Imagine, if you would, a rock star just...vanishing...
No Instagram stories. No GPS pings from their iPhone...just gone.
In 1982, that’s exactly what the lead singer of The Clash, Joe Strummer did. At the absolute peak of his band’s fame - right before the Combat Rock album dropped - Joe decided he’d had enough of the band’s drama. He didn’t check into rehab, or a spa; he just hopped a train to Paris and disappeared for three weeks.
While his manager was panicking and the press was whispering about suicide or a massive publicity stunt, Joe was living his best life in a tiny apartment in Montmartre. He grew a beard, blended in with the tourists, and spent his nights hitting dozens of bars until the sun came up.
But, BY FAR, the most unbelievable part of this story was that without a single day of training, he decided to run the Paris Marathon. His “training” was pure rock ‘n’ roll: 10 pints of beer the night before and zero running for a month. He finished the race, grabbed a beer and a smoke at the finish line, and was found by a private investigator a couple of days later.
If this had happened in 2026, every news crawl from Duval to Tokyo would be screaming “STRUMMER WATCH”! He’d be on somebody’s TikTok throwing a chair through a window at a pub, while threatening to beat up paparazzi snapping pics outside.
Instead, Joe just walked back into the studio like he’d been out on a 3-week run for a pack of smokes, and got back to work. We really don’t make ‘em like Joe anymore.