Mark Lindsay’s viral two-cent royalty check isn’t just a sad joke—it’s a stark expose of how music royalties trap even legendary artists in poverty, while uncovering a chilling link between his band’s music, Quentin Tarantino, and the Manson family murders.
On March 6, 2026, just three days before his 84th birthday, Mark Lindsay, the iconic lead singer of Paul Revere & the Raiders, posted a photograph on Facebook that would ignite a firestorm. The image showed a royalty check dated November 26, 2025, from NBC Universal—made out for a mere two cents.
The check, issued via SAG/AFTRA, laid bare a brutal truth: even bands with enduring cultural impact often receive pittances from residual and sync fees. Paul Revere & the Raiders dominated the 1960s with four top 10 Billboard Hot 100 hits and claimed the #1 spot in 1971 with their version of “Indian Reservation (The Lament of the Cherokee Reservation Indian)” [Parade]. Yet decades later, Lindsay’s two-cent windfall exemplifies how legacy artists are left behind by compensation models designed for a bygone era.
Lindsay paired his post with a live cover of “Money (That’s What I Want)”—a song written by Motown founder Berry Gordy and Janie Brown, first recorded by Barrett Strong and later reinterpreted by acts from the Beatles to the Flying Lizards. The irony was unmistakable: a man whose voice defined an era was essentially paid in pennies for his work.
The story quickly evolved from a quirky anecdote to a portal into Hollywood’s darkest secrets. Lindsay and his producer friend Terry Melcher once resided in the Benedict Canyon home later rented by director Roman Polanski and his wife, Sharon Tate. In August 1969, Tate and others were murdered inside that house by followers of Charles Manson—a crime that would shock the nation and inspire countless works of fiction.
That grim history resurfaced in 2019 with Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time … in Hollywood, a film that fictionalized the Manson era. Tarantino’s soundtrack featured multiple Paul Revere & the Raiders tracks—“Good Thing,” “Hungry,” “Mr. Sun, Mr. Moon,” and “It’s Happening”—cementing the band’s sonic imprint on a nostalgic vision of 1969 Los Angeles [Parade].
At a Grammy Museum event that year, Tarantino shared the stage with Lindsay to discuss the film’s music and its Manson connections. “Paul Revere & the Raiders was exactly the kind of band that would have rocked my little socks off,” Tarantino remarked, praising Lindsay’s smooth vocals and the band’s signature revolutionary-war costumes. He then delivered a chilling revelation: “And the reason Manson knew of Terry Melcher was because of Paul Revere & the Raiders.” [Los Angeles Times]
This convergence of music, cinema, and true crime is uniquely Hollywood. Lindsay’s two-cent check symbolizes a system that undervalues its pioneers, while his band’s soundtrack presence in films like Licorice Pizza (which featured “Indian Reservation”) secures a form of immortality money can’t buy. The Manson connection adds a layer of cultural gravity: Tarantino’s film didn’t just use the Raiders’ music—it wove their real-world history into its fictional tapestry, reminding audiences that the line between art and life is often terrifyingly thin.
For fans, the story is a reminder that the music they love is entangled with histories both glorious and gruesome. For industry observers, it’s a case study in how legacy acts navigate an economy that frequently fails them. Lindsay’s wry post, set to the tune of “Money (That’s What I Want),” becomes a protest in miniature: if this is what “two cents” looks like for a rock legend, what does it mean for the thousands of creators building today’s cultural bedrock?
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