were really shocking at first. And then someone mailed me these<br>German torture videos where as far as I can tell a woman was kidnapped, and<br>beaten nearly to death. I mean, she was beaten and sexually abused in ways<br>that I can\u2019t even explain&#8230;it kind of turned my stomach. And then there are snuff<br>videos. People send me videos of people killing themselves, like news footage.<br>The Bud Dwyer thing, someone sent me three camera angles of that, and in slow<br>motion. And it&#8217;s not like what Hollywood makes&#8230;there&#8217;s not a huge splatter of<br>blood and brains on the wall&#8230;I mean, he just dropped. But things that shock me<br>are on CNN. When I can watch our country ignoring our own starving and<br>homeless people, but helping people in other countries, that shocks me. It<br>shocks me to think that we won&#8217;t educate our own, but we\u2019ll send missionaries to<br>other countries to teach them Christianity and the Bible. It shocks me and it hurts<br>me. As much as I think that people should get up and help themselves, there are<br>some people that aren&#8217;t strong enough, who are held back by the system. I<br>think I&#8217;ve lost complete faith in the system, and that shocks me, because we live<br>in a land of opportunity, and not everyone can reach if. If I\u2019m walking down the<br>street, and 1 see this family living under a bridge in a box, because he got laid off<br>from this job that he worked at for 25 years, but only one month away from his<br>pension, and they can\u2019t survive&#8230;or that a factory closes and there are no other<br>jobs around. \u00cd grew up in a part of the country where when I was in high school&#8217;,<br>all the industries closed down, and there was no work. I got the hell out of there.<br>I didn&#8217;t have family keeping me there, so I packed my bags, got on a bus, and<br>went on to do this shit&#8230; But I think that\u2019s what shocks me.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: So there is good in you?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Is that good? I mean, I&#8217;m what the system considers a rebel&#8230;what they<br>consider inappropriate. I have no faith in the system. This system is supposed to<br>be all good, but I don\u2019t see it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: But you are capable of compassion.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I\u2019m very compassionate. Look at the music that I write about.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: The Satanism label has been out there. It may due-to the stereotype that<br>goes along with the type of music that you review, or because of your publishing<br>of gravestones in MK Ultra. Like you said, it&#8217;s a dark publication, and people<br>associate it automatically&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: &#8230;but that&#8217;s associating darkness with Satanism, which are not alike at all. 1<br>had a nickname when I was DJ in Columbus&#8230;they called me \u201cSatan-Boy\u201d. And<br>it was just a fun nickname because I was kinda naughty&#8230;I was infamous for<br>tempting girls with sexual taboos that maybe they hadn\u2019t been tempted with<br>before. Nothing like S &amp; M, or mutilation, or torture&#8230;just fun stuff. I was always<br>exploring. But then I moved here, and I guess I&#8217;m at the edge or right in the<br>middle of the Bible Belt, as far as I can tell, and it&#8217;s very conservative. And the<br>people who associated White Zombie with Satanism kinda pushed White Zombie<br>to the \u2018Say You Love Satan<sup>1<\/sup>&nbsp;type t-shirts, Route 666 stickers, and things like that.<br>They look at it as all tongue-in-cheek, and it&#8217;s very funny. But then there are<br>bands like Electric Hellfire Club and Marilyn Manson who take Satanism very<br>seriously, and let me point out that when I talk of Satanism in the terms 1 do the<br>Hellfire Club and Marilyn Manson, there is a big difference between Satanism<br>and devil worship. Within Satanism, there is no heaven or hell or devil or god.<br>That\u2019s their belief, and their belief alone. Y\u2019know,&nbsp;I&#8217;ve worn black my whole life.<br>My family made fun of me when I was a kid, it&#8217;s just me. Richard Lewis wears<br>black on stage and during his interviews and no one calls him a Satanist. Priests<br>and nuns wear black, and no one calls them Satanists. And there are priests that<br>are far more evil than I could ever be, or Marilyn Manson could ever be. I mean,<br>Marilyn Manson isn\u2019t out there molesting children, then saying he\u2019s sorry and<br>thinking that he\u2019s going to heaven because he&#8217;s confessed and repented. I&#8217;m<br>not a devil worshiper, and  I&#8217;m not a Satanist. People just confuse darkness with<br>Satanists. There are dark elements, like voyeurism, lust, obsession, perversion. I<br>don\u2019t consider those Satanic&#8230;it&#8217;s just human nature. I am, for instance, by<br>nature, attracted to women. I, by nature, want to see what they look like naked.