Coke, Rage & Envy: How The Drug Caused ‘Very Arrogant’ Glenn To Break Up The Eagles

  • 6 years ago
“Rockstars in the seventies believed that cocaine was good for them,” begins music journalist Lesley-Ann Jones in a teaser for REELZ’s new docuseries Breaking the Band: The Eagles. “It did make them lose their inhibitions, it did give them more energy,”

“At that time in history, doctors, lawyers, Wall Street types, they were all doing it,” admits The Eagles funding member Don Henley in a throwback interview.

“Im not really ashamed of anything. I mean, we had an amazing journey and that was part of it,” explains The Eagles founding member Joe Walsh.

As RadarOnline.com readers know, tension between the founding members of the ‘70s American rock band is ultimately what caused them to split after becoming one of the most beloved and renowned musical groups in the world.

Their “sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll” lifestyle, however, only worsened their issues, and created an environment of rage, envy and hostility behind closed doors.

“What cocaine will do is it will kind of amplify those parts of your personality that are the lowest, they’re the brashest, and in Glenn’s case we already know that he’s very confident, that he’s very dictatorial and you put him on amphetamines and you just kind of pump that up even more,” says psychologist Dr. Linda Papadopoulos.

“Cocaine made Glenn very, very arrogant. It made him feel like the king of the world,” recalls a former pal.

“You’ve got people around him that maybe don’t trust him and then that paranoia sets in so what you have is an amplification of every negative and difficult emotion within that band—it becomes sort of a perfect storm for the breakup that ultimately happens,” adds Papadopoulos.

Breaking the Band: The Eagles airs Sunday, July 15 at 10:00 ET / PT on REELZ.

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