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  2. Students say Lou Reed's 'Take a Walk on the Wild Side' is transphobic. Going one further, the student group said that while they acknowledged the song was written with "certain purpose and...

  3. Oct 4, 2023 · Walk on the Wild Side” introduces listeners to a cast of characters who represent various aspects of the marginalized and unconventional lives that were a part of New York’s subculture at the...

    • 3 min
  4. May 22, 2017 · The close friends of the late Lou Reed have completely dismissed claims that the lyrics in hit song ‘Walk on the Wild Side’ are transphobic. “I don’t know if Lou would be cracking up about this or crying because it’s just too stupid,” Reed’s former producer Hal Willner told the Guardian.

  5. In 1962, after being bullied by homophobes, the fifteen-year-old ran away from home; and, as in the lyrics, learned how to pluck her eyebrows while hitchhiking to New York. [14] "Candy" is based on Candy Darling, a transgender actress and the subject of an earlier song by Lou Reed, "Candy Says".

  6. Both were big Lou Reed fans and part of the vibrant and transgressive artistic scene in London that included photographer Mick Rock, who shot the Transformer album cover. Rock took the photo at one of Reed's shows at Kings Cross Cinema in London, which was transformed into a concert venue on Friday and Saturday nights.

  7. Sep 19, 2023 · Through his lyrics, Reed sheds light on the lives of transsexuals, prostitutes, and drug addicts, giving them a voice in a society that often shunned or ignored them.

  8. May 21, 2024 · The song, released in 1972 as part of Reed’s solo album “Transformer,” weaves a soft, soothing melody with lyrics that explore themes of drugs, transsexuality, cross-dressing, prostitution, and oral sex. While initially controversial, the song has become an iconic piece of music that continues to captivate audiences decades later.