<br>I by nature, want to feel. I feel envy sometimes, I feel greed sometimes, I feel<br>pride. I am proud of MK Ultra, and that\u2019s one of the seven deadly sins. My God,<br>I&#8217;m sorry. These are just all human emotions. <\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Do you believe in a higher power?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I&#8217;m not going to get into that.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: What about karma?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I am a firm believer in karma. I think that if you do good things, good things<br>will come to you. And I&#8217;ve been let down by this a lot. I guess in a way, I live by<br>the golden rule, do unto others. I want to help my fellow man. I just wish<br>sometimes my fellow man would help me. I&#8217;m very lucky to have good friends,<br>and 1 have faith. When I\u2019m down, and just when I\u2019m thinking everyone is terrible<br>and selfish, I come across someone who revives my belief in human nature, that<br>there are good people out there. And I don&#8217;t mean good people like Mother<br>Theresa or Sally Struthers. I\u2019m talking about good-hearted people that, if they&#8217;re<br>able to help somebody, they do. I felt that when I was hitchhiking one time. I<br>got stuck three states away from home in the freezing pouring-down rain in<br>December, and I thumbed across three states. I made it in five hours, because<br>of the people I met I was broke, and this guy gave me twenty bucks to get<br>something to eat. And I never mentioned to him that I had no money, and I<br>didn&#8217;t mention that I was starving. And this guy just gave me twenty dollars and<br>told me to get something to eat at my next stop. It\u2019s people like that who renew<br>my faith in human spirit, and that\u2019s karma. I think that deep down, I&#8217;m a very<br>compassionate person. And I think that if I help so-and-so out here and give<br>them a break, somebody down the road will give me a break when I need it.<br>And it\u2019s come true a few times. But am I Satanic?, no. I don&#8217;t have anything<br>against people in the Church of Satan, and I mean Anton LeVey&#8217;s Church of<br>Satan not people who drink blood and sacrifice babies, and those types of<br>things. I think Thomas Thora of the Electric Hellfire Club is a great person. He*s a<br>very intelligent person, and he&#8217;s fun to be around. But he\u2019s not gonna take<br>anybody&#8217;s shit, you know that. He\u2019s a very talented person, too. My point is that<br>if he\u2019s evil, then you have a lot of darker, more dangerous forces to deal with out<br>there than Thomas Thorn.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: With the trials life has put you through, I think it\u2019s important that people<br>know that MK Ultra isn&#8217;t just some rich kid&#8217;s pet project. You\u2019re obviously<br>drawing from experiences you\u2019ve had. You\u2019re obviously drawing from your own<br>feelings and passion. Can you identify an experience or event in your life that<br>has left the most impact on you?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: First, I should point out that no. I&#8217;m not a rich kid, and I\u2019m not from a rich<br>family. I\u2019ve had a very hard, tough life. I\u2019ve been on the streets. Everything I<br>have goes into the magazine. Someone once commented that my whole life is<br>MK Ultra, and yeah, maybe it is my life right now. I&#8217;ve starved and suffered and<br>fought for this. And right now, it is my whole life. I hope to one day share it with<br>somebody, but it\u2019s not that time yet. But to answer your question, the one thing<br>that changed everything for me was having my heart broken. It has atot to do<br>with the type of music that I listen to. I&#8217;ve always liked emotional, intense music,<br>and horror films. So no, I&#8217;m not going to say that it had anything to do with &#8220;the<br>dark side&#8221;. But when I had my heart broken,! never thought that that would<br>happen. I thought that I was a strong person, I thought that I played it safe, not<br>putting myself in a position where I would fall in love. My relationships were<br>always safe. I would get myself involved in long distance relationships, because<br>it would be romantic, yet there was no chance of deep emotional involvement.<br>And then I had my heart torn out. I think that when it happened and that\u2019s when it<br>all changed. And that may be why I bury myself in this work.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: So, having your heart broken was, in a way, a coming of age? If that what<br>made you what you are now?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: If you want to put it that way. I think it&#8217;s 100% of what made me what I am<br>now, as far as my appearance and the way I live. It&#8217;s been said that I\u2019m<br>intimidating, and I don&#8217;t mean to be, but maybe subconsciously, that\u2019s my<br>defense mechanism. I&#8217;m not into getting my heart broken again. There\u2019s a song<br>by The Sisters of Mercy called \u2018I Was Wrong<sup>1<\/sup>. And I think that song pretty much<br>says it all for me. And I was wrong. So I bury myself in work and journalism. Right<br>now, with MK Ultra, I travel a great deal from here to there and back, and I think<br>it would be impossible to have a relationship unless my significant other was<br>strong enough to deal with that or free enough to go with me. It\u2019s very much a<br>part of my lifestyle, and having my heart broken is why I&#8217;m not in one place for a<br>very long time.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: One of your hobbies that people are familiar with is photographing grave<br>stones, crypts, and the like. How did you get started with that?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I grew up in a part of eastern Ohio where there were a lot of very old<br>cemeteries. It was pretty much the center of the French &amp; Indian War. There was<br>a time when things were hand-crafted. Every time that I look at a huge<br> cathedra! built centuries ago, it amazes me that there weren&#8217;t cranes and<br>machinery putting these blocks together, and it&#8217;s still standing. Unfortunately, in<br>the age we live in, buildings and cars are throwaways. They aren&#8217;t built to last<br>and stand the test of time. But where I grew up, there were a lot of elaborate,<br>beautiful headstones and monuments to the dead. I spent a great deal of time<br>in cemeteries&#8230;they were pretty much my playground. I lived about fifty feet<br>from a gigantic cemetery. And these headstones were old. A stone&#8217;s throw from<br>by backyard under a tree, there was the gravesite of the first person legally<br>hanged in the state of Ohio by a judge. And I guess since I was always into<br>history, I found that there&#8217;s a great deal of history in cemeteries. It just grew into<br>exploring, and keeping a photographic record of what I found. I loved the effort<br>that people would put into these old monuments. I despise the new cemeteries<br>with the headstones that are flat so they can mow over them. I think that a<br>person\u2019s life means more to other people than that. It\u2019s a tribute to somebody\u2019s<br>life to give them a beautiful monument, even if they didn&#8217;t do anything<br>significant. If someone loved them, and they were loved enough for someone<br>to give them a lasting impression that stood the test of time, that&#8217;s the greatest<br>monument of all to someone&#8217;s life. It goes back to the undead thing&#8230;those<br>tombs that have stood there forever just fascinates me. When I see a grave<br>stone from the 1600-1700\u2019s that still looks as good as it did when it was crafted,<br>that&#8217;s beautiful to me. And a part of their life goes on&#8230;their memory. I think that<br>far too few people are appreciated. We can appreciate our presidents and our<br>heroes by giving them monuments, but we can&#8217;t appreciate our friends and<br>family. I hope that somebody thinks enough of me to at least put some cool<br>saying on my tombstone.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: What part of history are you most interested by?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: That always changes. For years I was into the French &amp; Indian war, and a<br>guy named Lewis Wetzel, who was a crazy man who lived in caves in Ohio, and<br>he ran wild through the woods. That just fascinated me. I love history. I love<br>reading about religion. I have books on so many religions from Jewish to<br>Mormon to Catholic. I love reading about traditions in religions, and things that<br>people were willing to die for. I\u2019m crazy about history, because if it weren\u2019t for<br>history, where would we be now?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: What, if anything, do you think you&#8217;d be willing to die for?