For Florida's sole remaining sex surrogate, love is a many splintered thing.
It's not just giant companies cashing in on America's defense industry.
How a throwaway idea at the Barkley ad agency became the "Sonic Guys."
A diner's guide to Texas's oldest Mexican restaurants.
CD — Thisisme Then: The Best of Common (Relativity/Legacy)
Before he hooked up with a major label and palled around with Kanye, Common was a socially conscious rapper who went by the more sanctimonious moniker of Common Sense. This 15-track compilation gathers cuts from the three albums he released back in the day. Common's booming voice and smart wordplay are already there, though it would take more seasoned beatmasters to catapult him to fame. This is where it all started.
DVD — The King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters (New Line)
This amusing documentary chronicles the battle between two old-school video-game nerds, duking it out, one coin at a time, for Donkey Kong's all-time high score. One guy is a science teacher, the other makes hot sauces; both are obsessed with racking up more than a million points on the classic arcade game. Bonus items include commentary, additional scenes, and an animated history of DK.
BOOK — Rap-Up: The Ultimate Guide to Hip-Hop and R&B (Grand Central)
Geeky white sibs Cameron and Devin Lazerine's Rap-Up magazine is written for hip-hop fans who really don't know a lot about hip-hop. The focus is as much on schooling folks on Chuck D as it is on pimping the latest T.I. CD. This book makes a handy primer, spanning from old-school pioneers to modern-day ringtone merchants. Best chapters: "Where's the Beef?," which lays out some of hip-hop's greatest feuds, and the helpful "Drop the Beat" section, which pairs producers with their hits.