Friday, 25 March 2022

Today's Rules

You'll have a hard time finding another person who listens to the same new music as you. Of course you can go online, or go to a gig and find acolytes of the same act, but the odds of going to work, hanging with friends, and finding commonality in new musical tastes is extremely rare.

Playlists did not solve the new music discovery problem. We used to depend on radio to introduce us to new music, then we depended on MTV, now searching for new tunes you like is like looking for a needle in a haystack. How many new tunes can you listen to at one time anyway? And who are the creators of the playlists, which only work as background listening anyway. If you're a dedicated music fan and you can listen to every song on a playlist...I don't believe it. The only exception is Rap Caviar, which has lost some of its power and influence since Tuma Basa decamped for YouTube, what a mistake, but there is not another playlist that is acknowledged as great in the entire music ecosystem, and that's just plain sad.

Repetition breeds acceptance. And in a world of unlimited choice there is little repetition so fewer tracks are embedded in one's brain, new music becomes ever more disposable.

Sure, younger people listen to more new music, but they are just as confused as the older generations, or focused on very narrow tastes. The younger people are not better at fixing computers, and they are not multitaskers, no one can multitask, but people still talk about it.

Attention spans have not shortened. Evidenced every day by the extended amount of time, hours, that young people play video games and binge television. This is just an excuse developed by oldster creators who are angry no one is paying attention to their productions. There's a run to greatness. And then there's everything else. The middle has been hollowed out. Kids know what is great, and avoid everything else except for extremely niche product, that appeals to them personally, that they experience/wear as a badge of honor. It's harder to separate yourself from others when we all have the same smartphone, but people still do try to differentiate themselves, ergo their unique interests.

People would much rather talk about streaming television than music. Adults rarely talk about music at all. Honchos in the music business rarely talk about music at all. They all want to talk about streaming television and politics, the drivers of today's culture.

Most people with something to lose avoid talking about politics, unless it's their brand.

Truth is nonexistent in America today. Finito. Which cheapens the value of the hype the entertainment business has historically traded on. Either people are numbskulls who'll accept everything you tell them, or they are educated with the power of analysis and are constantly checking what is proffered to them. Unfortunately, fewer are educated with the power of analysis than ever before, which is just how the rich and powerful like it.

Most people don't listen to the songs at the end of the album. The album model was based on vinyl, two sides, with four prime positions, opening and closing track on each side, you knew the act would put their best stuff there. But now with just a string of songs the audience doesn't know where to focus, so they start at the top and fall off somewhere along the way, if they even go that far.

Don't confuse money with power. The media focusers on Netflix's numbers constantly, talking about how many people are left to subscribe. It's kinda like cell phones. Now everybody has one and the old leaders, are still the leaders. Verizon, with the historically best service, has had the largest market share for years, and maintains that position. Just because an industry runs out of new customers, that does not mean it has no future. Netflix has first mover advantage, makes the most product, and I don't know what the upstart streaming services are thinking, it comes down to Netflix, Hulu, Disney+ and HBO Max. As for Apple, the company has so much money it stays in the game. As for Amazon...yes, it's buying MGM, but so far the company has never truly focused on visual entertainment, they've treated it like everything else in the store, an endless cornucopia, caveat emptor. Furthermore, it's essentially free with Prime. Brands are everything in a world where individuals have sold their souls for cash. Netflix has the best brand, people believe in it. And Disney and HBO Max have legacy power. Amazon? Video is the poor stepsister. And Hulu keeps losing product, how soon until it loses subscribers? As for streaming with advertising...there are always cheap people, but the real business is in people paying every month, and they'll only pay a limited amount of money.

Buzz happens slower than ever before. And the media is not in control of it. The old movie advertising, all the tricks to get people excited about something? Gone. Now hits pop up organically, and spread via word of mouth. "The Tiger King," "Squid Game"...even Netflix had no idea of their reach and power. And yes, streaming TV shows gain traction relatively quickly, but music takes forever to gain hold.

George Costanza rules. If you want to succeed in today's world, just do the opposite of what everybody else is doing. Be credible, turn down sponsorships and endorsements. Go the other way, people will notice it and respect you for going down the road less taken in a world of me-too.

TikTok brings classic rock back from the dead. As well as overlooked recent tunes. No one is in control of the process, it's spontaneous, but it's powerful, more powerful than any other platform of exhibition.

Web3 is about removing the power from the tech gatekeepers. Will it go down that way? Questionable, but some of the biggest players in the sphere want it to go that way.

The value of crypto and NFTs are debated constantly in the media, but almost all the stories miss the point. For the younger generation, crypto and its offshoots, like NFTs, are the new music. It's the late sixties all over again. The oldsters are completely out of the loop, they know nothing. This is exciting to the younger generation, there are many opportunities, and seemingly everybody is playing. You might not own any crypto, but twentysomethings do.

The future is unpredictable. Just when you think you know where things are going, the unexpected happens. Not so much the war in Ukraine, but the resolve of the Ukrainian people and the single-minded leadership of Zelensky. Everybody in America gets into politics to get rich. It's better than entertainment. Get elected and you can trade on your donors forever. Zelensky is not about this. He's Mr. Smith, but he certainly isn't in Washington.

Don't expect the story to be on Fox News. Stop waiting for it and its viewers to wake up to the truth, they don't even see it! Fox News is a controlled ecosystem just like the news in Russia. That's the truth, just like Trump is an autocrat. I mean step way back, this is a guy who thinks the rules don't apply to him, yet people are so caught up in the red versus blue they can't acknowledge this. Once you undermine the game, there is no game, remember this.