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Jesus&#8230;damn that\u2019s a deep question&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: You walked into it.<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: There was a time when I could have died for my stepmother. There was a<br>t\u00edme when I could have died for a friend. And there was a time when I could<br>have died because I was tired of living. I guess I could die for anything that I<br>believe in, but I&#8217;m not ready to die yet. I am not done. So ask me that<br>tomorrow.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: What mark do you want to leave? If it happened tomorrow, what cool<br>saying do you want to have on your tombstone?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I hope that the mark that I leave behind is that I made a difference, and that.&nbsp;is a big mark to leave. But I want to make a difference. I guess my mission right now is to let people know that there is more than what you are being offered by the mainstream media. There are a lot of VanGogh\u2019s out there. VanGogh wasn&#8217;t appreciated until years after he died. He sold one painting in his lifetime. And I want to find the VanGogh\u2019s of today, and make their lives a little more worth living, and a little happier while they\u2019re here, rather than them dying and<br>becoming legends later. A sad example is the guy from Sublime who died of a<br>heroin overdose, and they have a hit song now&nbsp;long after he\u2019s dead. I don\u2019t<br>think that people are appreciated enough while they&#8217;re here. And I want to find<br>the underground musicians and writers and artists, and at least give them their<br>fifteen minutes of fame. And as far as what they can put on my tombstone I<br>don\u2019t think I\u2019ve reached that point yet.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: There are artists that have reached their highest success after they&#8217;ve<br>passed away. You can\u2019t deny the public&#8217;s fascination with artists like&#8230;well, like<br>Jim Morrison, Kurt Cobain although I don\u2019t want to lump people like Kurt Cobain<br>in with people like Morrison or Marilyn Monroe. But there\u2019s obviously some<br>fascination with it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Well, none of these people were happy people, either, if you think about it. I<br>think they were all victims of the entertainment business. I mean, when Marilyn<br>was getting older and the President and his brother had finished<br>having their way with her, she was a throwaway. No one had any use for her.<br>Yes she wanted to be a star, but that&#8217;s Hollywood for you. Jim Morrison was<br>pushed. The movie portrayed him to be a drunken asshole! I mean, he did<br>drugs, and he did drink, but he wasn&#8217;t that bad when The Doors started. It was<br>fame and the business he was in that pushed him to do what he didn&#8217;t want to<br>do. He never wanted to be in front of thousands of people. He sang with his<br>back to the audience most of the time. He got drunk because, and I can<br>sympathize with this, it was the only way he could go on and face people. He<br>was a shy person. And Kurt Cobain, Jesus Christ, this was a guy in a three piece<br>band, and I&#8217;m happy as hell that he got to see some of his success, but I think<br> they&#8217;re making one hell of a lot more money off him now than he got to see in<br>his short lifetime. He was a tortured artist, and a victim of the entertainment<br>business as it is now. They exploit and use their artists, and it&#8217;s a bunch of fat old<br>bald guys getting richer and richer off of young stars.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Which do you think is more powerful, the tribute of the fans being<br>fascinated with bands like Nirvana, actresses like Marilyn Monroe, or artists like<br>Andy Warhol or do you think the exploitation after their death is more powerful?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: In what way?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Well, for example, it would have been easy after Elvis Presley died to just<br>stop. Or it would have been easy after Marilyn Monroe died to maybe just put<br>out a couple biographies, and that would be it.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: People like Marilyn are timeless. I don&#8217;t think anyone would be able to<br>duplicate what she did, although people try. But the fans won&#8217;t let them die.