Newsmakers
Sounds Shady, Slim: Did the real Slim Shady just stand up? Last week David Mays and Raymond (Benzino) Scott of The Source magazine, once considered the bible of hip-hop, held a press conference to play what they claimed were a pair of unreleased Eminem recordings from 1993, on one of which he verbally attacks a black ex-girlfriend. "All the girls that I like to bone/Have the big butts, no they don't/ 'Cause I don't like that n----r s--t/I'm just here to make a bigger hit." And: "I'll get straight to the point, black girls are bitches/that's why I'ma tell ya you better pull up your britches."
Until last week, this conspicuously white rapper in a conspicuously black medium was known for his scrupulousness about race--the third rail of hip-hop. And the imprimatur of legendary producer Dr. Dre had given him credibility in the black community. Eminem's manager told MTV that neither he nor Eminem had heard of the track containing the N word. But Eminem acknowledged the other track was his. "I'd just broken up with my girlfriend, who was African-American," he said in a statement, "and I reacted like the angry, stupid kid I was. I hope people will take it for the foolishness that it was, not for what somebody is trying to make it into today." Eminem refused NEWSWEEK's request for an interview. But Mays, who along with part-time rapper Benzino has been involved for more than a year in a war of words with Eminem, was glad to elaborate. "This is racism," Mays (who is white) told NEWSWEEK. "Eminem is a divisive figure, not unlike Elvis, leading hip-hop away from the community that created it, toward a new form marketed to mainstream--i.e., white--America." He vows to release the tracks with The Source's January issue.
Q&A: Alex Rodriguez
Any doubt about who is baseball's most valuable player should have been erased three years ago when the Texas Rangers signed A-Rod to a record 10-year, $252 million contract. Last week the 28-year-old shortstop finally won his first American League MVP trophy. Rodriguez batted it around with NEWSWEEK's Mark Starr.
How strange is it to win the MVP and then hear your name in trade rumors?
It is a little weird. But we've had a little bit of a hard time the last two years in Texas, so speculation is going to follow.
You seemed surprised by this award.
Of all the years, this was the one I said, "No way. I haven't had one of my monster years." I feel like I was [rewarded] for the five or six years I've been in the running.
This coincides with news of baseball's steroids problem.
In a cynical kind of way, it's been a very positive few weeks. Some of the speculation was 40 to 60 percent [of players], and the test came back 5 to 7 percent. So it's not as severe as our fans may have thought. Now we have to make it to zero.
When Boston put Manny Ramirez and his mega- salary on waivers, did you read a message in that?
There's no doubt our economy has changed night and day from when we all signed. I didn't need him on waivers to know that.
If you really want to play for a winner, why not take a pay cut?
For the right place, I would be flexible. But [Texas owner] Tom Hicks controls everything. He's the one who has to give me permission to talk to anyone. If it gets to that point, I haven't said that I wouldn't be flexible or creative.
Did you watch the postseason?
We probably had the best postseason in history. I watched every game. My business partner got us great tickets to Game 7 in Chicago.
You have trouble getting good seats?
Those tickets were hard for anyone to get.
I live in Boston, where rumors have you heading.
It's a great baseball town. My wife has 30 or 40 family members there. Maybe I'll see you at Fenway. Maybe I'll leave you some tickets.
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Mark Starr was named a senior editor in March 1998. He continues to serve as Newsweek's Boston bureau chief, where he has been headquartered since 1985. Starr has also held the title national sports correspondent since 1992. Before moving to Boston, he spent four years as a general editor in National Affairs.
Starr has covered eight Olympics, beginning with the Winter Games in Albertville and the Summer Games in Barcelona back in 1992. Before the Salt Lake Olympics, he wrote a cover story on American skating queen Michelle Kwan and, during the Games, covered both figure skating's judging scandal and Sarah Hughes' upset gold medal. In December 2001, Starr profiled Hughes in Newsweek's year-end issue as the "Athlete to Watch" in 2002, calling her a strong upset possibility in Salt Lake.
He was also prominently involved in four cover stories on the Nancy Kerrigan-Tonya Harding saga, which climaxed on the ice in Lillehamer, Norway in 1994. Starr has also covered three World Cups, writing cover stories on the shocking French men's home triumph in 1998 as well as America's "girls of summer," after they beat the Chinese in a thrilling Rose Bowl shootout in 1999. Starr has always been interested in women's sports. In 1996, he wrote on the U.S. women's basketball team hopes for an Olympic gold medal to jump-start a pro league. A year earlier Starr sailed with the women of America3 before its America's Cup challenge in San Diego.
Starr was a major contributor to Newsweek's special issue on the retirement of Michael Jordan, "The Greatest Ever" (October/November 1993) and the March 20, 1995, cover story on Jordan's first return to basketball, "Hoop Dreams." Starr has profiled a wide range of top personalities and performers in all sports including basketball's Shaquille O'Neal and Kobe Bryant, baseball's Pedro Martinez, NFL coaches Steve Spurrier and Bill Parcells, skating star Tara Lipinski, tennis' Martina Hingis, boxing champ Evander Holyfield, track stars Marion Jones, Michael Johnson and Carl Lewis, soccer superstars Roberto Baggio and Mia Hamm, Olympic gymnast Shannon Miller, speedskating queen Bonnie Blair and golfer David Duval.
Starr has also covered some of the more dramatic political stories out of Massachusetts, including John Silber's longshot bid to capture the State House, congressman Barney Frank's revelation that he was gay and Michael Dukakis's 1988 campaign for the presidency. Starr rode the Dukakis "bus" from New Hampshire until the November election.
Prior to Newsweek, Starr covered Central America for the Chicago Tribune during the Sandinista revolution of the late '70s. He was also a reporter for The Wall Street Journal, the Rochester Democrat & Chronicle and the San Jose Mercury-News.
Starr, a native of Boston, holds a B.A. from Cornell University and an M.A. in journalism from Stanford.
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