VIEWPOINT

view from the 27th floor

As an editor for DC Comics I included an op-ed column in most of the comic books I edited. The column, called "View From the 27th Floor," was so-named because my office looked out over Seventh Avenue. This is an archive of unassorted and unapologetic observations on the human condition. As much whiny complaint as sermon or essay, and of only marginal literary value at best. But, hey, it's my website, so I get to blather on and on and on and on and on about the death of intimacy brought about by the minivan, and other scintillating topics.

gone


Divorce is a lot like a death that you just keep on dying. The cynical view of divorce, of relief or even joy at having parted ways with your hated enemy, is a wholly inaccurate and immature view of what is the most painful process imaginable. If you are considering divorce and think divorce will bring you relief from your struggle, please think again. Divorce only brings you a new struggle, a new emptiness and a new unhappiness. Like abortion, it creates as many problems as it solves and leaves you the shell-shocked walking wounded, trying again and again for the kind of Cinderella love we were promised as children. Those gentle lies our well-meaning but ultimately ignorant parents told us as they ingrained severe un-truths in us. Un-truths about Happily Ever After. Programming we spend our lives trying to overcome as we continue to search for a Happily Ever After that simply does not exist. Since the divorce, the closest to love I've been was one Christmas when I kissed her. I pulled away and just kind of assaulted my dear friend, who meant the world to me, with a truth I was actually startled to hear myself saying out loud: I still love her. It was a terrible thing to say, but my new friend caressed my cheek and whispered back: I know.

family plot: the last safe american bigotry


The Colorado Springs City Council, now front-loaded with white conservatives, repealed four month-old ordinance that extended health benefits to same sex partners of city employees. The vote came as no surprise and they made no secret of the fact that their very first order of business was going after this ordinance. This is such a lovely town, this little place in paradise. But, like many other little places in paradise, this town hides a terrible ugliness: a smug intolerance for anything and anyone who is not them. As lovely a place as this is, and surely there are few lovelier places in the world than rural Colorado, beneath the surface lurks a rural thinking, one driven more by fear than logic. A mid-1960's Leave It To Beaver mindset that endangers the most basic freedoms of Anyone Who Is Not Us. I  presume this to be a mystery, if not exactly a paradox, that God condemns homosexuality while, at the same time, creating homosexuals. No rational vein of thought suggests homosexuality is a lifestyle choice, but, it is, rather, part of the human genetic makeup. In that context, making criminals of homosexuals seems wrongheaded. To suggest someone can be born into an inescapable sin is to deny the power of the cross. To suggest that a person must war against their own nature or, I dunno, lock themselves in a closet, and embrace shame and scorn just to make it into heaven and be embraced by a loving God is paralyzingly stupid. In this context, "Family Values" becomes a kind of code. Whose values? Whose family?

the gospel of george


My question is, does knowing there's a reasonable and possible explanation for extremely bad behavior excuse the behavior? This is my struggle. As a minister, my job is to understand. Or, even if I don't understand, to at least dress like I understand. Does God send us to hell, even if our poor choices were caused by sleep depravation? If we have some chemical imbalance inside our brains, isn't that His fault? Figuring out where the line is between dysfunction and, say, evil, is a tough nickel. Maybe the best advice I can offer (or solicit) is understanding the dysfunction, likely, inhibits our impulse control. This suggests the disorder doesn't actually cause us to be selfish, mean, arrogant narcissists. It just reveals that character by removing our behavioral safety locks. If it wasn't already in someone's nature to be, well, the bad friend, then all the ADD in the world couldn't make them become that. But a lack of sleep can certainly amplify something you already are. Which is my armchair know-nothing psychologist's way of suggesting there is a case for setting boundaries and, yes, for figuring out where to draw the line.

i would have liked to have seen
montana in high definition


Paramount Pictures has recently re-issued the Jack Ryan "franchise" films on DVD. A franchise by only the thinnest definition, since they keep re-casting the Ryan character and since only one of the films was any good. John McTiernan's Hunt or Red October, better known as Die Hard On A Submarine, is, simply, one of the greatest pop action adventures ever made. It is a canonical A-List Must Have film for any home theater enthusiast. Unfortunately, the re-release of Red October is, at best, marginally better than its original slapper. A brand new transfer clearly and obviously made from the same telecine as the THX Laserdisc (I would know: I own the LD), the reissue fails miserably at giving this fine film the dignity and respect it deserves. The film suffers, painfully, from a lack of resolution, a clear indicator that the telecine was not a new high-definition print prepared for DVD's ultra high resolution but the same ol' print made for the murky Wal-Mart crowd's $8.99 VHS rack. This is painful, demoralizing hack work. Which now passes the torch of least favorite home video vendor to Paramount.