<br>And as long as the fans are there, the fat cats are going to keep churning out<br>product Books, pictures, t-shirts. As long as people will buy it, they\u2019ll make<br>money off of it. I just wish the money would go back to the families. I look at<br>Andy Warhol\u2019s grave&#8230;I go there a lot when I&#8217;m in Pittsburgh&#8230;and it bugs the hell<br>out of me. Whether or not you think he was great he was the most successful<br>artist that ever lived. He had his hands in everything. Publishing, painting,<br>writing, photography, film, music. He did it all. I wish that I could do that, and I<br>want to do it, or at least I will try. But he has this two foot by one foot block in a<br>hill that is sliding down. The graveyard is literally sliding down this hill in Pittsburgh<br>from the subway vibrations. And I think that he deserves so much more than<br>that. But I don\u2019t think Andy Warhol is as marketable as Kurt Cobain or Jim<br>Morrison or Marilyn Monroe, because Warhol was looked at as a freak. But<br>somebody&#8217;s making money off of him. But at least Warhol made sure his money<br>went to scholarships and things like that.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: A comparison I want your thoughts on is the one between Nirvana and<br>Blind Melon. Nirvana and Blind Melon both achieved somewhat of the same<br>level of success prior to the death of their respective lead singers. But then<br>Nirvana seems to have gone much further&#8230;<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Nirvana was more marketable than Blind Melon. No one&#8217;s making money<br>off of Shannon Hoon, who was a real cool guy, by the way. He was a very cool<br>guy. And a misunderstood guy. Blind Melon was more of a 60\u2019s type of a band.<br>I talked to their bass player when we were hanging out, and he compared<br>Shannon to Janis Joplin&#8230;they came from that school, where Nirvana was garage<br> rock&#8230;l hate the word&nbsp;&#8216;grunge\u2019. It was more trendy than Blind Melon. They were<br>more successful. The numbers were better. Nirvana had Geffen records behind<br>them&#8230;the &#8220;almighty powerful\u201d Geffen records. I mean, Kurt\u2019s been dead for a<br>long tim\u00e9 and they still come out with a new album every year. That\u2019s total<br>bullshit and next year, there\u2019s going to be another album out. I just think it\u2019s sad<br>that they both had the same problem with the same drug. But 1 think they died<br>for different reasons. I think that Courtney Love killed Kurt Cobain, and heroin<br>killed Shannon Hoon.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Do you think that has anything to do with it? That one was a suicide and<br>one was an overdose<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I consider the first time you stick a needle with heroin in your arm as suicide, <br>no matter what. Whether you die from it the first time, or you die from it five<br>years after you&nbsp;start, it\u2019s suicide the first time you shoot up.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: But Kurt Cobain putting both barrels of a shotgun in his mouth gave the<br>record company the opportunity to disassociate him with heroin abuse. Where<br>with Shannon Hoon, the last thing he\u2019s known for is that needle in his arm.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: Kurt Cobain had a problem with heroin. They talked about how it had to do<br>with his ulcers and things, but 1 think that fame had alot to do with that. Kurt<br>Cobain wasn\u2019t a rock star. They made him a rock star. And I don\u2019t think that<br>Shannon Hoon was a rock star. They made him a rock star, too, for a short while.<br>With Cobain, his wife, and this is just how I feel&#8230;obviously he tried to commit<br>suicide when they were in Europe. When he did commit suicide, his wife was<br>away, and the baby was away, and when a guy\u2019s in a suicidal state, you don\u2019t<br>leave him by himself. I mean, the guy wanted to die. You don\u2019t leave him<br>alone. And if she loved him so much, how could Courtney Love let her album<br>come out a week and a half after he died? She didn&#8217;t have to be there to pull<br>the trigger, and I don&#8217;t think there&#8217;s this big conspiracy. But I\u2019ve read that she<br>had him murdered, and maybe she did&#8230;I don\u2019t care. She may as well have<br>done it, because she wasn\u2019t there. When someone\u2019s that depressed, you don&#8217;t<br>leave them by themselves&#8230;I\u2019ve been there. I\u2019ve wanted to die. I don\u2019t now,<br>but&#8230;you just don&#8217;t leave someone alone. It&#8217;s the final straw. When you think<br>you\u2019re alone, and you have no reason to live, then you\u2019re not going to want to<br>live. I think Kurt Cobain is very brave for what he did. At least he had the balls to<br>take it into his own hands and fulfill his ultimate destiny. He just wanted to go.