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Sexual Healing
Sad stories and otherwise freaky tales from Florida's last sexual surrogate
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Backbreaker
A half-kilo of blow, machine-gun blasts, and a millionaire chiropractor. Does this make sense?
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To Hug a Porcupine
Three little boys set out to destroy the parents who loved them. This isn't how adoption is supposed to work.
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Switch Hitter
Before swinging a bat in a lesbian softball league, pick a side. Gay or straight? Or something else?
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Unfinished Business
A son denied becomes a festering campaign issue haunting Commissioner Eggelletion as Election Day approaches
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Recent Articles by Ben Westhoff
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Talib Kweli
Eardrum (Blacksmith)
Published on September 06, 2007
"Conscious rap" needs to be eliminated from hip-hop's vernacular — or, at the very least, Talib Kweli's name should be stricken from its rolls. Nobody's quite sure what the term means: Music that doesn't focus on rims and bling? Songs wherein the listener's life isn't explicitly threatened? Kweli has said he doesn't like being pigeonholed by the term, and the release of his sixth solo album, Eardrum, seems an appropriate time to let him go. Eardrum is a heaping mess, neither smart nor groundbreaking, and loaded with clichés. "It's been a long journey, but they say that life's path is not about the destination, it's all about the journey," Kweli informs us on "NY Weather Report." Later, we learn that if you can make it in New York City, "you can make it anywhere." "More or Less" catalogs how he feels about a number of mundane issues: "More building, less destroying," then "more marijuana, less coke, more freestyles, less written, more history, less mystery, more Beyoncé, less Britney," and "more happiness, less misery" would be neat. (Gee, thanks.) However, Eardrum does boast topnotch production, and Kweli's adroit flow almost makes up for his crap lyrics. Abandon the shrill platitudes, buddy; they're about as effective as an abstinence campaign.