Everybody believes they are powerful, everybody believes they have a voice, and they exercise it online. Raise your head and it will be chopped off. This is the world we live in, if you think you're better than everybody else you're in for a rude awakening.

No one trusts the legal system anymore. They shake their fist and say they're going to sue...but the last place you want to be is court, it's time-consuming, expensive and you've got no idea of the result. Actually, the legal system is for the rich only. It only works if you've got money. And if you've got money, you can bury almost anybody. I'm talking civil, of course the hoi polloi get caught up in the criminal legal system. Hell, we need people to fill all those for profit jails!

Everybody wants a smaller government until they need it, then they want relief from the disaster they experienced.

The rise in gas prices is the greatest incentive to buy electric cars...if there were inventory the numbers would shoot into the stratosphere. This is the turning point, this is the inflection point, from now on it's all electric. I don't want to hear about government support, I don't want to hear about precious metals for batteries, the public can sense and see the future. A car is their second biggest investment. And they don't want to be at the whim of the oil companies. Yet why people keep having to drive ever bigger trucks... Once again, don't expect people to be rational.

Nothing is foolproof. Spotify went down a couple of weeks back, and Apple did just last week. This is not a reason not to believe in services. Hell, you've been paying for cable for decades and think about how many times that went out! The truth is products are built better than ever before, they work right out of the box, and tech reliability keeps improving.

If you believe Social Security will collapse, you believe the U.S. government will collapse. Want to take those odds? I didn't think so.

Everybody's an expert, and almost nobody knows the score. With so much information available online, why does misinformation rule? People still live like it's the pre-internet era. They'll tell you what's best when you can go online and easily suss out what's best yourself, and it's rarely what people tell you it is. People are attached to what they've owned and what they've experienced, they don't want to admit they made a mistake, or even that they're wrong. So if you have an important decision to make, call your friends last, go online first. I'd say the same thing about bloviating about politics, but...people don't want to find out they're wrong. And why can't they even Google to find out the veracity, the trustworthiness of the site/people they are quoting? It's mind-blowing.

People are either lying about being poor or lying about being rich. It's cool to be poor and it's cool to be rich. The poor are downtrodden and the rich are overlords. When the truth is most people talking like this are neither poor nor rich, just average. There are truly poor out there, too many, but they don't brag about it.

You're on your own. No one is looking out for you. If you don't know this yet, you've been sheltered by your parents, or they are rich. America is a giant casino, which is rigged, and those who own it don't want you to win, no matter what they say. Las Vegas doesn't advertise its truth, that the whole city is built on losers. The odds are against you. So, if you want to win learn the game, the facts. Because if you get ripped-off or lose, the odds of someone coming to aid you...are close to nil.

The world runs on sex. Pure and simple. The richest people with the best pedigree will risk it all for sex. Then again, is sex what life is really all about? I mean if we weren't focused on sex, there'd be no new generations. But if you can't understand what is going on, look at the sexual element. And the monetary element too. People do their best to hide their truth but it's evident, you've just got to look harder.

The world runs on information. That's the beauty of the internet world. You can be sitting at home, without portfolio, but if you read and gather information you have the ability to play with the successful. It takes effort, but the information is at your fingertips, you've just got to read it.

People are impressed by the knowledgeable and articulate. If you think it's all about how you look, fashion, you've immediately taken yourself out of the game, unless you're so good-looking that you can trade on that alone, and that's a matter of genetics, and almost no one wins that lottery.

Don't do what everybody else does. The competition is too rough.

Don't tell people they're better than that. That just makes you look bad, that you think you're better than them!

Don't apologize unless you mean it. Apologies have become nearly worthless in our society. They're get out of jail free cards. Stand your ground, and if you're wrong admit it. Because character is everything, live long enough and you'll find that out.


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The Oscars

I don't plan to watch. Which is astounding if I look back to the past. The Oscars were a ritual. My mother would stay up late watching them. She was a movie buff, she used to go to these Judith Crist weekends. This was back when being a fan was enough, you didn't need a badge, you didn't go online and try and become a star yourself. The world has changed a lot, but the Oscar telecast has not. Hell, the movies themselves have changed but the Oscars have not.

Everything comes and goes, like MTV. Youngsters would find it hard to believe that when MTV launched we'd stare at it for hours, usually at a friend's house, because it wasn't yet available in ours. It was new, it was different, it demanded all of our attention, it drove the culture, and then it didn't. Kind of like the VMAs. That was an awards show, with an irreverence lacking from the Oscars. And although the VMAs still exist, they're completely irrelevant, a marketing vehicle. That's what the Grammys turned into too. A way to expose talent. Once it was learned there was a bounce from an appearance, everybody wanted to be on, performing their new song so it could run up the chart. But the audience was turned off by this, and there's no longer a bounce. Turns out in the streaming era everybody who is interested has already experienced the music. It's only the out-of-touch brain dead who learn something from an awards telecast. Not to mention, in today's world of deep niches, nothing is universal and most people don't care about most things, think about that.

But it's the same damn Oscar show every year.

I'm not saying the nominees don't want to win, I realize people tune in for the fashions, but the movies themselves have changed, as have stars, the world is different, but in Oscarland, it's completely the same.

Kind of like in music. None of the classic acts can get any traction with new material. The old fans don't want it and the youngsters have more than enough with what's out there already. Music moves forward, you have to accept this. You can also accept that music today is in a bad space, but that does not mean it will be so forever. But one thing is for sure, we're going forward, not backward.