<br>But maybe he wouldn\u2019t have if he would have had a different woman, or if<br>Courtney had been there. But it all goes back to heroin when you look at it. He<br>was fighting an addiction, he didn&#8217;t want to go on doing smack anymore, and<br>that&#8217;s a terrible thing to live with.<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><em>At this point Alex and I took a break to shed the mood we had gotten<br>ourselves into. We tried to make each other laugh (Alex has a tremendous sense<br>of humor) and pilfered the last of the beer from the \u2018fridge.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Where do you see yourself and MK Ultra five years from now?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: That\u2019s one of the questions you learn to ask when you&#8217;re in school. Man, I<br>don\u2019t know. I mean, I know where I\u2019d like to be, but I didn\u2019t see MK Ultra where it<br>is right now. First of all, I didn&#8217;t see MK Ultra in Indianapolis, then going to<br>Chicago, and I certainly didn&#8217;t see it going any further than Pittsburgh. I thought<br>it would be just a city entertainment newspaper when we started. But I can&#8217; t<br>wait to see where it takes me. I don\u2019t want to go backwards, and (laughing) it<br>certainly can\u2019t get any worse than it is now. I think that MK Ultra is at it&#8217;s lowest<br>point now because it&#8217;s being restricted by being in Indianapolis. But I don\u2019t<br>have a lot of distractions here. In five years, I see MK Ultra in Chicago, I see it<br>having a lot to do with the underground music scene there, and I see Nine Inch<br>Nails reaching Elvis Presley proportions, as far as being accepted. There was a<br>time when they couldn\u2019t show Elvis\u2019 hips on TV, now it&#8217;s funny. I see MK Ultra<br>riding along with it, but breaking away, too. I see Chicago, I see making a<br>difference, breaking some bands, I see expanding. If all goes well, it will be<br>much bigger, and it will be a force to be reckoned with. It&#8217;ll make a difference.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Do you think the scene in whatever city you happen to be in influences MK<br>Ultra, or does your main influence come from elsewhere?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I\u2019m not necessarily influenced by any city. I think there is an MK Ultra<br>\u201cscene&#8221;, but there&#8217;s definitely no scene here in Indianapolis. A scene comes<br>together, and people come together. But in Indianapolis, everyone is selfish,<br>everyone is backstabbing, and nobody wants to share the spotlight And that&#8217;s<br>why I think that MK Ultra doesn\u2019t fit in well here. We&#8217;re considered an east coast<br>magazine, and they love us on the west coast, although I don\u2019t know why. I<br>guess it\u2019s because we really are different. I don\u2019t see MK Ultra being a part of<br>any scene&#8230;we\u2019II always dance on the edge of what the scene perceives as<br>what\u2019s in. As much as I want to see Trent Reznor be Elvis Presley, I think that once<br>he does, we&#8217;ll just go the other way. If Peter Steele became Elvis Presley, maybe<br>not, but I don&#8217;t think he will, so I won&#8217;t have to worry about that.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Peter Steeie as the fat Elvis dead on the toilet? Or Peter Steele the success<br>Elvis was?<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: i don\u2019t think Peter would let himself go that way. Ever. But he\u2019ll take a lot with<br>him when he goes, you can be sure of that.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Peter&#8217;s written some pretty unreal stuff, some of which I&#8217;ve read. Do you<br>see MK Ultra publishing anything he\u2019s written?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I don\u2019t think people take what Pete says seriously, and I don\u2019t think that Peter<br>takes what he says seriously. Sometimes I&#8217;m sure he does, but I think the more<br>people look up to what he says, the more he just laughs at them. I don&#8217;t know,<br>though, I&#8217;m not Peter Steele. But the Gospel According to Peter Steele&#8230; I think<br>I\u2019d much rather read a chapter of what he has to scry than anything written by<br>Matthew, John, or Luke. It&#8217;s much more fun, and makes for more interesting<br>reading. He gets to the point.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: You mentioned fading away from some features published in past issues.<br>One thing I\u2019ve not only read in MK Ultra, but also experienced at MK Ultra<br>functions, is the tongue-in-cheek humor that is very much a part of it all. Will you<br>continue with that? Will you continue basically flaunting what pe\u00f3ple think you<br>are?