The event, titled "Politics, Prophecies, and Gonzo: What Louisvillian Hunter S. Thompson Got Right and Wrong," takes place at the Frazier History Museum at 6 p.m. on Tuesday, June 11. Among the topics will be a discussion of what Thompson would have to say in the era of President Trump. Roorda said he was immediately excited when he was invited to be part of the panel on Thompson. "For years I’ve preached that Hunter S. Thompson was prophetic, and I’ve often assigned his writing in my courses," said Roorda In a recent class on U.S. history, Roorda said he used four of Thompson's books and two essays about Louisville: “A Southern City with Northern Problems” and “The Kentucky Derby is Decadent and Depraved.” Tickets to the event are $14 and include admission to an exhibit focused on Thompson's unsuccessful 1970 campaign to become sheriff of Colorado's Pitkin County on the "Freak Power" ticket. The event, part of a citywide Year of Gonzo, is free for museum members. The other panelists are:
- Stephen George, Louisville Public Media's president
- Pam Platt, former Courier Journal editorial director
- Tom Eblen, former Lexington Herald-Leader columnist
- Mark Hebert, a former political reporter who is now director of programming and production at the University of Louisville