the elvis-ing of mj


It is entirely possible nothing even remotely sexual transpires in Jackson's room with those boys. Jackson, in his mind, could still be eleven years old. At eleven, many of my friends bunked out at one house or another, guys sleeping on the floor, on sofas, on beds. Nothing even remotely sexual went on, and, frankly, the issue never even came up. But, it is just as possible that Michael falls in love with the boys or the boys fall in love with him and, in the pre-dawn of their sexual awakening, the boys are much more vulnerable to a weeping, heartbroken Jackson who may cross the line between playmate and predator. Whichever case it is, I am convinced, based on what I have seen, that in Jackson's mind, at least, he has done no harm. The scariest part about the documentary, for me, was Jackson's bald-faced lies. Most obviously the lie about his extensive and terrible plastic surgery. Jackson, I am sorry to say, is a guy who just lies. And this doesn't help him make his case for the harmlessness of his communal bedding of preadolescents. Jackson intended to charm and to warm his image for us, but instead he creeped us out. He is a creepy, lonely, lost guy. I have great empathy for him, for what has brought him to this sad place in his life. And for the sad fact that, like Elvis before him, Jackson has grown too powerful and too isolated for anyone to intercede and halt his spiral.

his way


Having learned absolutely nothing from history, President Bush is pushing forward into a war without popular support of the American people. Bush, who has no apparent sense of political timing, has alienated the five African Americans who actually may have liked him (National Security Advisor Condaleeza Rice among them) by taking on a Supreme Court case regarding collegiate affirmative action practices. Why the president chose now, when he needs the nation to rally around him, to toss so explosive a political grenade over the fence is just beyond me, other than it speaks to the utter political ineptness of the man. Maybe it was yet another diversion attempt from the fact Bush never caught bin Laden, is powerless to do anything against Kim Jong Il, and really has no case for sending a quarter million Americans to Baghdad. These guys in the White House are criminals. They are criminally petty and possibly criminally stupid or possibly OJ Stupid. Or, maybe they're just nuts. Michael Jackson dangling his kid over the rail. Whichever it is, there is no excuse, none, for the United States to ever start a war.

those who reman


The Remans looked goofy. The enslaved alien race from the Romulan sister-world Remus, the Remans were cast as slimy, pale-skinned bug-eyed freaks in prosthetics so laughable bad that I, and many around me, could not stop laughing whenever they appeared on-screen in this year's spectacular Trek flop Star Trek: Nemesis. Eking out, at this writing, less than $40 million at the U.S. box office, Nemesis is the worst Stark Trek disaster since the William Shatner-helmed The Final Frontier. Adjusted for both inflation and budget-v-income, Nemesis may be the biggest Trek feature flop of all time. Nemesis writer John Logan, who also co-penned the Oscar®-winning Gladiator, knows a lot about Romans but little about Trek and apparently nothing about how the Romulan villains function. Nemesis misses its mark early on, bouncing off of the atmosphere and trailing off into space. We are left, mouths agape, wondering precisely what drugs Trek executive producer and chief bottle washer Rick Berman is on. Word of mouth is disastrous as the good ship Enterprise sails off in this unsatisfying, humiliating finale. Nearly as big a disaster as Joel Schumacher's gay love fest Batman And Robin, Star Trek: Nemesis is, as that film was, an extinction level event. A franchise killer.

cop out


My favorite TV show, NYPD Blue, is simply no longer worth watching. I will probably continue to tape the rest of the season, but then, adios! as I, and doubtless thousands if not millions of other deeply saddened viewers, retire the 15th Precinct from our viewing schedule. The show has lost its way, going from bizarre to bad over the past three seasons. But even bad is preferable to lame. Bad has a certain entertainment value. Lame is just inexcusable. There is no greater crime in broadcasting than boring your audience, and NYPD Blue is, finally, boring me. Bochco and Clark have either lost interest in the show or can't remember how to make it work anymore. Or, maybe they just don't know any good writers. I could take the show being weird. I could even take the show being bad: every show has its highs and lows. What I can't take is the show being dull. I suppose I will continue taping on inertia, hoping the show will pull out of this tailspin, but I am not overly optimistic about the show's chances. The wheels have come completely off of the wagon this season, and worse than being bad, the show is criminally dull. I think it's time for me to collar up.

