''Courtesy of the Red, White & Blue'' - Discusses the Toby Keith post-9/11 song. ''The Pill'' - Examines Loretta Lynn's 1975 hit, banned by many stations. ''Independence Day'' - Analyzes response to Martina McBride's song and video on domestic violence, which re-emerged after the brutal murder of Nicole Simpson. ''Would You Lay With Me In A Field of Stone'' - Revisits the mid-1970s hit by Tanya Tucker, then an underage adolescent singing about sex. ''Indian Outlaw'' - Presents several points of view on the Tim McGraw novelty hit, including a wide range of perspectives of famous Native Americans. 'Johnny Cash vs. Music Row' - Focuses on Cash's battle in the 1980s to convince radio stations to keep playing his songs, in the middle of a shift to promoting younger artists exclusively. ''John Walker Blues'' - Explores Steve Earle's song about American expatriate John Walker Lindh, the center of a firestorm for his service as a Taliban soldier. 'Kris Kristofferson' - Looks in particular at the singer-songwriter's famed 'Sunday Morning Coming Down,' a hit for Johnny Cash despite (or due to) lines such as 'wishin' Lord that I was stoned.' ''Okie from Muskogee'' - Presents the Merle Haggard song of small-town life, questioned by some for expressing what they described as 'divisive' political opinions. 'Murder They Wrote' - Examines famous songs of violent death, such as Johnny Cash's 'Folsom Prison Blues' and the Dixie Chicks' 'Goodbye Earl.' ''Stand By Your Man'' - Discusses Tammy Wynette's most famous song and its reception by feminist groups at the time of its release ... and long after. ''Take This Job and Shove It'' - Profiles Johnny Paycheck's song of the disaffected American worker in the economic discouragement of the 1970s.