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 | | | Hannah Montana on an Unfamiliar Stage by Adam R. Holz Rather than preach at Miley Cyrus for taking immodest photos, we'd like to offer some concrete, practical thoughts about how families might navigate the murky waters of teen and tween entertainment.
 | | |  | | | Theorizing About Mariah Carey's Equation by Paul Asay Occasionally forgetting to put on enough clothing, Mariah Carey has once again climbed to the top of the charts and is currently on top of the world with the release of 'E=MC2.' So what does Einstein's theory of relativity look like through a butterfly's eyes?
 | | |  | | | Sleepless Sleepover Nights by Paul Asay By that headline, we're referring to the parents left behind by wide-eyed kids who're just running across the street or across town, but it seems that they've left for another planet. How do you handle these rites of childhood passage, anyway?
 | | |  | | | A Pretty. Interesting. Look at Panic at the Disco by Adam R. Holz Three years after the pop-punk disc 'A Fever You Can't Sweat Out,' Panic at the Disco has shed its exclamation point along with much of its razor-sharp bitterness and world-weary winks with the release of 'Pretty. Odd.'
 | | |  | | | P.O.D.'s Snake-Snaring Techniques by Adam R. Holz For P.O.D., the line between good and evil, between light and dark has always been a stark one. And that doesn't change on the band's seventh CD, 'When Angels & Serpents Dance.' But what's up with collaborations with guys from Helmet and Suicidal Tendencies?
 | | |  | | | 'Lipstick' Smudges on a Big-City Collar by Paul Asay Taking its moral cues—and its creator—from HBO's 'Sex and the City,' NBC's 'Lipstick Jungle' could seriously use a few nips and tucks. At the very least, a little deforestation is in order.
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