oj stupid


In this Age of The CEO Perp Walk, changing the tune of the American press from the economy to national security would seem a good idea. It is, of course, preposterous to assume the administration would actually put anyone in harm's way for political gain. I am not suggesting this is what they are in fact doing. I am also not saying anything about Iraq having the world's second largest oil reserve. Bush is not saying anything about it, either, not even if only to dispel the thought that we're out to grab the oil. This is how evil, how conniving this all looks. Not talking about the politics or the oil only encourages that line of cynicism. Even if the administration's motives are absolutely pure, their good takes on the appearance of evil by the timing of their initiative and their silence on these kinds of issues. Skepticism is a cancer to any military campaign. While preparing this country for war, the administration has done itself and this nation a disservice by encouraging our cynicism with maneuvers that are either too clever for us to parse or are exactly what they appear to be: stupid. I am suggesting that they are stupid. Very stupid. Or perhaps they are OJ Stupid: pretend to look stupid, leave blood trails, drop gloves, low speed Bronco chase, so the defense goes, "You can't possibly think he's that stupid? It's a frame up!" which makes OJ Stupid a very smart maneuver. So Clinton was the victim of a vast right wing conspiracy, OJ was set up, and this Iraq business can't possibly be about the 2002 elections because that possibility really is just too ridiculous and obscene. Which, to me, means the Bush White House is either Stupid Stupid or OJ Stupid. Stupid Stupid if they are genuinely protecting vital US interests while not muzzling Karl Rove and Andrew Card (and not hiding a clearly uncomfortable Colin Powell). OJ Stupid if all of that chaos was meant to make us suspicious of the administration's motives, while dismissing the obvious because it's just too skeevy to be contemplated.

short view


Excerpts from my weblog, on whatever's on my mind at the time:

Cop Block: CBS Scores With Hack and Robbery Homicide Division
DeBunk: Diamonds Are A Despot's Best Friend
Off The Wall: What Michael Jackson Should Do
1 Simple Rule: What Your Teenage Daughter REALLY Needs To Know
Still The One: Bill Clinton on Letterman
Still Waving: The Profit & Loss of 9|11

black out:
fox's whitewashing of bulworth


Black people. by and large, did not go see Bulworth. Bulworth was a film almost nobody saw, grossing only $26 million, despite very good if not rave reviews. What made Bulworth interesting to me, and the subject of my latest rant, was 20th Century Fox's concerted effort to un-play the race card in its marketing of the film, a campaign that focused on the high farce of a U.S. Senator having a mental breakdown and putting out a contract on himself, while downplaying, if not completely obfuscating, the fact that Bulworth is, largely, a black film starring Warren Beatty. In its misguided effort to appeal to Beatty's white-shoe fan base, and perhaps to not offend blacks, Fox splashed images of Jack Warden, Christie Baranski and Oliver Platt all over the place, and largely dismissed the huge cast of black actors and their fine performances. Marketing Bulworth was, certainly, the rock and the hard place for Fox, but I think their handling of the film was ham-handed verging on capricious, as they, from all appearances, deliberately tanked Beatty's film, and never made much effort to market it to the audience who might have embraced it— African Americans. Bulworth is brimming with African American actors, most with speaking roles. Intelligent roles, funny roles, a wide spectrum of intelligently and credibly drawn characters, led by Halle Berry and Don Cheadle. I didn't even know Berry was in Bulworth until I saw her walk into the church scene and, delighted, said, "Hey— Halle's in this!" Bulworth is not an easy fit in our new uber-PC Great Society, but I can't help but hold Fox accountable for burying this very funny film, with this great cast and this great soundtrack, just because they don't have enough faith in themselves, in Beatty, in the work, in the performances or, frankly, in America, to believe a film like Bulworth could go out and do business. I find it insulting that, apparently, Fox feared the African American community was either too thin-skinned or too stupid to get the joke, and that the credibility of the fine black actors involved did not, apparently, bring enough gravity to the roles or the film to earn it credibility within our community.

