skit involved a parody of a Kelly music video titled "Piss on You," while another about jury selection in the case foundthe comedian urinating at the witness stand while shouting, "And that's from the heart!" (The videotape at the heart of the Kelly case allegedly shows him urinating on an underage girl before having sex with her.)- Last November, cartoonist Aaron McGruder devoted an entire episode of his animated series "The Boondocks" to"The Trial of R. Kelly." As supporters of the singer danced in the courtroom, the show's 10-year-old star Huey chastisedthe jury: "You wanna help R. Kelly? Then get some counseling for R. Kelly. Don't pretend the man is a hero!""The jokes that entertainers like Chappelle and Chris Rock make about Robert and his situation -- Robertunderstands that that's what these guys do," Mayer said. "When you're a public figure like him, and you're involved in asituation that, whatever else it might be, is inherently ridiculous, people are going to comment on that. He doesn't take it personally."BROTHERLY ACCUSATIONSPerhaps most troubling of all is a new interview in the premiere edition of Dhrama, a DVD magazine about hip-hopand R&B that has been available via the Internet since February. In the lengthy interview, Carey "Killa" Kelly claimshis older brother offered him a bribe to lie in court, implying he was asked to claim that he was the man on thevideotape, not R. Kelly."I got a call a year, year and a half ago from my older brother who wanted me to do some s--- pertaining to this casethat was going to leave me behind bars," Carey Kelly says on the DVD. "I turned it down. The nigga offered me$50,000, a bull---- record deal and a house to lie, to perjure myself in a court of law, and I felt this s--- wasn't worth it."Carey Kelly goes on to accuse his brother Robert of chronicling his real-life obsession with underage sex in songssuch as "Age Ain't Nothing But a Number," the hit he wrote for Aaliyah, the female protege R. Kelly illegally wed in1994, when she was 15. The marriage was annulled a short time later."He's been telling [people], 'I've got a problem, because if I love this girl and she's 12, that's all that matters,' "Carey Kelly says. "He's been saying it in his songs, and that's what makes him the genius that he is. He speaks s--- thatother motherf-----s who are on his level can relate to."And I say to America, the criminal justice system: If you let that nigger off, he's going to do it again, trust me. I betmy life on it."By his own admission, in the Dhrama interview and others, Carey Kelly has battled drugs and spent time living onthe streets, and he resents his superstar brother for failing to help him launch a musical career of his own. Carey'smanager did not respond to numerous requests for an interview with his client."This is not the first time Carey has made ridiculous accusations against his brother," Mayer said of the DVD."We're not going to dignify them with a comment."Prosecutors have been in contact with Carey, but they declined to say if he will be called as a witness.A PALL OVER THE TOUR The controversy surrounding Kelly hangs over the current tour. Almost every review has mentioned the chargesagainst the star, and the way that he seems to reference them in his stage show."At a few points during the show, Kelly played up his outlaw status, saying that unnamed people were trying tokeep him from being too raunchy, but he was going to do what he wanted," a reviewer wrote in the Newark Star-Ledger on April 14. "A segment where he was supposedly arguing with authorities backstage (with a microphone capturingevery word) hardly seemed believable."On April 15, the Washington Post added: "Neither the kiddie-porn charges he's facing in his hometown of Chicagonor Kelly's inherent weirdness ... seem to have deterred his female fans, who are legion and remain unflinchingly loyal."PROTESTS IN TEXASIn Austin, Texas, last month, 15 members of a group called Feminists of Color United protested Kelly's appearanceat the University of Texas' Bass Concert Hall by chanting, "We love R&B, not child pornography!""His arrogance isn't wasted on us, that he's touring and singing about sex while these charges are unresolved," saidCourtney Desiree Morris, a graduate student in anthropology who led the protest. She also helped draft an open letter