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d-34534House OversightOther

Anecdotal recollection of a personal encounter with Groucho Marx

The passage is a private, non‑political narrative with no concrete names, dates, transactions, or allegations involving public officials or institutions. It offers no actionable leads for investigatio Describes a one‑time personal encounter described as a 'weekly orgy'. Mentions Groucho Marx expressing cynicism toward institutions and Lyndon Johnson in a dismissive man Includes a brief, unrelated

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #015374
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a private, non‑political narrative with no concrete names, dates, transactions, or allegations involving public officials or institutions. It offers no actionable leads for investigatio Describes a one‑time personal encounter described as a 'weekly orgy'. Mentions Groucho Marx expressing cynicism toward institutions and Lyndon Johnson in a dismissive man Includes a brief, unrelated

Tags

historical-figurepersonal-anecdoteentertainmenthouse-oversight

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EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
Wednesday--time for our weekly orgy.” The interviewers left in a hurry. Sheila and Marcia led me up the stairs to my loft bed, and we had a delicious threesome. It had never happened before, and it would never happen again. At one point in our conversation, Groucho somehow got into a negative space. He was equally cynical about institutions, such as marriage-- “legal quicksand” --and individuals, such as Lyndon Johnson, referred to as “that potato-head.” Eventually, | asked, “What gives you hope?” He thought for a moment. Then he just said one word: “People.” | told him about the sketch | had written for Steve Allen, “Unsung Heroes of Television,” with the man whose job it was on You Bet Your Life to wait for the secret word to be said so that he could drop the duck down, and Groucho told me about one of his favorite contestants on the show. “He was an elderly gentleman with white hair, but quite a chipper fellow. | asked him what he did to retain his sunny disposition. ‘Well, I'll tell you, Groucho,’ he says, ‘every morning | get up and | make a choice to be happy that day.’” Groucho was holding onto his cigar for a long time, but he never smoked it, he only sniffed it occasionally. “Everybody has their own Laurel

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