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Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water
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Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $11.89

Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $11.89
Loading Inventory...
Size: CD
The scatological meaning of
Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water
is obvious to anyone who's graduated junior high. Hot dogs and chocolate starfishes are metaphors, as
Fred Durst
uses them to illuminate his one topic, how nobody understands him. He occasionally frames his rage as us versus them, as on
"My Generation,"
but, ultimately, it's all about himself.
Durst
dwells on bad things said about him, dismissing the criticism that he helped stoke the fires at Woodstock 99 with a round of the "critics that don't get it," and devoting a song to an attack at labelmate
Trent Reznor
. Some fans may empathize with
, but will it resonate? ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water
is obvious to anyone who's graduated junior high. Hot dogs and chocolate starfishes are metaphors, as
Fred Durst
uses them to illuminate his one topic, how nobody understands him. He occasionally frames his rage as us versus them, as on
"My Generation,"
but, ultimately, it's all about himself.
Durst
dwells on bad things said about him, dismissing the criticism that he helped stoke the fires at Woodstock 99 with a round of the "critics that don't get it," and devoting a song to an attack at labelmate
Trent Reznor
. Some fans may empathize with
, but will it resonate? ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
The scatological meaning of
Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water
is obvious to anyone who's graduated junior high. Hot dogs and chocolate starfishes are metaphors, as
Fred Durst
uses them to illuminate his one topic, how nobody understands him. He occasionally frames his rage as us versus them, as on
"My Generation,"
but, ultimately, it's all about himself.
Durst
dwells on bad things said about him, dismissing the criticism that he helped stoke the fires at Woodstock 99 with a round of the "critics that don't get it," and devoting a song to an attack at labelmate
Trent Reznor
. Some fans may empathize with
, but will it resonate? ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine
Chocolate Starfish and the Hot Dog Flavored Water
is obvious to anyone who's graduated junior high. Hot dogs and chocolate starfishes are metaphors, as
Fred Durst
uses them to illuminate his one topic, how nobody understands him. He occasionally frames his rage as us versus them, as on
"My Generation,"
but, ultimately, it's all about himself.
Durst
dwells on bad things said about him, dismissing the criticism that he helped stoke the fires at Woodstock 99 with a round of the "critics that don't get it," and devoting a song to an attack at labelmate
Trent Reznor
. Some fans may empathize with
, but will it resonate? ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine