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*Click here to download a sound clip from the news talking about how GG knocked out his own teeth.
*Click here to download a sound clip from the news talking about how some radio station went "too far" by playing a GG Allin song. The news guy says that the lyrics to GG's music would "embarrass even the toughest sailor."
*Click here to download a sound clip from the news talking about how GG took a shit on stage and threw it at the audience.
*Click here to download another sound clip from the news talking about how GG took a shit on stage and throw it at the audience.
*Click here to download a sound clip from when GG was on the Jerry Springer Show. This is the introduction that was played before the show started.
*Click here to download a sound clip from when GG was on the Jerry Springer Show. It's of Jerry talking about what GG does at his concerts and how GG was arrested over 52 times.
*Click here to download a sound clip of GG on the Jerry Springer Show talking about what he thinks Rock 'n' Roll is.
*Click here to download a sound clip of GG on the Jerry Springer Show talking about how he helps out people by teaching them how to deal with tragety. At the end of this clip, GG says "If you get raped at my show, your probably better off for it."
*Click here to download a sound clip of GG on the Jerry Springer Show talking about how Christains/fuckheads go to church on Sunday and eat the body of Christ, and how people at his concert eat the body of him. In this clip, he calls some Christain in the audience a bitch.

* To download this file, you have to left click on the link. Four options will appear, choose "save file."


Under this picture, the following article was printed:
      GG Allin, a "punk" rocker from Manchester, is the self-proclaimed "Public Animal Number One," and the infamous lead singer of a group called GG Allin and the Cedar Street Sluts. This is the legend Sweet Potatoe magazine described as "Raw, frenetic, rough, brutal and stupid."
      Allin stands about six feet tall, his black shoulder length hair is held back by a black bandana. His eyes are accented with black liner. There's a small silver ring piercing his nose and a pull tab from a beer can dangling from his ear. He wears a studded dog collar padlocked around his neck. His face is worn, much too worn for 27 years old.
      He sits down on a broken kitchen chair in his Manchester apartment and nurses a bottle of beer in his black-lace gloved hand. The walls of the dark paneled apartment are covered with posters of punk rockers and muscians: Wendy O. Williams of the Plasmatics and MC5. Near the door above the sink, where the black Gorilla amp to his guitar rests, is a picture of Allin with Tiny Tim. On the wall over his bed are two album cover featuring Nancy Sinatra. There is a well-worn Suicidal Tendencies baseball cap in the corner and a broken mirror on top of the radiator. Allin's place is small, but it has atmosphere.
      "Have you heard about me?" he askes. He darts to the bed in the corner of the room where he laid out albums, articles and reviews of his last tour.
      Darting around his room like a lizard, he brags about his two-month "Hatred In The Nation" tour during which he was hospitalized three times for self-inflicted blood poisoning.
      "It was a pretty good tour," said Allin of his trek through the southwestern United States. He talks enthusiastically about another tour that will take him through the midwest, about his new record and a 45-minute rock video called "Tasteless Animal Noise." He is no less anthusiastic about his arrests and the number of clubs that have thrown his out.
      "I got arrested a couple times," he said of the "Hatred" tour. "We're probably the most insane band in the world. We've been thrown out of every club we ever played in.
      "They threw me out of the Casbah three times," Allin said of the now defunct club on Manchester's Elm Street. "I couldn't keep my clothes on." He has been banned from most clubs in the area, including The Zoo, a seemingly impossible task.      "Every time he played, we had to pull the plug," said Neil Schneider, former owner of the Casbah. "He's rather rude and vulgar, but he's a hustler and if he had the porper managment he might make it. He's the Iggy Pop of Manchester."
      Allin's performance rivals that of the early '70's outlandish punk rockers like Iggy Pop abd the Stooges. He jumps on stage and generally knocks himself out. Often, he says he is so bloody, bruised and beaten that he has to be carried off the stage.
      "Sometimes I think I shouldn't do that," he said, "but I like doing that, I like the pain."      His music, he says, defies definition. "We don't fit into any category," he says. "We're the outcasts of rock and roll. I'm more into doing my own thing. It's great because we live the same lifestyle as we play on stage. It's not just a show. I'm not in this for the money, I'm in this to say things," he says, speaking loudly over the music from his duel cassette deck.
      Whatever it is that Allin does, there is apparently a market for it. Inner Light Records in Manchester is one of the stores selling GG Allin tapes and T-shirts.
      "It does sell," said store manager Cathy Maesk. "It's the best selling local stuff." I don't know why, but it's probably people buying to give to friends as jokes. A lot of young kids worship him because he's someone accessable. A lot of sick girls all over the country write him letters."
      "I don't care if people like it or not," he says. "I do it for myself. I'm selfish. I'm basically an angry, self-destructive person. All my money goes to beer, drugs and music. That's why I live in a dump like this. 'Living like an animal' that's my motto.
      While young posing for a picture, Allin grabbed a whiskey bottle from the corner, "Can we take a picture with this?" he asked? Then he grabbed a pistol from a shelf. "Can we take it with my gun?" He had just one other request.      "Just don't print anything nice about me. I don't want it to look like I've sold out, because I haven't."