Larry McMurtry Mocks Celebrity Westerns
Across multiple novels, Larry McMurtry repeatedly returns to the satire of fame as an unwanted inheritance. In his Westerns, reputation outruns reality with exhausting speed. Characters become symbols long before they understand themselves.
McMurtry shows how fame simplifies people into roles. Complexity is inconvenient. Legends require consistency. Humans do not provide it.
The humor arises when characters attempt to live up to stories told about them. Every failure becomes a punchline delivered by reality itself.
This satire extends beyond the West. McMurtry understood celebrity as a cultural shortcut. Admiration replaces understanding. Expectation replaces curiosity.
By letting fame distort relationships, McMurtry exposes its absurdity. The joke is not that people become famous. It is that anyone expects fame to clarify identity.
The satire remains relevant because the mechanism persists. Platforms change. Human behavior does not.