And speaking of going forward, the movies today are all about superhero/comic book/action adventure tentpoles. That's okay, it just doesn't square with the Oscars, which are supposed to be about artistry as opposed to commerciality, and in films the two diverged decades ago. You cannot square what is popular with what is good, what is art, what the Oscars want to reward. The Oscars are still living in a twentieth century world, and it's 2022.

Not that I think the Oscars should be fixed. They had their run, that's it. They've been superseded by streaming TV. Streaming TV liberated creators, suddenly everything was fair game, and on a smaller screen it's about plot as opposed to image. Movies have become special events, kind of like the circus, before that was put out of business, because it was out of date and out of time, what was permissible in the past is not necessarily permissible today. Going to the movies used to be a ritual, an interest akin to sports. You knew who the actors were, you were aware of the past greats, and the films addressed and moved the culture. But they haven't done that for a very long time. Think about it, we had a slew of Vietnam movies, from "Apocalypse Now" to "The Deer Hunter" to "Coming Home" to... But we haven't had a slew of films about the dot com crash, or the 2008 meltdown. No big budget studio efforts that try to make sense of the past. There was "The Big Short," which was excellent, and did not use a traditional style, kudos, but it was just one movie.

And then there's the indie sphere. Which is kind of like music. With the means of production so inexpensive, everybody is making a movie these days, and everybody believes their film is worthy of attention. It's positively overwhelming to the consumer. Furthermore, the films play at festivals for eons before they're released generally. They're already passé, moribund. As for the audience? There is one, but they want to see them at home, on the flat screen, built in to a service they're already paying for. The independent business is so rearguard, it's nearly a circle jerk. In today's attention economy, the indies put up so many barriers to seeing their pics that they go unseen. I'm not paying fifteen bucks to see one pic when that will buy me a month of Netflix. As for going to the theatre, it's too slow for me. The movies don't start when I get there and I've got travel time and I can't pause them and I know there are dedicated moviegoers yelling just the opposite right now, but they're in the minority. What's the metaphor, you skate to where the puck is going? Well, it certainly isn't going to a healthy independent theatre experience.

Change is hard. And it often happens when you're not looking. But if you don't change, you become moribund, stuck in the past, which may be comfortable, but leaves you in the rearview mirror.

Let's talk about the excising of all those awards from the telecast.

The question is simple. Are the Oscars an awards ceremony or a TV show? Awards ceremonies are supposed to have gravitas, have meaning, which is why everybody's pissed off that these awards will not get airtime. But they do detract from the flow of the show, so should they go? Well, as soon as you get rid of them you undercut the essence of the Oscars. But like everything these days, it all comes down to the money, and that TV cash...

And when the money is first, the public knows it and bakes it into their decisions. I mean the Oscars are undercutting whatever credibility they still have. As for the Grammys adding nominees after the fact, these people are so inside they can't see the outside whatsoever. The public is laughing, you just showed the truth, that the awards are worthless.

And most awards are. The funny thing is what is awarded most, which gains the general consensus, is not what is remembered, even lauded in the future. And there are so many awards shows, aimed at people who got a trophy just for participating, that winning means nearly nothing.

That's the world we live in.

Want to have an awards show where you honor popcorn pics? Be my guest. But trying to mix them with artistic films is like bringing Megan Thee Stallion to the symphony, it's a different thing.

Now the truth is I don't have enough time. That's what the internet era has wrought, a tsunami of information, a lot of which I'm interested in. Do I want to waste four plus hours seeing some awards show? No. I'll just read who won and move on, like everybody else, no one seems to remember who won.

I mean first we've got the news. It's endless, and right now there's Ukraine and Web3 and the film business has its head stuck in the sand like none of this exists. And who cares what actors have to say about the big issues anyway, they're just playing a role. And there's an entire gossip industry built on such issues as whether Jennifer Aniston wants a baby, will have a baby, or will get back together with Brad Pitt. That's commerce, not news. Like most of the tentpole pictures. It's fine if people want to pay attention, but not me. I mean once "The Towering Inferno" was part of the culture, but today we've got so many options we have superior stuff to consume, and interestingly we all want to consume different stuff.

I guess that's another problem with the Oscars. There's no longer a monoculture, that went out with the last century, where the Oscars are still living. We're all in a different space and we all think our opinion is worthwhile and maybe awards shows are history, just like late night TV.

Did you see that Jimmy Fallon just got a new producer? That used to be big news, they wrote books about late night TV. But now fewer people than ever watch the shows and they don't move the needle. I mean the goals of the past mean nothing today. Remember when every comedian wanted a sitcom? Today there are few sitcoms and the ones that air play to tiny audiences and you're not furthering your career whatsoever. Things change.

I wish I was excited about the Oscars.

Then again, there was that news about a month ago, how all these foreign language series are being watched in not only America, but around the world. That's exciting. Around the world creators are striving for our attention, doing new things, testing limits, and there's an audience for all this, whereas another Marvel movie? I mean it's juvenile, whereas most of these foreign streaming series are not.

So I don't know where the world is going, but one thing I know for sure, it is going. And if you want to drag it into the past, if you want to protest about change, the joke is on you.

If you have a profile, people are pissed when you change. But artists can't be beholden to their audience, no way, otherwise they're not artists.

I already know what the Oscar telecast will contain before I turn it on. Oh, a few jokes, a few faux pas, boring musical numbers and some winners, that's it. Interested? I mean I can literally name a hundred things I'd rather do with my time.

