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Salt-n-Pepa’s “Legends of Hip-Hop” at the DeSoto Civic Center

Twenty-five years after rap duo Salt-n-Pepa’s debut — and, no, I can’t believe I just wrote that — female hip-hop stars are still sadly rare. MC Lyte followed fast on their heels, Missy Elliott expanded the role, and Nicki Minaj is currently ascendant, but the genre has never seemed capable of making room for more than a couple of A-list women at a time. So it’s sort of nice that Salt-n-Pepa are the ringleaders of the “Legends of Hip-Hop Tour,” whose revolving golden-age cast — Lyte excepted — is otherwise a boys’ club. The duo built two of its best hits — “Tramp” and the En Vogue pair-up “Whatta Man” — off classic Stax singles, so hopefully Memphis music will get payback in the form of recognition this week. Scheduled to join Salt-n-Pepa on the Memphis leg of the tour are Biz Markie (“Vapors”), Whodini (“Five Minutes of Funk”), Kool Moe Dee (“How Ya Like Me Now”), and the incomparable Doug E. Fresh (“The Show”). The “Legends of Hip-Hop Tour” lands at the DeSoto Civic Center on Sunday, March 13th. Showtime is 6:30 p.m. Tickets range from $44 to $59. — Chris Herrington

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A Bunch of Dummies

Ventriloquist Jeff Dunham is one of the most watched performers in history. His DVDs go platinum, his TV specials have broken records, and a YouTube clip of Dunham and his puppet Achmed the Dead Terrorist has had more than 115 million views. That means Dunham’s routine is just a little more popular than Lady Gaga’s “Just Dance” video and just a little less popular than a laughing baby clip titled “Hahaha.”

“There is just something funny about this little inanimate object coming to life and abusing the people around them,” Dunham has said in an attempt to explain how he and his puppets became a certifiable phenomenon.

Of course not everybody thinks Dunham is funny. Critics savaged his short-lived 2009 series on Comedy Central and Blue Collar Comedy producer J.P. Williams once complained that Dunham’s material wouldn’t be very funny at all if it weren’t for the puppets. Even the puppets have been criticized for representing a variety of negative ethnic stereotypes like Achmed the Dead Terrorist and Jose Jalapeño on a Stick, a sleepy-eyed Mexican chili pepper with a very small sombrero.

Dunham, often compared to insult king Don Rickles, has laughed off the criticism, noting that Peanut, his best-known puppet, is a purple “Woozle” from Micronesia, Walter is a gas-passing old white dude, and Bubba’s a good-ol’-boy who loves NASCAR because it’s a “sport that’s easy to watch if you’re hammered.”

Jeff Dunham at the DeSoto Civic Center, Thursday, July 15, 8 p.m. Tickets are $40.