May 19, 2012

Car Bomb a Possible Factor in Broadway Declines

Car Bomb a Possible Factor in Broadway Declines
By PATRICK HEALY; Compiled by DAVE ITZKOFF
Published: May 3, 2010
Almost all Broadway plays and musicals lost money at the box office last week, with some of the biggest declines occurring at theaters near a car that was found to contain a bomb on Saturday evening. The ensuing evacuation of Times Square could have been a factor in some of the declines, theater industry executives acknowledged, but they said they had no data to confirm such a correlation. The car with the bomb was found on West 45th Street, just west of Seventh Avenue and right outside the Minskoff Theater, where “The Lion King” is playing. Last week “The Lion King” had one of the biggest declines, of $113,440, although the hit show still grossed $1.3 million, third behind “Wicked” and “The Addams Family.” The largest week-to-week decline was for “Mary Poppins” at the New Amsterdam Theater on West 42nd Street, close to Seventh Avenue and some of the most heavily trafficked subway stops in Times Square; some theatergoers said they did not reach their shows on Saturday night because of subway delays and were exchanging their tickets. “Mary Poppins” was down $180,251 from the previous week, to a total of $704,541. No Broadway shows canceled performances because of the bomb scare and evacuation. Over all, Broadway box offices grossed $20.7 million, down from $22.1 million the previous week — but up from the $19.9 million for the same week last season.

rumor spreading around Facebook about there being a new security vulnerability

Right now there is a rumor spreading around Facebook about there being a new security vulnerability in Facebook accounts and it’s absolutely inaccurate. Information similar to this was spread previously in something called the “Automation Labs bug“. In both instances the rumor was absolutely false.

Here’s what the message says that’s being spread around Facebook:

… found…. Hacker in door in our friends list!….We are now listed as friends of ourselves! You need to delete yourself from your friends list to close the door to hackers. To do this … Go to Account, go to edit friends, there search for your name on the list and click …the X to get your name removed

Essentially someone has found a strange bug: when you search through your friends list, you show up as a friend of yourself. Even if you “delete” yourself as a friend, you’ll continue to show up as a friend once you refresh the page. The one thing that users need to know is that their accounts have not been compromised in any way. Rather than blindly participating in the rumor spreading, let your friends know that this information is completely false.

Pearl Jam kicked out the jams at the New Orleans Jazz Fest

pearl jam 2010 concert review new Orleans

Pearl Jam concert review

pearl Jam tickets

Pearl Jam kicked out the jams at the New Orleans Jazz Fest

By Keith Spera, The Times-Picayune

May 01, 2010, 9:35PM

Pearl JamChris Granger, The Times-PicayunePearl Jam singer Eddie Vedder plays on the Acura Stage at the New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival on Saturday.

It’s hard to imagine now, but during grunge rock’s early ’90s heyday, Pearl Jam was often dismissed as pretty-boy pop poseurs. On Saturday at theNew Orleans Jazz Fest, Eddie Vedder and company delivered an exhilarating set that reiterated why they now rank among rock’s finest live bands.

Wearing a short-sleeve plaid shirt over a “Mr. Bill Show” T-shirt, Vedder was the genial everyman rock star, his voice undiminished. Facing one of the largest, densest and youngest crowds to assemble at the Acura Stage in recent memory, he addressed fans in the distance: “I can’t get closer, but we can play louder.”

From my vantage point 100 yards deep on the field, Pearl Jam was plenty loud, and plenty clear. Every nuance of the musicians’ interplay, from Jeff Ament’s robust electric upright bass on “Nothing Man” to the nimble give-and-take of guitarists Stone Gossard and Mike McCready, was audible. There was much to savor in those details.

The thrills came early and often. After getting their bearings with the opening cover of The Byrds’ “So You Want to Be a Rock ‘n Roll Star,” they bore down on “Corduroy,” powered by drummer Matt Cameron. Multiple sunburst refrains broke open in “Given to Fly.” They beefed up a raging “Even Flow” with bonus guitar solos, but still maintained the spirit of the original arrangement.

Gossard and McCready swapped well-constructed riffs on “Down” and elsewhere. Gossard windmilled through the big finish of “Better Man.” McCready nailed his solo in an epic “Alive,” then extended it as Vedder hopped off stage to meet-and-great the folks down front.

Vedder recalled how, in November 1993, a Decatur Street brawl earned him a trip to Orleans Parish Prison. “There’s a lot of people here. I can’t be the only one who’s had the great pleasure of spending a night in a New Orleans jail.”

That night he learned that, if you have enough money for your bail and someone else’s, “you’ll never see a happier 85-year-old toothless man.”

His stint in the pokey aside, Vedder noted, the band has enjoyed some good times here. The 1994 album “Vitalogy” was partially recorded at Daniel Lanois’ former Kingsway Studio on Esplanade Avenue. In honor of that visit, they knocked off that album’s squalling “Tremor Christ.”

Vedder greeted members of the Louisiana National Guard and other troops watching the show in Iraq and Afghanistan via a live video and audio feed. He thanked them for their “valiant work in extreme conditions…I wish you’d break down and have a beer. You’ve earned it.”

The singer mounted his soapbox only once: To chastise British Petroleum for the oil polluting the Gulf of Mexico. Vedder suggested the children of company executives should vacation on the Louisiana coast this summer. “Send your sons and daughters, BP, to clean up your f—– mess.” (Imagine the awkwardness had the blown oil rig in the Gulf belonged to Jazz Fest title sponsor Shell.)

With that, Vedder and his bandmates got back to business with early anthem “Daughter.” On Pearl Jam’s more recent, uneven, albums, hooks and melodies are sacrificed for a full-bore attack. At Jazz Fest, they flirted with that punkish spirit on “Comatose” and “Supersonic.” A final thrash through the MC5′s “Kick Out the Jams” brought it all home.

Their only misstep was a sin of omission — they omitted the last 20 minutes of their allotted set time. But the previous hour-and-40 minutes left little doubt that Pearl Jam, at peak form, has few peers.

Music writer Keith Spera can be reached at kspera@timespicayune.com or 504.460.4763.