Or you could go smaller, take the route of gravitas, meaning, but the Oscars still think there's such a thing as one national mind when a healthy chunk of the population truly believes Trump should be president, that victory was stolen from him. Maybe you forgo the big tent, the big net, and only appeal to the fans.

But that would require living in the future.

The Oscars are all about the past. Own it, don't try to convince us otherwise, because we're not buying it.

But we're buying plenty of stuff, if you want to push the envelope and get us excited.

But the Oscar telecast does not.

Next.


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Thursday, 24 March 2022

Wednesday, 23 March 2022

Mailbag

RE: SACRIFICE

I have been wondering for some time what the differences are between a Russian and an American oligarch. The only thing I can think of is that in Russia the government tells them what to do but in the USA the oligarchs tell the government what to do. But in the end is there any real difference?

Zack Schindler

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Great piece, Bob. I remember Ken Kesey once said in an interview that Americans no longer know how to forebear. He was comparing the Baby Boomers and younger Americans to earlier generations. People who lived through the Flu of 1918, the Depression, and World War II knew sacrifice in their bones because they had so much firsthand experience with loss and hardship. That hasn't been the case in our buy-now/pay-later culture for decades.

I've often wondered what kind of shock would recalibrate the scale. There was a brief moment of unity right after 9/11, and some people felt called to serve their country, but then George W. told Americans to go shopping. A global pandemic didn't do it. I shudder to think what it might take at this point.

Stay well.
Matt Kohut

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I agree with this sentiment. but young people today think they can become billionaires via crypto trading, or being on Tik tok or an IG influencer. To achieve financial independence via practicing law on my own took years and huge risks were required. The kind where you say to yourself, well if this doesn't work out I guess I will just go BK and start over. That kind of risk made me sacrifice getting married and having kids, which I don't really regret now but as a youngster, I assumed I would get married and have them. Had to break up with girlfriends I could have had a nice life because of that.

Brian Barry

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Bob, you CAN have it all.
You just can't have it all at once.

Peace,
Susan Dorsey

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RE: DON HENLEY PLAYLIST

This one was -is impossible as I love everything Don has ever done. Honored to have played on record with him a few times and he is still an old friend.
Don could sing the alphabet and make it great.
+ Eagles rule

Luke

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Some truly great songs/vocals in here. And they hold up.

Tom Johnston

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Subject: Re: Proud Mary

I played guitar for John for about a year. My first gig was in St. John, Nova Scotia in front of 10,000 people. I had never experienced anything like it in my life. I was used to a 45 minutes to an hour and a half gig, tops. These were pushing 2 1/2 hour shows easily and filled with hits! My favorite Fogerty song has to be "Long As I See the Light," but "Proud Mary" was a roof raiser as was "Born On The Bayou" (although I got relegated to congas because I was the new guy!) But, every night watching these people sing along to these songs blew my mind. Some of the greatest songs ever written and here I was playing alongside the person that wrote them. And the songs are so basic, but timeless.

David George
Moozer Music, Inc.

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Subject: Re: Elton John Favorites Playlist

I love this list… I have been ever so lucky to play almost all of them with him.
Quite a few years ago, there was a set list that Elton wrote out by hand. It was songs he wanted to play I assume, for a show where he didn't perform mostly the hits. There is about 28 albums and maybe 3-5 songs from each one. Would have been pretty cool if it ever materialized.
Lot's of them are on your list.

Thank You Bob,
John Mahon

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From: Chip Lovitt
Subject: Re: William Hurt

Wow! A great but sad tribute to a great actor. My father used to joke that you go from reading the "funny pages" pages in newspapers to the sports pages or the news, and eventually you turn to the obits...Like Paul and Artie sang in Old Friends, how terribly strange to be 70...I didn't quite get that line back when I first heard Bookends. Anyway, nice piece!

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From: Jose Sala
Subject: Re: Even More Covid

One of your readers (Trent Keeling) mentioned how orderly things were in Puerto Rico regarding Covid.
I have lived here all my life.
Mandates were generally lifted 2-3 weeks ago, and still everybody wears them in most places, especially inside. No drama.
Its just common sense and being considerate of others.

What makes us this way vs what I see wherever I go in USA? My theory:
- basic values that stem out of Family and to a degree, Religion
- that our people truly care for each other: friends, neighbors or strangers (ask any tourist)
- the reality that we struggle thru catastrophic events TOGETHER continually (hurricanes)

When you put those 3 together, you have a "cohesive society".
Pulitzer Prize winner Joseph Stiglitz used that phrase in a speech here to describe our people.
These 3 elements are visible now in Ukraine.

Joey Sala

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From: marc brickman
Subject: Re: Podcast is up!

hi bob,

thanks again for letting me be myself.
i did make a mistake when i spoke about
Lou Kellman/ NFL films.
Lou's nephew was Ed Sabol.
founder of NFL Films.
Morris Kessler was founder/designer
of SAE audio here in LA.

xo,
marc

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RE: JOHN OLIVER ON TICKETMASTER

From: Russ Turk

I paid $315 each for McCartney at MetLife stadium in NJ. Floor seats, section 14 on the aisle. I have no problem with that price and those seats. It's McCartney and even at close to 80 years old, it's Paul Freakin McCartney. I've paid about that price to see him for the past 15 years every time he plays NJ or NYC. How many more times will we be able to see a Beatle play the Beatles live before our eyes? Worth every penny.