stranger than fiction


In Nixon, Anthony Hopkins was clearly doing Nixon, but he was obviously Anthony Hopkins as well. A composite character, a neo-Nixon, emerged from this combination of personalities  that satisfied us that, yes, this was Nixon on the screen, but it was also familiar enough as Hopkins for us to not be jolted out of the story. Alternatively, Aussie film director (and Bill Clinton clone) Roger Donaldson opted to not even try for a JFK clone in the melodrama Thirteen Days, choosing Bruce Greenwood, a man who has, I guess, a head shaped like Kennedy's but otherwise does not look or sound much like him, to fill the film's center chair. Thirteen Days succeeds, however, on the sheer strength of Greenwood's acting ability. Greenwood simply runs away with it, turning in an understated and restrained but weighty performance that delivers every knot in JFK's stomach during  the Cuban Missile Crisis. In Ali, however, director Michael Mann reaches for Muhammad Ali at the expense of Will Smith, losing Smith in the process, and most of Ali's potential audience with him. Had more of Smith been in the mix, had we gone for the composite Ali rather than the literal Ali, this film would have been hilarious, I mean a scream, and the box office would have been far healthier. In a film that got so very much right, I am stunned at how wrong they got Ali. I have absolutely no clue how Smith won a nomination for this performance. The difference between this film and a great film would have been to let Will Smith not only be Ali, but be Will Smith at the same time. That, my friends, would have truly been a knockout.

philly: case closed


Case ClosedI was getting ready to turn in last night, figuring I'd taped NYPD Blue, only to discover I had not, in fact, taped Blue but taped the series finale of Philly. An odd leftover show, I suppose, as they'd just had their season finale two weeks ago. I was stunned by the suggestion that this show had been canned, and wondered what moron at ABC programming made that call. This was a show just bursting with potential, and stocked with colorful characters who would only become more colorful; an infrastructure that would become more dense and purposeful as the show found its way. But it needed to be allowed to find it. I suppose the main problem with Philly was the show's star herself. Kim Delaney has always been a delightful and talented actress, but, perhaps, in struggling to flesh out Kathleen Maguire, Delaney still grapples with the toughness of Diane Russell. Diane always worked well in an ensemble. She was an interesting voice in the chorus and occasional lead singer, but she was not a solo act. Kathleen Maguire lacks the gravity of Diane Russell, and Kim Delaney thus far lacks the injunctive demand a soloist must impose to get us in front of the tube every week. I'm not sure what it is, but Delaney does not have it: the stuff that makes me not wanna tape her but watch her.

a bug's life


Bugging OutThe Goblin mask sucked. And, I'm sorry, but maybe I missed a meeting: to me, Kirsten Dunst just isn't that hot. Both Peter Parker and Mary Jane were both way out of character: Peter was too wimpy (Peter is not a wimp), and MJ was, well, there really wasn't enough to Dunst's portrayal to even characterize what she was way too much of. Having said that, let me say this, as sincerely as I possibly can: this is, possibly, the finest super-hero film ever made. Had the movie only had great stunts, had it only had a script you could swear Stan Lee wrote (except that his Mary Jane was way more interesting than Dunst), had it only been a fabulous special effects bonanza, I still wouldn't have cared. What absolutely floored me was not just that spider-Man could move, but that he moved like Spider-Man. Not like Tim Burton's idea of how Batman moves, but how Spider-Man actually moves. This was a film obviously created by people who actually knew something about Spider-Man. People who loved Spider-Man and who cared a great deal about getting it right. 

sex & the single minister


I'm trying to work through this, this communications gap between men and women, between ministers and laity, between Christian and Jew, between New York and California. Between us, whoever that is, and them, whomever "they" are. The only thing we can ever be sure of, in this life, is that they are not us, and we certainly are not them. And, somewhere, some of "them" are confused by why a practicing minister has a picture of a half-nude woman on his website. The short answer is, of course, that it's none of your business. But, see, I've made it your business by posting all of that whiny blather, by telling you how to live. I really don't tell anybody how to live, I just tell you how I live. The rest is up to you. But, the last thing I want to do is confuse anybody. And, besides, just talking about all of this gives me an excuse to post more shots of happening babes in bathing suits, so why not. I'm not sure I understand in what way Carla is demeaning. Is she demeaning in the sense of many rap groups are demeaning to blacks— that they make our struggle that much harder because they reinforce negative and superfluous stereotypes about blacks in this country? Does Carla's pinup shot set back the cause of women's rights and encourage men to continue to objectify women? If that's your case, then, I suppose you have a strong one.

