On August 10, 1967, a short-haired, pre-Led Zeppelin Robert Plant walked down a West Midlands sidewalk toward a courthouse, flanked by demonstrators bouncing signs in protest of Plantโs drug-related charges. โNo condemnation without investigation!โ One sign read. โRobert Plant must go free,โ implored another.
Within the context of the hazy, pot-smoke-filled Summer of Love, the protest was timely and dramatic. It was also completely fake.
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Robert Plant Staged a Drug Bust Protest as A PR Stunt
In the Summer of 1967, Robert Plant was pursuing a career as a rock โnโ roll vocalist with the English rock outfit Band of Joy. His manager, Mike Dolan, was in charge of PR. Dolanโs role as public relations manager was a fairly quiet affair until Plant got a traffic violation for โdriving without due care and attention.โ Plant had pulled out in front of a passing car and ran into a treeโa milquetoast infraction that hardly suited a rising rock โnโ roller.
So, Dolan took a few creative liberties and, er, re-framed Plantโs upcoming court appearances. โRobert Plant is well-known for his sympathy with the โFlower Generationโ and being an ardent supporter of the campaign to legalize the smoking of cannabis,โ Dolan wrote in a press release for local music paper The Midland Beat. โIn view of this public appearance, a large number of flower children, and other Robert Plant fans, have decided that this will be an ideal time and place to display their support to Robertโs beliefs.โ
Confused? Letโs catch up. Dolanโs press release claimed that Plantโs court appearance had to do with drug charges, not a minor traffic violation. The statement also mentioned a โlarge numberโ of protestors, but the real number was around seven peopleโmostly Plantโs bandmates, his girlfriend, and other acquaintances. In short, Dolanโs entire press release was a fabrication meant to get the aspiring rock starโs name in the papers. Amazingly, it worked.
A Double Win For The Future Led Zeppelin Vocalist
Band manager and renegade press maker Mike Dolan told The Midland Beat that nearly 30 fans of Robert Plant had crafted banners and signs in protest of Plantโs (fake) drug charges. In reality, only seven people accompanied Plant to court. Though, they did bring signs that referenced marijuana, including ones that read, โHappiness is pot-shaped!โ and โDonโt plant it. Smoke it.โ
Just as Dolan suggested, countless members of the press flocked to the West Midlands sidewalk to photograph the woefully mistreated rockstar (heavy on the air quotes). Plant wore South Asian clothing, including an Indian bridegroom chest piece. The women who walked alongside him wore mini-skirts and strappy sandals. In appearance alone, the event was quintessentially 1967.
Once inside the understandably curious courtroom, Plant defended his case and pled not guilty. Because the prosecution couldnโt prove to the magistrate that he had been careless when pulling out in front of a moving car, the court dismissed Plantโs case. Dolanโs fake protest also gave Robert Plant invaluable press in the earliest days of his career, making August 10, 1967, a pretty fantastic day for Plant, all things considered.
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