Turk

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From: Bill Nelson

Haven't seen the J Oliver bit. I was looking for NCAA Tournament tix on Ticketmaster. Nothing but "verified resale tickets" which always reminds me of "certified pre owned" vehicles acquired in trade or at auction. I know. It's different. But it's the same. Kind of. And you're right. People will bitch and moan about high prices for tix. But they'll (we'll) pay up cuz we wanna fuckin go, like, YESTERDAY! I saw the Eagles recently and, yeah they charge what the tix are worth. But I still paid more. No regrets. And I'll pay "more" for upcoming shows cuz I like taking my youngest son, who will be seen in public with me if I pay. So I pay……all of it, merch, beers, whatever. The memories, are worth the bucks.

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Hi Bob,

The fans love scalpers? The only way to stop ticket touting is to inflate prices?

It's an interesting perspective. But there's more than one way to skin a cat.

In the UK, I've been overseeing a campaign called the FanFair Alliance since 2016. It's supported by managers and teams for many of the world's biggest artists, and won backing from the vast majority of the UK's live music business.

Our work has helped secure many important legislative and regulatory changes, and a much improved enforcement of consumer protection law.

The situation isn't perfect, but here's the upshot.

1. Unlike North America, British consumers have at least some transparency when they use sites like viagogo and StubHub. For instance, they must be told where seats are located, or if there's restrictions around the use of a ticket. They must be shown fees upfront. Pressure selling techniques are banned. Speculatively listing tickets (ie fraud) is unlawful. And if the seller is a "trader" (ie a business, rather than a fellow consumer) they must be provided that info too. In short, you need to understand what you're buying and who you're buying it from.

2. As a result, artists and promoters can enforce their T&Cs - making clear that commercial resale is prohibited, while allowing fans to resell for the price they paid or less. Technological innovation (e.g. mobile-only tickets) further enhances these strategies.

3. The UK now supports an increasing range of capped consumer-friendly resale services. Every major primary ticket agent - including Ticketmaster - offers this kind of service, alongside specialist resale platforms like Twickets. This is the direction our market is moving.

4. Consequently, artists and promoters have been empowered to disrupt and prevent exploitative online ticket touting. If they want to, they can set the "market price". They can successfully implement anti-touting strategies. And they can guide their audiences towards consumer-friendly alternatives for resale.

5. On the flip side, legacy platforms like viagogo and StubHub are in decline. These sites are entirely artificial constructs anyway, and wholly reliant on two things: a small number of large-scale commercial resellers and a dominance of paid-search on Google. Remove the touts or the advertising, and the whole business crumbles. They're also plagued with non-existent or speculative listings. These sites don't serve a demand - they simply increase scarcity, or, more truthfully, the illusion of scarcity.

6. With greater transparency, we can see that the value of "secondary ticketing" has been massively over-inflated. When the UK's business regulator, the Competition & Markets Authority (CMA), investigated the merger of viagogo & StubHub, the two Parties claimed the value of tickets resold via the UK's online secondary market in 2018 was worth up to £2.5bn.

The CMA's estimate?

£350m.

Less than 20% of what viagogo and StubHub will have potentially told their investors.

And this is a business reportedly looking to IPO with a $13bn valuation!

Best, Adam

Adam Webb
AL1 Communications

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From: "Allen S. Miller, MS, DC"
Subject: Re: Brandi Carlile Responds

Dear Bob.

I go back through my father an ex-LAPD detective, to the days when gay men were arrested in Parks. I was a bodyguard to Dinah Shore in the early late 70's and early 80"s and it didn't dawn on me at the time, how pivotal this amazing woman was in this movement. We had many guests from her show up to the house for dinner, and it was a safe haven for everyone that had been on the "couch". So many at the time were fearful of the atmosphere and could not enjoy an average evening out with their partners, or enjoy the simple act of holding one's hand in public. Rock Hudson, Danny Kay along with straight actors and actresses all under one roof laughing and enjoying Paulines cooking.

This atmosphere was unique at the time. I am at a complete loss as to why, what Brandi desires is not the rule. I don't understand the fear, and anger that exists, as this is a no-brainer. How did the paranoid few make things so hard on those that just want to live, be happy, coping with the insanity of the world that roles over us. I'm sorry, I just don't get it...

One more thing, Ms. Carlile' interpretation of Elton John's, Madman Across the water was just amazing, and it gives me chills just writing this. It was a fitting and respectful cover while adding a standalone sound of her own to this song, while showing great respect to Elton John. A wonderful tribute to him his music and hers.

Thank you as always,
Allen Miller

________________________________________
________________________________________

From: Hugo Burnham
Subject: Re: LGBTQ Protests

In our miniscule way, not meaning shit in the bigger picture of weight to throw around - we are selling bits of smashed-up microwaves, worn/broken drumsticks (with 'These Drumsticks Fight Fascists' hand-written on them), and branded guitar/bass picks at our merch table - and donating the $ to Planned Parenthood. If someone brings us an album or a grabbed Set List to have signed, it's, "Of course! But will you please go and make a contribution to P.P. at the merch table for it?"