the secret garden


David Hamilton: The Age of Innocence / Aurum Press © 1995 I'm not certain why society has traditionally seen female sexuality as a threat. I have a notion the main reason men have abused and subjugated and repressed women over the centuries owes more to our own insecurity and massive yet fragile egos. There is enormous power in the eyes of woman. In her smile. In her warmth. I suppose men have traditionally seen that as a threat, one to be severely dealt with. By extension, I'll suppose the open warfare on female sexuality speaks directly to the issue of male domination. If a woman learns she can satisfy her own sexual needs, it vastly diminishes the power men have over her. A woman's body is a male asset, and he will stand for no one touching her intimately— not even herself. In a world where sex is used to sell virtually everything, masturbation is used to sell absolutely nothing. Where television is inundated by couples of varying marital status engaging in on-screen coitus, masturbation, a much safer alternative to intercourse, is still too taboo to make the airwaves, and arrives on film only in the context of baked goods.

noprah


David Letterman's valiant campaign to become an invited guest on The Oprah Winfrey Show came to a tragic end today. Dave glibly noted in his now infamous Oprah Log: "Day 82: I no longer want to be on your damned show." I liked to bust a gut laughing, even though I was sad to see this, one of Letterman's best bits in years, go packing. Taking a joke to its logical conclusion and then stretching it (and his audience's patience) far, far beyond all reasonable tolerance is a Letterman specialty. Stevie Wonder once said something like, "First, I do it right. Then someone else will come along and do it neat." Wonder was referring to his trademark over-long songs, wherein he hammers the listener with a hook for seven minute stretches, bludgeoning the listener into picking up the irresistible melody. And, that's Letterman: drilling us with the same joke, relentlessly, week after week after month, going on hiatus and coming back with the same gag, wearing out our patience beyond all reason, until, finally, the joke morphs into a tribal experience. It becomes greater than itself, humor on a whole new level, as America (at least Dave's America) assimilates the phenomena into its cultural lexicon.

jingle this


Christmas, to me, meant the Grinch made my mother go away so I could have some flashing robot that I'd play with for exactly nine days and three hours. Christmas was my being intimidated by the local "cool" kids bragging about their spoils, and my own sister, my own blood, joining in the chorus of people who despised and rejected me because I was different.The cumulative effect of this tradition, of a childhood like that, was to develop thick skin and an arsenal of weapons of mass intimidation. I suppose part of the reason I come off fairly acidic and sardonic is it's a learned reflex. Hurting my feelings is beyond the powers of most mortal men, as I have learned to just roll with the critical punches, and unleash the fury of a childhood spent in solitary confinement. The field mouse grown to become Mighty Field Rat, Slayer of Narcissists.

a platinum complication


Sara is an artist. She paints with words. Art conveys ideas, emotion and concepts in a visceral and intellectual way. Art connects the producer and consumer, linking them in a common experience. Sara is webmaster of plantinumcomplication.com, a site that exists, apparently, as a hobby (much as this one does). She is a 20-ish college senior from upstate New York who likes some band called Orgy and (shudder) U2. Sara's studying something she calls "neuropsych" and is currently being hammered by her GRE's. She is, frequently, terribly happy and terribly miserable and she parties with her friends and hides from psychotic stalkers and worries about her future and her place in the world. About right for someone her age. The site is taken from two of her favorite songs, Platinum from Orgy's album Candyass, and Complication, an instrumental track of off Fragile, a release by the band Nine Inch Nails. Now, this is either the most cynically calculating manipulative bitch I've ever met, or, more likely, this is horrifyingly real. A personal bulletin board on How Sara's Feeling At This Very Moment. We're on the ladder outside her bedroom window, watching this person make the painful transition from child to woman, and she is brazen enough or desperate enough to not mind that we're there, fogging up her window. I've chosen to believe this is more bravery than manipulation. Actually, I've chosen to receive it as art. Cumulatively, as a piece of work, the content and design rise to that standard, evoking emotional and intellectual response and connecting producer with consumer.

