[Village Voice] Gene Simmons—rocker, reality star, author, and world-famous tongue—called from Germany for our scheduled interview. So how was Gene Simmons doing? “I get to be me another day,” he responded, blithely. “And that’s never a bad thing.”
Before you go after him with a cartoon buzzsaw, you should know the man’s not exaggerating. He’s on fire—and not just because he’s usually breathing it onstage. All at once, he’s started the fourth season of A&E’s hit reality show Gene Simmons Family Jewels; Kiss keeps selling out tours after what he calls “35 years of confounding the critics”; and now he’s authored the must-grab book Ladies of the Night, “a personal and historical overview” of the fine art of whoring. Is he a client? “I never have delved, as they say,” Simmons swore. But he’s apparently researched the subject even more than Eliot Spitzer has. “It’s often called the oldest profession in the world,” Simmons related, “and it is. At the dawn of man, in what was then known as Eastern Europe in the middle of the Ice Age, one of the first Cro-Magnon females turned to her male counterpart in the cave and said something like, ‘Ugh. Why don’t you get your hairy ass out there and bring me delicious mastodon meat, and I’ll trade you some of mine for some of yours?’ ”
An exact quote, I’m sure. “The 15-year-old pimply-faced boy next-door,” he went on, “wants the sunshine-faced girl next-door, and he’ll pay. He always paid and he always will pay. It’s not prostitutes as such, but let’s be honest—if you take anybody out, you’re paying for it. Whether you call it going to dinner or prostitution or even matrimony, you’re paying. With marriage, there’s traditionally been payment on the way in—a dowry—and on the way out—alimony!” No wonder we gays are fighting for the right to marry: It’ll legitimize our whoring!
Anyway, Simmons interviewed tons of ‘hos for the book and told me: “They said, ‘I love my family and kids, and I’m well-educated. But since I enjoy sex, I thought: Why shouldn’t I get paid for it?’ And it’s on their terms. They decide who they’re having sex with and how much they’ll charge.” And whether to do a skanky music video when their politico client is caught by the big guys.
Can a self-empowering dame make it with Simmons (who’s long been married to onetime Miss November, Shannon Tweed) or does he treat them like caca doody? “Any girl can go to the media,” he argued, “but you’ve never heard anything like that.” But didn’t some of his famous ’70s conquests claim he was, uh, arrogant? “Everybody says I’m arrogant,” he replied, sensibly. That tended to remind him of a story: As God is sitting on his throne, various holy figures from Gandhi to Mother Teresa knock on the door and come in to explain what they believe in. (Love, peace, and other feelgood stuff.) Then Simmons arrives, no doubt in full Kiss makeup. “What do you believe in?” asks God. Replies the rocker, “I believe you’re sitting in my fucking seat!”
It is good to be Gene Simmons.