We also have branded condoms 'For Your Top Left Pocket' (- for those that know why…)

Hugo B


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Tuesday, 22 March 2022

Don Henley Favorites Playlist

https://spoti.fi/3L5ZWcV

Witchy Woman
Nightingale
Doolin-Dalton
Desperado
On the Border
One of These Nights
Hotel California
Life in the Fast Lane
Wasted Time
Victim of Love
The Long Run
The Disco Strangler
King of Hollywood
Those Shoes
No More Walks in the Wood
Waiting in the Weeds
Long Road Out of Eden
Dirty Laundry
The Boys of Summer
Not Enough Love in the World
Sunset Grill
The End of the Innocence
The Last Worthless Evening
New York Minute
The Heart of the Matter
For My Wedding
Goodbye to a River
They're Not Here, They're Not Coming
My Thanksgiving
Words Can Break Your Heart
Everybody Knows
Yes It Is
Leather and Lace
Sometimes Love Just Ain't Enough
Inside Out


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Sacrifice

You can't have it all.

That's what they told women, back in the seventies, at the height of the liberation movement, that they could have it all. But you can't. You've got to give something up. Sure, you can have a high-powered job and kids, it's just that you might not be home when your child speaks their first word.

But this isn't about women. They were held down and still are, but it's representative of the seventies. The war was fading in people's consciousness, they kept saying it was gonna be over, that peace was at hand when it wasn't, at least not until 1975, and the human potential movement popped up, resulting in what Tom Wolfe called the "Me Decade." EST, therapy, you wanted to be all you could be, before the army went all volunteer and co-opted the slogan.

Then came the eighties. It was all about greed. There was even a movie where it was said "Greed is good." The boomers flipped from love everybody to love me, I'm first, and up until the dot com crash of the twenty first century things appeared pretty groovy. Clinton created a surplus. The wall fell. The USSR disintegrated. We believed peace would reign, ain't that a joke.

The past few decades have revealed the cost of the economic run-up. Turns out many were left behind while those with lowered taxes and higher incomes were living like royalty. To the point where dissension appeared in our homeland, never mind overseas.

And now it's even worse, we've got more questions than answers.

This is the world you're living in. How do you get ahead?

Well, maybe you were born into wealth, and mommy and daddy can sustain your lifestyle, even after death. But that's an elite few, what about the rest of us?

We have to sacrifice.

Sacrifice has been a dirty word ever since Jimmy Carter told citizens to put on a sweater during the energy crisis. But we're America! We're entitled to drive gas-guzzlers, you can't impinge on our lifestyle, even if we drive the environment off a cliff.

And sacrifice is involved here, and the youngest generations prioritize the environment and have a different ethos than their parents, and this sacrifice is important, but it's not exactly what I'm referencing here.

To be successful, to have an impact, you must sacrifice, severely, you cannot have it all.

I talk to uber-successful people all the time. On the surface they might appear to have it all, but in truth, they're so busy working they don't have time for their accoutrements, even for their family. It's so hard to make it, and always has been. This is what they don't tell you. You can't be raised by society, it's all Madison Avenue marketing messages. If you're lucky, you'll have a parent who steers you right, but that assumes that parent knows the score to begin with.

But the boomers' parents didn't grow up in luxury. Many of their grandparents were immigrants. These boomer parents wanted more for their kids. But they were aware of the manual labor, the picking themselves up by the bootstraps, of their parents. The boomer parents made a life, saw the landscape and wanted to give their kids a leg up. Education was key. You needed to ring the college bell. You had to be prepared for a career. Forget that so many veered from this prescription, and some successfully. But back in the seventies, the goal was to be a doctor or a lawyer, your parents wanted to know that when they died you'd be protected, that you'd have enough money, that you'd survive.

But then the boomers told their kids they could have everything. That no one should lose. You got a trophy for participating. And if someone stepped on your toes, in truth or metaphorically, they would run out and protect you. Bullying was taboo. And the school was at fault, not you.

And education became polarized. Public schools declined. There was a clear line of demarcation between the haves and have-nots. But still, people were told they could have it all, still are.

Like the online influencers. It's a casino, only you have to gamble 24/7. Even the most successful influencers burn out and abandon the role, they're working themselves to death, providing content for Mark Zuckerberg and the Chinese so they can become billionaires. That's the pitch, you too can be rich, just make me rich by bringing in eyeballs.

And the musicians. They just can't understand why they're not rich. The game is rigged, stacked against them, there must be some reason why they're not world famous, rolling in dough.

No one wants to speak the truth, that you need to sacrifice. Greatly. To achieve one significant thing. Hyphenates? Very rare. Don't specialize too early, but by time you hit your twenties, maybe it takes until your thirties, you'll see the destination, it will come into focus, and if you want to get there...

You've got to give stuff up.

Maybe you can't drive a new car. Maybe you can't own a house. Maybe you can't afford to even get married, never mind have kids.

And you can't party ad infinitum.

But this doesn't square with what you've been told, that you can have it all!

Which is why the hoi polloi are flummoxed when icons are held in front of their eyes. How'd they make it? I'm entitled too!

Yes, everybody is entitled, but not everybody wants to go down the road less-traveled. What's that AC/DC song, "It's a Long Way to the Top"? Never mind staying there.

So the Ukraine war has turned everything we know upside down.

We thought the Russians would cream the Ukrainians virtually overnight. We had no idea to what lengths the Ukrainians would go to defend their country. And this revealed the chinks in Russia's army, turned out when engaged in battle, when truly tested, it wasn't that good.

And all day long we're confronted with images of bombing and death. It's reminiscent of World War II. It's unfathomable to Americans, we're safe, right? Well, that's debatable. But one thing is for sure, Americans are not into sacrifice, quite the opposite, they believe they're entitled to all of it. To not be vaxxed, or wear a mask, and be free of Covid. It's like if they believe it to be true, it shall be. And too much of America is ruled by televangelists, scamsters getting rich on selling falsehoods. When you tune in the channel they sell salvation, and your eyeballs pay their handsome salaries. It's a good game if you're the purveyor. As for the receiver... Give all the money you want, there's no guarantee you're getting into heaven, that there even is a heaven.

