headsonfire (Login headsonfire) Club America - the Cure FC
Hey, I was away over the weekend so I taped live 8 to see The Cure. I couldn't find when The Cure performed. I guess they didn't show Robert and pals, huh? What happened?
Well Grenn Day performed and they did "We are the Champions" by Queen and Billie Joe tottally blew it on the vocals. Elton John played so did The Killers, Paul MaCartney and George Micheal, Madonna, Coldplay and Richard Ashcroft did "Bittersweet Symphony together and it was awsome!! Well lets just say that there was alot of rappers and there was no Cure. So the show pretty much sucked!!!
headsonfire (Login headsonfire) Club America - the Cure FC
Re: question about live 8
July 6 2005, 2:19 PM
Thanks! Of course they had to make it so teeny-bopper audience friendly and play rappers like crazy. Too bad about The Cure. Was The Cure in London? Did anyone on this site go?
filth... (no login)
"we're all big stars and we really care about poor people"
July 6 2005, 2:30 PM
yea, i was pretty well discusted.
brandon flowers looked ever-so-smart in his pencil legged trousers though. i'm SO DAMN SICK OF BELL BOTTOMS i could vomit!
the killers were a bright spot in an otherwise sorry line-up of televised acts.
i was thinking it was odd to not raise $$...
they did it to "raise awareness"?!
WTF?!
is there actually anyone out there who does not know that people are starving in africa? i mean, how damn stupid do you have to be...?! it was more like a gathering of wealthy celebs who are impressed enough with themselves to get on stage and say:
"we're all really big stars and we care about poor people"
Filth did you sign the petition on www.one.org? They don't want your money because a lot of people aren't even aware of the suffering over there. If you want to donate some money go to that site and donate there. You can also email your local reps and senators and tell them you support debt relief for African countries. Now before you all think when I say everyone I mean us I don't. I went to work on Saturday morning and my coworkers didn't even know what LIve Aid was. And I went to work with different coworkers on Monday and they didn't even know what it was and didn't know what www.one.org was either. These world leaders think no one listens or that they can do whatever they want. We may be more aware because we read what's going on online. Anyway. They are using their celebrity for peeps like us to support debt relief and tell our friends who don't know what they can do.
I think aol has the concerts by artists now. whew. Mtv's coverage reminded us of the nbc coverage of Bjork when they talked over the whole thing. The dj's on Saturday were like "What an amazing event. This amazing performer is right behind us and we are talking over him. WOW. Look at how many people are here!!" WHO CARES!! SHUT UP AND LET US LISTEN TO THE MUSIC IDIOTS!!!!!!. Ahh I feel better!!
Insatiable (no login)
Re: question about live 8
July 6 2005, 6:15 PM
mmm... COF has a good gallery of the Cure performance. is it just me, or is it always nice to Robert hot, sweaty, and with his mouth wide open?
Anonymous (no login)
Re: question about live 8
July 6 2005, 8:03 PM
it's just like when they televise parades. you can't enjoy the parade because they can't stop talking.
headsonfire (Login headsonfire) Club America - the Cure FC
Re: question about live 8
July 6 2005, 8:46 PM
Oh wow! I thought the purpose of Live 8 was to raise money! I mean, it is hard to believe that people don't know that there is suffering in Africa, but I guess that there are.
Re: bellbottoms, I agree. The straight leg look is a good one.
And a sweaty Robert is always a good thing.
Anonymous (no login)
Re: question about live 8
July 6 2005, 8:52 PM
apparently America was asked to give money or to match the money earned from ticket sales, or so I heared.
headsonfire (Login headsonfire) Club America - the Cure FC
Re: question about live 8
July 6 2005, 8:56 PM
Did America do that? Did we pay attention? Are we asking the government this?
I think that more than awareness, the idea was to let the leaders of the 8 most powerfull economies in the world know that we are ok if they take 70 cents of each 100 dolars we pay in taxes to help africa...if that really happens (if the African government doesn't steal this money) Africa would be changed within one generation...I think it's a great idea...and if it wasn't for this festival, I probably wouldn't know that all I had to do was go on line and put my name there...
Well, by now you guys probably know that if you go to aol on demand you can watch the cure's performance...they sounded great...and it was a great little setlist...
(Just like heaven, 100 years, Boys don't cry, End and Open)
headsonfire (Login headsonfire) Club America - the Cure FC
Re: question about live 8
July 7 2005, 4:10 AM
Pink, I can't get that on demand thing to work. It says you have to have Netscape. I have a Mac with internet explorer and Safari. Do you have any suggestions? Thanks!
pinkcat (no login)
Re: question about live 8
July 7 2005, 7:43 AM
You have to download netscape. My fiance did it for me...he said that he typed on google "how to download netscape Mac OS X" and he went from there...give it a try and let me know!
Anonymous (no login)
A big thank you from ONE
July 14 2005, 1:10 AM
here's the email from one campaign...
Dear Friend:
This is a big thank you to all 1.5 million of you who joined together as ONE to do something extraordinary.
From the 500,000 letters you sent to President Bush to Live 8 in Philadelphia to the G8 Summit in Gleneagles, you called on eight men to do more to fight global AIDS and extreme poverty, and they heard your call. In Scotland this past Friday, overcoming the shadow of a tragic day in London, President Bush joined G8 leaders in an unprecedented deal to cancel debts and double aid to Africa.
For African nations fighting poverty and corruption, this means a $25 billion increase in aid and wiping out 100% of their debts. With this funding, Africa can halve deaths from malaria, put millions of children into school, and 10 million people across the world will have access to lifesaving AIDS drugs. Behind each of these numbers is one person, one life that will be changed forever.