the emperor's new nose


I'm not quite sure what to say about Michael Jackson. Certainly, most everything that can be said has already been said about Jackson, arguably the greatest living pop performer in the world. Does that make him the king of pop? Hardly, and Jackson's insistence on grasping for a crown nobody has otherwise awarded him makes him seem desperate and out of touch— two things no true pop king should ever be. The first thing you notice about Invincible, Jackson's first new record in a great while, is Michael appears to have a new nose. It's a happy nose. A mortal nose. A What, me worry? nose.

wave this flag or else


The gulf between Them and Us has never been wider, and the greater tragedy of this new war is the rallying of White America, in a  plangent strum that is certainly heartwarming and glorious to behold, but is, for many of us, merely a spectator event. We applaud and cheer and are brought to tears by this great coalescing of America, but it's not our America that's being coalesced. And the sloganeering all sounds like code. Patriotism as observed through a chain link fence. This is why I don't like talking about 9.11. Because a great many people who want to discuss it or want me to discuss it really don't want to hear what I have to say. They want another voice in the chorus. Wave This Flag Or Else.

room with a view


The first thing Keys does is curse at me. Besides being artistically empty, the cussing demeans Keys as a woman, and cussing over Fur Elise demeans the music and the musician. It prejudices an entire segment pf her potential listeners against her: clean cut, family oriented, church-going youth may be taken aback, and old farts like me may be flatly turned off, rightly assuming that whatever follows her shit is likely equally idea-starved. Now, I guess I should preface this by saying Alicia Keys vaguely resembles one of my cousins, a girl I adore like she was my own child, while still wanting to drown her after being around her more than five minutes...

the ostracized negro


I'd like to think it's just that I've outgrown it. That my disdain for much of the hip-hop culture is borne out of generational differences and the arrival of middle age. But, by any rational objective standard, the main thrust of the urban black culture is anti-moral and, ultimately, self-loathing. It advocates the ontological rape of black women ... it imposes an anti-intellectual standard on young black men while incongruously defining their existence by an unsustainable standard of material wealth, sexual acuity, controlled substances and binge drinking. Failing to achieve or sustain that lifestyle, especially in the absence of a quality education, leads many young black men into often unrecoverable spirals of low self-esteem... The patterns are, by any reasonable and objective standard, pathological; a race subsumed with self-genocide by means of centuries-old unreparated wounds growing increasingly cancerous with each successive generation.

the emperor's new limo


The Emperor's New LimoGeorge W. Bush was sworn in yesterday as the 43rd president of the United States, and I have experienced a profound epiphany: the new presidential limousine is just hideous. The car, however, is completely adequate, in tone and spirit, for our new president. I could have wished no more appropriate a banner for our new, ideologically bankrupt president, a coward of epic and stunning proportions who clearly does not himself believe he was actually legitimately elected. Emotionally, this "transfer" of power feels to me like a game of jacks played by ten year-olds, where one of them snatches the prize from the other and then goes on to stonewall, in the thinnest and least defensible kid-argument, as to why he "won" the game.

in search of a sister


In Search of A SisterI didn't write this.  This is exactly the woman I'm looking for. But I'm not looking. And this person of maturity, spirituality, intelligence and strength either doesn't exist or is already married, probably to some dope named Leroy who guzzles beer and cheats on her, but that's a rant for another day. In the meantime, there is this. And, yeah, if I could find her, she'd be the one.

 

 

the regretted child


The Regretted ChildThe death of sexual intimacy usually coincides with the purchase of the minivan, the worst idea a wife could ever have. In the ongoing struggle between emotion and intellect, most wives I've met sabotage their family's future by alienating a man from his manhood, forcing him into maroon or tan Plymouth Voyagers and so submerging herself in motherhood that she denies him the mystery, thrill and hunt of his glory days. To many a married man, the arrival of the minivan signals his best days are behind him  and the decay of his relationship with his best friend is a slow retreat into eunuch-hood...

 

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Text Copyright © 2007 Grace Phonogram eMedia. All Rights Reserved.
Sample/edit of The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill by Lauryn Hill and Tejumold Newton. Performed by Lauryn Hill.
From the Ruffhouse CD The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill. Copyright © 1998 Ruffhouse Records, L.P. All Rights Reserved..