So it's not only the Ukrainian public willing to die for their country, it's their leader too, Volodymyr Zelensky. The leaders are usually inviolate, far from the frontline, sipping their brandy in comfort. But Zelensky is right there in the action, with his people. He doesn't think he's better than them, he knows he's an equal. And that the public needs leaders who speak truth. Funny how much truth resonates, we all know it, but few are willing to stand up, sacrifice for it.

Like Alexei Navalny. That's today's news, how Russia has given him nine more years in prison.

Now this guy was poisoned by Russia, recovered in Germany and went back to Russia to go to prison on false charges. I can't think of a single American who would do such a thing. He's standing up for his beliefs, which are more important to him than the trappings. In a rigged system. Anybody gets wronged in America and they say they're going to sue. And if they actually do, and lose, they say they're going to appeal. There must be someone who'll make this right, who'll make me whole.

Yes, Americans believe that there's insurance for everything, that you can never lose. Your job is protected, nothing can be taken away. But this isn't how the world works, there is progress. And this brings winners and losers. And you might be on the wrong end and have to adjust. This is why the self-esteem movement is rotten at the core. Losing is a part of life. The earlier you start losing the easier it will be to cope when you lose as an adult.

And there aren't enough resources to make everybody whole.

And if you protect the past, you die inside. Only by pushing the envelope can society be protected. Just yesterday in the "New York Times" it was stated that Toronto is a hotbed of tech innovation. One of the drivers is the immigrants that Trump wouldn't let into the U.S. Turns out you can't throw out the baby with the bathwater. But somehow, Americans believe that letting in these immigrants will cause them to suffer, when quite the opposite is true.

So we weren't prepared for a world with Zelensky and Navalny. Money was paramount, you should point your life in that direction. If you lie, cheat and steal along the way, that's fine, maybe you too can own a three hundred foot yacht. But suddenly they're seizing those. These oligarchs thought they were inviolate. Are they ever going to go after the oligarchs in America? I'd like to see that, and I'm not the only one.

Am I willing to sacrifice for that?

That is the question. I mean would you go back to Russia after they poisoned you knowing that you'd be put in jail? On the surface I say absolutely no way. But today, reading that Navalny believes he'll never serve the nine additional years because the government will fail before that... I'm inspired. One person can make a difference, they just have to sacrifice.

And it's not one day and one decision. It's a long time coming, it's cumulative. You realize the whole is greater than the individual. That there truly is right and wrong. That there are bad guys, and they're almost always guys, but they're just guys, they're just human, and truth is more powerful than the sign of the cross. Everybody knows it, they're just afraid to speak it.

Except for these guys.

Can you say no to the endorsement/sponsorship? The artist's great club is the ability to speak truth to power. But so many immediately put this aside, do what they're told, all in pursuit of money. To the point where we can't have an anthem in the United States anymore, to the point where a forty year old song has more power than any track on the hit parade, that's right, Kyiv's calling. Joe Strummer might be dead, but he's got more power, more meaning than anybody making music today. He's got a legacy, along with the song's cowriter, Mick Jones, and the rest of the Clash. Did the band always get it right? No, but they knew what was important.

So you don't only study history to learn lessons, you study what's right in front of you.

Everything's up for grabs, nothing is protected except you and your mind.

To make a difference you must sacrifice, there is a cost. Because the game is rigged against you. They don't want to let anybody new in, they don't want any change.

But the heroes are always the innovators. Those willing to go against the grain. Those willing to stand up for what they believe in.

And each and every one of them sacrificed, severely, to get where they are.

Most people have no idea of this level of sacrifice. But for decades, sacrifice has only been about work. And work is important, but it turns out there are things bigger than money, like right and wrong, like human dignity, and the greats sacrifice for that.

Do you want to be great?

Then you'll have to sacrifice.


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Monday, 21 March 2022

Your Favorite Don Henley Song-This Week On SiriusXM

Tune in tomorrow, March 22nd, to Volume 106, 7 PM East, 4 PM West.

Phone #: 844-6-VOLUME, 844-686-5863

Twitter: @lefsetz or @siriusxmvolume/#lefsetzlive

Hear the episode live on SiriusXM VOLUME: siriusxm.us/HearLefsetzLive

If you miss the episode, you can hear it on demand on the SiriusXM app: siriusxm.us/LefsetzLive


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Sunday, 20 March 2022

Even More Covid

From the "Wall Street Journal":

"Ivermectin Didn't Reduce Covid-19 Hospitalizations in Largest Trial to Date - Patients who got the antiparasitic drug didn't fare better than those who received a placebo": https://on.wsj.com/3Ip0FnJ

____________________________________

I got Omicron and I'm vaxed. It's not mild. The first five days were like a slight cold, but then I went down hard. I still have serious lung issues after 10 weeks, but a 14 day run of azithromycin seems to be helping so far. Regardless of whatever anyone says, it's rough and very unlike anything I've ever experienced before. 

