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GOT A QUESTION
FOR CROZ?
Email AskCroz@
Rollingstone.com
My husband had pros-
tate surgery a few years
ago and is no longer sexu-
ally functional in any way.
I don’t want to divorce the
guy (he’s the love of my
life), but would it be so
wrong of me to seek sex
elsewhere?
—Cathy, NV
I’m sorry about your guy,
but I’m sure he’s sorrier
than I am. If he says you
should get laid, then you
could. But if you just go do
it, it’s going to hurt him. It
would be disloyal, not lov-
ing. It’s not his fault he got
sick. And getting laid isn’t
that important. I say that
even though it was the
most important thing in
my life at one point. I was
a caboose to my dick. But
if you love this guy, don’t
do it. It’ll break his heart.
My son is 17 and I worry
I’ve been a failure as a
father. No matter what I
do, he does nothing all
day long but stare at his
phone. What can I do?
—Dave, WI
A ton of parents are in
the same situation. A
lot of kids I know spend
all their time gaming.
They don’t go out or
even have friends. Don’t
blame yourself because it
doesn’t help. Say to him,
“Let’s go get a burger or
take a walk on the beach.”
It can be anything, but
get him out of the house.
Try your best to get him
to participate in the real
world. I think kids that act
like him are not happy
with their lives and are
looking for a place to hide.
I would take a look at that
and try to figure out why
this happened.
Real-life advice
from a guy who’s
seen, done, and
survived just about
everything
CROZ
ASK
Rolling Stone | 23
For
reviews,
premieres,
and more,
go to
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Stone.com
album introduces us to a
generation of future stars.
WEED CONFERENCE
- Cannabusiness
From March 18th to 21st,
South by Southwest’s
second annual Canna-
business Track is tackling
social equity, looking at
how the pot industry can
ensure people of color get
a fair shot, with guests like
advocate Steve DeAngelo.
MOVIE
- The Climb
Michael Angelo Covino
expanded his 2018 short
about two guys out for a
bike ride into a feature —
and the result is the sort
of independent comedy
that makes you feel like
the Nineties never really
ended. If you only see one
film this year featuring a
chubby guy doing a pole
dance in a suburban base-
ment, make it this one.
BOOK
- Broken Faith
Two veteran journalists
take you inside North
Carolina’s extremist Word
of Faith Fellowship. It’s
harrowing stuff, especially
their descriptions of
“blasting,” i.e., restraining
congregants and
screaming at them until
their demons are released.
COMIC
- Strange
Adventures
Last year, CIA-agent-
turned-comics-author
Tom King gave the vintage
DC series Mr. Miracle an
experimental makeover.
Now, he’s done the same
thing with DC’s 1950s
spaceman Adam Strange,
turning it into a radically
inventive metaphor for
the ”19th-century Europe-
an dream of colonialism.”
TOUR
- Rage Against
the Machine
We were deep in the Great
Recession the last time
these rap-rock lefties got
together. Well, capitalism
still sucks, RATM still rule,
and this is an awesome
must-see reunion.
PODCAST - No Dogs
in Space
Marcus Parks, co-host of
the great horror-themed
Last Podcast on the Left,
dives deep into the stories
of his favorite bands, start-
ing with punk heroes the
Stooges. Even die-hard
fans will find it revelatory.
ALBUM
- The Kids That
Grew Up on
Reggaeton
Marco “Tainy” Masís has
shaped modern reggae-
ton, producing albums for
Daddy Yankee, J Balvin,
and Bad Bunny. His new
EXHIBIT
- Studio 54:
Night Magic
As the epicenter of New
York nightlife at the peak
of the disco era, Studio 54
has become synonymous
with Seventies decadence.
This exhibit at the Brook-
lyn Museum celebrates
the club’s coked-up
legend while examining its
impact on pop culture and
the sexual revolution.
DOCUSERIES
- Hillary
Decades after she first
entered public life, Hillary
Clinton remains a polariz-
ing figure. Hulu’s revealing
new series tells her life
story, including a uniquely
unfiltered glimpse of the
2016 campaign.
SINGLE
- Dixie Chicks’
“Gaslighter”
A pop-music lifetime after
their anti-Bush views
made them Nashville ex-
iles, the Chicks are about
to release a bold new LP.
Its first single is personal,
not political, chronicling
the slow collapse of singer
Natalie Maines’ marriage.
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