P.08V Continued from Page 10 because of his homosexuality. Since that time, he has been unable to understand homophobia and still feels like a victim. Displaying incredible control of his own fear and hatred, Dong has deliber- ately chosen men tried and convicted for homophobic hate crimes, asking each directly, "Why did you do it?" Dong's interviews of seven of these men is interwoven with a taped police interrogation of a homophobic mugger who had just been arrested for stabbing someone 27 times (he only seems to recall five). The documentary is both irresistible and hard to watch. There are very graphic crime photos, and the film hits close to home for many homophobic men. Moreover, just by hearing these men explain why they did what they did, one is forced to include the criminals in humanity, however much one may hate them and their actions. This documentary's only real flaw is that its title only applies to Donald Aldrich. Of the seven interviewed, he was the only one who felt he had a pub- lic mandate to commit his crime. Aldrich did not regret his crime, only for his defense strategy. "My crime came to what it was because I knew how the police felt about homosexuals back in Tylei ... it was supposed to help me o But because of the new hate crin statutes, it backfired on me." The documentary isn't about Aldrich's claim that police look the other way when hate crimes agaiinst homosexuals occur. Dong may be saying that hoimo- phobia gave these men a license, or a motive, to kill, but "Licensed to Kill" isn't public advocacy of these crimes but about criminials' own view of them this week's installment of "PON which was not available for review, comes from director David Zeiger. "The Band" is about Zeiger's son Danny's high school band while also paying trib- ute to the loss of his other son. "Licensed to Kill" and other "P.OV" films are often available for private ownership and for public screenings. The PI3S webpage (www.pbs.org/pov) offers contact addresses and a chance to respond to the documentaries. One can also send a video letter, which may be aired in a see ment called "Talking Back" that will fol- low future documentaries. So the next time someone proudly declares "I don't watch TV' tell them that it's okay to be uncultured, and that maybe they should sit down every Tuesday over the summer to see what "Must See TV" really is. Slayer proves metal is still going strong By AdHn Rosil For the Daily All media music indicators are say- ing that Heavy Metal is a rotting corpse replaced long ago by Ska, Electronica and anything else one can stick an 'a' at the end of. Well, someone forgot to mention Heavy Metal's demise to the sold out, 3,000 plus crowd at Harpo's on June 9 who was there to see Slayer. Supporting bands were label-mates System of a Down and Clutch. System of a Down got the crowd in the ye right mood with: its harsh and hard 30-minute Slayer set of Middle Eastern-flavored, Harpo's mosh-inducing June 5, 1998 music. The momen- tum started by System of a Down was m oment a ril y stalled, however,I -_ when Clutch took the stage and plodded through its boring brand of retro-metal. Even Clutch's singer looked a little bored throughout the set. This temporary loss of momentum was quickly remedied by about 10 p.m. The lights were dimmed and the open- ing, pre-recorded strains of Slayer's "Hell Awaits" started blaring through the speakers. Dark silhouettes took the stage, the pre-recorded music stopped, and the thunderous sound of power chords swallowed everything within range. Slayer had arrived, and the crowd went insane. Slayer blasted through a set filled with crowd favorites, playing every- thing from "Reign in Blood" to its recently released "Diabolus in musica' The crowd sang along (it you cai call it "singing along") to "War Insemble,"' "Captor of Sin" and "Jesus Saves," while still managing to keep the mosh pit looking like a brewing and boiling cauldron. SingerTom Araya's crowd conversa- tions were very minimal and kept to the bare "thank you for coming," and "Are you having fun?" But Slayer is not really a band th, needs much crowd interaction anyway. Its career has already spanned 17 years, and its following is insanely loyal, unfazed by trends or band line- up changes. Dhe crowd was there for Slayer's brutal form of music, and Slayer knew all the right moves to please its fans. One had to be there to experience the sheer feeling of connection between the crowd and the band, as well as the eerie, supernatural atmosphere creat by Slayer's performance of "South of Heaven" midway through its set. After a false show ending, the band resirned to the stage for an encore and ended its set on a high note with "Chemical Warfare" and the eagerly anticipated "Angel of Death." Singer Tom Araya then thanked the crowd and asked everyone if they would come see Slayer again ne time it played in Detroit. Not surpri, ingly, the crowd erupted ina massive, chorus-screaming "Yeah!" and proved that if Heavy Metal music is supposed to be dead, it's a musical Lazarus.