Sacha Spindler

____________________________________

Well said man.   I did the prudent thing.   Stayed at home for 20 months.    Cloroxd my shoes and washed my hands to sand paper.   Then I got the COVID…..it was NOT a flu and my doctor said "if I wasn't vaccinated " Plus booster I would have died.     It was not cool as I attempted to cough up body parts that didn't exist…….and oh how cool it is to taste and smell food again.    Pin heads

Chris Apostle

____________________________________

Thanks for the caveat on Michael Ball's letter. The guy spoke relatively reasonably, without name calling, etc, then posted three links to prove his points. For kicks, I clicked in them because he's right about David Muir. That guy's terrible. 

And here we go, down the rabbit hole. All three of those links failed to prove the writer's points. All three of them pointed to possibilities and potentials, but with clear disclaimers and caveats.  

The BBC link about masks talked about the far-increased effectiveness of higher-grade masks. Didn't say a thing about cloth masks not doing any good. 

The Vitamin D one from Europe talks about a study of less than 1000 people. And the one from Indonesia went out of its way to make clear that the info was preliminary because, yes, science can change. 

And Trump/insulin thing? Even a cursory search shows that never even took effect before Biden repealed it. 

I certainly do appreciate the guy's mistrust of big pharma. And I, too, often wonder how Dave Muir's able to keep his job. 

But even those who know how to "do their own research" will only pick & choose the info that supports their position. 

Jon Langston

____________________________________

I moved to Puerto Rico, where the infection and the death toll are half of the per capita rate stateside. Everyone wears a mask, vaccine cards are required most places, and in months I've never seen a single bit of drama about it. The only place I've seen any disregard for health measures has been in the tourist spots where Americans congregate. Los feos americanos. 

Trent Keeling 

____________________________________

I am going to see Graham Nash perform this evening. Masks are required for this event. Proof of vaccination or a negative Covid test are also required. Thank you, Graham, for your efforts to keep your fans safe. This is only the second concert I have attended since Covid.  The other was an outdoor concert by the Rolling Stones, who I have tried never to miss since meeting them at West View Park Danceland in Pittsburgh,  during their first US tour in 1964.

Ed Salamon 

____________________________________

I'm only slightly immunocompromised but to be safe I wear a KN95 in indoor public places and (mostly) avoid indoor restaurants (and always avoid crowded ones).

That said, a "95" mask plus crowd avoidance will protect me (or anyone) just fine, and for that reason I don't agree that masks should still be imposed on the general population, nor do I resent anyone who chooses not to wear one.

Mark B. Spiegel

____________________________________

Old and scared. Superkarens. 
Get over it, Hypochondriacs we all die!

Wake up stop pretending you were ever "safe" the tv told you to be scared and
You're old.

Also irrelevant.

Andrew Hunter 

____________________________________

Bob, it's endemic. We all had better get used to it and move on living our lives. It's never leaving. My wife is a surgeon and they have stopped testing patients at their hospital in Nashville unless someone says they have symptoms. My wife was back doing surgery 5 days after testing positive in January. That's what the hospitals mandated as protocol. 

If you're high-risk, wear a mask and wash your hands. It's simple. 

Don't be the woman I saw snorting hand sanitizer through her mask at the coffee shop the other day. 

Kenton Bryant

____________________________________

Your ideas about Covid are just your ideas. They are not right or wrong. But like Paul Krugman, you are certain you are correct. And that is always wrong.

Tanner Freeman

____________________________________

Continually amazed by how many compete dumbshits here and worldwide think they're experts. May we live in interesting times. 

Matt Burnham

____________________________________

In Spain its still mandatory to wear masks inside, on bus, metro etc... only walking outside is it not required.  Clearly given the other EU countries having trouble w the new Omni B2 variant they know its coming here. 20,000 a day now. a week ago 10k. but at peak in Jan/Feb it was over 100k, almost 200.  And that is with very high Vax rates here.  

Brian Barry

____________________________________

Longest damn note I've ever read  and probably the worst!

I don't mean to belittle you but some where somehow the stupidity must end.

I am a old Jarhead,  USMC Marine, for those timid fellows like you. 

I've lost the top lobe of my right lung, from smoking or radiation.  I saw the last USA nuclear tests and believe me you don't want to see one. Currently very possible with Biden as President. 

This covid is no worse than the Swine flu several years ago. The difference is with our government not allowing a "crisis " to go to waste. Obama and company are nailed to the wall on all of this. Anyone associated with Bernadine Dorn is guilty of a multitude of sins.

You and many like you are guilty of believing anything spit out by these criminals. 

Maybe somewhere down the road you will see the truth and not believe what is being spewed by Biden and those who should be respected leaders. But aren't!

Most are truly Traitors but only time will bring this to the forefront!

Once again I'm only an old Marine speaking in the wilderness!

You have a good day and enjoy life as it is short and sometimes sweet. Sometimes it is rough!

K P - kenmar13

____________________________________

Bob, I couldn't get through your response over this shit.  One thing is clear.  You have a brain. I wish everyone else had.. This shit has gone enough.. I can't even talk to my younger brother about the covid stuff..He is stubborn as a mule..i can't talk to anybody about up here in Canada...guaranteed argument ... Yes i am immunocompromised .. i am double vaxxed Maybe because i am sixty five i don't give a fuck. But I don't wanna take anybody down with me...I haven't seen my mother in two years.. She is 89 years old .... I miss her man.. keep up he good work

Randy Dawson

____________________________________

Staind frontman Aaron Lewis: "Maybe we should listen to what Vladimir Putin has to say .. Why are (Deep State) trying to protect Ukraine so much? What do they have to lose? .. Putin is fighting the Deep State right now, which is the same people we're fighting."

https://twitter.com/RonFilipkowski/status/1505624176903790604


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