The Wall Street Journal wonders if Irving Azoff is the man who can save rock ‘n’ roll, and heralds the return of the green-haired animated superhero known as Captain Planet;
Cahl’s Juke Joint reviews Eddie Mack: The Complete Recordings and Gurf Morlix’s Last Exit to Happyland;
Eddie Money proves that the rock-musical trend has finally gone too fucking far;
Everyone’s favorite Lefsetz goes cuckoo for the new U2;
On the Trail of the Great shows some love for singer/songwriter Don McGlashan;
Ickmusic issues a disappointing update on Prince’s newest Web venture, then reviews J.J. Cale’s new album, Roll On;
Rolling Stone takes a peek inside the upcoming Zappa box, Lumpy Money;
Idolator interviews Ne-Yo;
The Beastie Boys talk to the BBC about their “strange” next album, Tadlock’s Glasses;
Wings for Wheels posts the eight funniest words in movie history;
Topless Robot counts down the eight most awesome old school 3-D flicks;
Slacktivist looks at the other side of the myth of the undeserving poor;
Kinder Trauma relives the horror of Toto’s “Stranger in Town” video;
The long-lost 20th take of “Revolution 1” makes its way onto the Web;
Def Leppard, Cheap Trick, and Poison just made our old pal Kurt Torster cream in his acid-washed jeans;
Jeff Vrabel, a.k.a. the Michael Phelps of Monopoly, looks under the Boardwalk of the game’s 4,219th reinvention;
Styx, REO Speedwagon, and 38 Special have come up with a “rock ‘n’ roll stimulus package” that we urge every state governor to reject;
Steven Page splits with the Barenaked Ladies, breaking the tender heart of our very own Jason Hare;
…and Taylor Hanson, Bun E. Carlos, Adam Schlesinger, and James Iha debut their first single as Tinted Windows, “Kind of a Girl”:
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