On Fire for the God Con
The Music Man was a 1957 Broadway show written by Meredith Willson, a musician from the small Iowa town of Mason City. The popular play (and later movie) featured a con man called Harold Hill who ripped off the naive people of River City, a fictional small town based on Mason City. Nearly seventy years later, Josiah Hesse, another Iowan from Mason City, sees the Music Man narrative replaying itself. As Hesse notes in his autobiographical new book, On Fire For God, today's Harold Hills are the megachurch salesmen who descend on small American towns to rip off the local community with their religious claptrap. "They know how to prey on people's fears," Hesse argues about these evangelical preachers, "how to locate the thing that's changing, that's new, and offer something that hearkens back to another era, a pure era of American wholesomeness." As another observant American midwesterner, Mark Twain, once quipped: "History doesn't repeat itself, but it rhymes."
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
America Never Was a Democracy—And That's Why It's Dying Now
That Frog in the Boiling Water is Us: Why Progress Won't Save Us From Climate Catastrophe
The Week AI Began to Act: The Dawn of an AI Stone Age in Which Machines Have Their Own Tools
Trump's Hot Summer of Disorder: How Short-Term Chaos is America's Long-Term Global Strategy
Why Julius Caesar was anything but Trumpian: How Rome's 'Dictator' Actually Saved Roman Democracy
The Resurrection of God: Why Europe's Bestselling Science Book Proves Materialism is Dead
Why Reports on the Death of the American Dream are Greatly Exaggerated
Why Podcasts Are Ruining Our Lives: On the Insidious Charm of Chat
The Chinese Communist School of Hard Knocks: How Xi Jinping's Father Shaped China's Current Tough Guy Leader
Going Soft on China: Is Xi Jinping really a Competitor, not an Enemy, of the United States?
Tech Insider Claims OpenAI Will Be Worth $10 Trillion: Has Silicon Valley Finally Gone Totally Bonkers?
Can Democrats Really Pull a Reagan? How the GOP's 1980 Playbook Could Work for Progressives in 2028
From Six Days of the Condor to American Sky: James Grady on Nostalgia and the American Dream