<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I don\u2019t know&#8230;! don&#8217;t think that I&#8217;ve really let people figure out who I am. I<br>mean, I think that I&#8217;ve said a lot more than what I thought I\u2019d say in this interview.<br>But I think I&#8217;ll always be a bit of a smart-Alex. (Laughs.) Was that tongue-in-<br>cheek enough? But I&#8217;ve got to get away from what people expect to see.<br>Don&#8217;t expect to see more of what you\u2019ve already seen, but expect it to be as<br>unexpected as what you have seen. I don\u2019t like to repeat what we&#8217;ve done.<br>Although we\u2019ve run two Peter Steele interviews and two Gene Simmons<br>interviews, I think that we were talking to them at different periods of time. I<br>mean, we were talking to Gene Simmons when he was in Kiss without make-up,<br>then we were talking to him when he was getting ready for the reunion tour. We<br>talked to Peter Steele before Type O broke and had a gold album, then we<br>talked to him afterward. It\u2019s all about things 1 like. You\u2019re going to see more<br>features about people like Mortiis and these bands from Norway that no one<br>knows about. That is the ground that we haven&#8217;t broken into yet, and I\u2019m really<br>looking forward to it. We\u2019re going to stay dark but we\u2019re not going to be evil.<br>We\u2019re not going to portray an evil image anymore&#8230;we\u2019ll let people perceive us<br>that way if they want. But I\u2019m not going to make light of it anymore. I&#8217;11 find<br>other things to make light of.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>CW: Since you don\u2019t intend to let people get to know you &#8216;all they way\u2019, what is<br>it about Alex Zander that you want people to know that they don&#8217;t know<br>already?<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>AZ: I want people to realize that I really do care about what I\u2019m doing, whether they<br>agree with it or not. 1 want people to know that at least I took a chance and that<br>I tried. I don\u2019t want anybody to tell me that I can\u2019t do anything, because they&#8217;ll<br>find out that they\u2019re wrong. I\u2019m a fighter and a survivor, and I have a lust for<br>what I want to do, and I\u2019m far from it. I want people to know that I am a<br>dreamer, and that I&#8217;m making my dreams come true. And anybody can do<br>that, you just have to believe in yourself first.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Crown Hill Cemetery Indianapolis IN The MK ULTRA Staff 1996 by Chris Weiler and transcribed by Ellen the Felon Marshall I sat down with Alex Zander this crisp wintry evening in Indianapolis in his livingroom at the \u2018Goth Manor&#8217;, amid candlelight and photographs. You can senseAlex&#8217;s influences everywhere, from his video collection to the huge&hellip;&nbsp;<a href=\"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/?p=17358\" rel=\"bookmark\">Read More &raquo;<span class=\"screen-reader-text\">&#8220;Tables Turned&#8221; an Interview with Alex Zander originally published Spring 1997<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":17359,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_coblocks_attr":"","_coblocks_dimensions":"","_coblocks_responsive_height":"","_coblocks_accordion_ie_support":"","neve_meta_sidebar":"","neve_meta_container":"","neve_meta_enable_content_width":"","neve_meta_content_width":0,"neve_meta_title_alignment":"","neve_meta_author_avatar":"","neve_post_elements_order":"","neve_meta_disable_header":"","neve_meta_disable_footer":"","neve_meta_disable_title":"","ngg_post_thumbnail":0,"_themeisle_gutenberg_block_has_review":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[11,7],"tags":[],"class_list":["post-17358","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-innerviewz","category-news"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/17358","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=17358"}],"version-history":[{"count":2,"href":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/17358\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":17371,"href":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/17358\/revisions\/17371"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/17359"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=17358"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=17358"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/mkultramagazine.com\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=17358"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}