For the first time ever, everyday Americans like you joined together to take a seat at the negotiating table, asking the world's most powerful leaders to do more to help the world's poorest people. Because you signed the ONE Declaration, wore the white band and forwarded emails to friends about ONE, you made a huge step toward making poverty history. We've come so far and still have far to go.
Keep the momentum going, email 3 friends about ONE today.
This agreement is a real victory for Africa - but promises made of words will only become promises for a generation if we keep watching, asking and acting. Much more needs to be done in Washington DC to turn these commitments into lifesaving programs, and the world must take new steps to make trade fair. More meetings will take place this year in New York and Hong Kong where a comprehensive debt-aid-trade deal can be reached and end global AIDS and extreme poverty in our time.
We can be that great generation. As ONE, let's keep up the positive pressure and make 2005 the year we joined together to make history.
Thank you,
The ONE Team
P.S. You can learn more about the details of the G8 deal by checking out the ONE.ORG G8 page.
Anonymous (no login)
Re: question about live 8
July 15 2005, 2:25 AM
The way I see it:
The Live 8 served to promote a bunch of RICH WHITE Billboard Top 100 rock stars. That's it. Bono and U2 could rid Africa of the debt themselves with the profits of their U2 ipod. IF THAT IS WHAT THEY REALLY WANTED TO DO. There are plenty of nameless people that give selflessly and continuously, without a press release, and free everything all the time.
chicken bauk (Login xdariax) Club America - the Cure FC
cant please everyone now can we
July 16 2005, 6:11 AM
So i went to go read it and i had to RE- freakin register to read it, so for those who are not registered, here:
All Rock, No Action
By JEAN-CLAUDE SHANDA TONME
Published: July 15, 2005
Yaoundé, Cameroon
LIVE 8, that extraordinary media event that some people of good intentions in the West just orchestrated, would have left us Africans indifferent if we hadn't realized that it was an insult both to us and to common sense.
We have nothing against those who this month, in a stadium, a street, a park, in Berlin, London, Moscow, Philadelphia, gathered crowds and played guitar and talked about global poverty and aid for Africa. But we are troubled to think that they are so misguided about what Africa's real problem is, and dismayed by their willingness to propose solutions on our behalf.
We Africans know what the problem is, and no one else should speak in our name. Africa has men of letters and science, great thinkers and stifled geniuses who at the risk of torture rise up to declare the truth and demand liberty.
Don't insult Africa, this continent so rich yet so badly led. Instead, insult its leaders, who have ruined everything. Our anger is all the greater because despite all the presidents for life, despite all the evidence of genocide, we didn't hear anyone at Live 8 raise a cry for democracy in Africa.
Don't the organizers of the concerts realize that Africa lives under the oppression of rulers like Yoweri Museveni (who just eliminated term limits in Uganda so he can be president indefinitely) and Omar Bongo (who has become immensely rich in his three decades of running Gabon)? Don't they know what is happening in Cameroon, Chad, Togo and the Central African Republic? Don't they understand that fighting poverty is fruitless if dictatorships remain in place?
Even more puzzling is why Youssou N'Dour and other Africans participated in this charade. Like us, they can't help but know that Africa's real problem is the lack of freedom of expression, the usurpation of power, the brutal oppression.
Neither debt relief nor huge amounts of food aid nor an invasion of experts will change anything. Those will merely prop up the continent's dictators. It's up to each nation to liberate itself and to help itself. When there is a problem in the United States, in Britain, in France, the citizens vote to change their leaders. And those times when it wasn't possible to freely vote to change those leaders, the people revolted.
In Africa, our leaders have led us into misery, and we need to rid ourselves of these cancers. We would have preferred for the musicians in Philadelphia and London to have marched and sung for political revolution. Instead, they mourned a corpse while forgetting to denounce the murderer.
What is at issue is an Africa where dictators kill, steal and usurp power yet are treated like heroes at meetings of the African Union. What is at issue is rulers like François Bozizé, the coup leader running the Central Africa Republic, and Faure Gnassingbé, who just succeeded his father as president of Togo, free to trample universal suffrage and muzzle their people with no danger that they'll lose their seats at the United Nations. Who here wants a concert against poverty when an African is born, lives and dies without ever being able to vote freely?
But the truth is that it was not for us, for Africa, that the musicians at Live 8 were singing; it was to amuse the crowds and to clear their own consciences, and whether they realized it or not, to reinforce dictatorships. They still believe us to be like children that they must save, as if we don't realize ourselves what the source of our problems is.
Jean-Claude Shanda Tonme is a consultant on international law and a columnist for Le Messager, a Cameroonian daily, where a version of this article first appeared. This article was translated by The Times from the French.
Anonymous (no login)
Re: question about live 8
July 17 2005, 6:56 PM
hte problem with the world is that ALL governments are corrupt
Anonymous (no login)
Re: question about live 8
July 18 2005, 3:04 PM
What is happening in Africa is horrific, by any standards.
But - to some extent, it is wrong of westerners to evaluate their circumstances by holding up our Euro measuring stick (European standards measurement). We tend to look at the problems of the world through our own socio-economic framework of thinking, and it is important to recognise that the people we condescendingly look upon with pity do not think of themselves likewise.
Their culture finds many practices - which are outlawed in Europe, acceptable. Their governments are more corrupt than ours. They resent interference from other country's when it comes to political intervention. To some extent, change, or the willingness to change, has to come from within.