Two cities united with a common goal: to celebrate and renew the city of New Orleans.
You are receiving this email because you have a ticket to the Voodoo Music Experience, scheduled to take place Halloween Weekend in Memphis' Tom Lee Park.
In an historic move, this year's VOODOO MUSIC EXPERIENCE will return home to New Orleans for the first day of its two back-to-back concerts.
The Saturday, October 29 event will be an invitation-only celebration in New Orleans' Riverview Park behind Audubon Zoo to honor the heroic efforts of countless individuals who are dedicated to the clean-up and recovery of the city. Please visit www.voodoomusicfest.com for the lineup.
The Sunday, October 30 event will take place in Memphis' AutoZone Park and will feature performances by some of the original Voodoo lineup as well as special performances by New Orleans artists. In addition, there will be a series of free concerts in downtown Memphis beginning Thursday, October 27 and continuing throughout the weekend. Details and the full lineup are available at www.voodoomusicfest.com.
Tickets to the New Orleans event will not be onsale to the public, however, in an effort to show our appreciation for your patience and support during this difficult time of transition, your ticket will grant you exclusive access to the New Orleans event on Saturday, October 29. Please note, this ticket will not grant access to the Memphis event.
If you would like to solely attend the event in Memphis on Sunday, October 30, please refund your $60 ticket and purchase a single-day ticket to the Memphis Event for $35.
If you would like to attend both the event in New Orleans and the event in Memphis, please retain your original ticket and also purchase a ticket to the Memphis Event for $35.
For those affected, refunds are available through Ticketmaster at 1-800-488-5252.
As previously announced, proceeds from the VOODOO MUSIC EXPERIENCE will benefit the New Orleans Restoration Fund (NORF), a donor-advised fund of the Entertainment Industry Foundation.
This is an ad I saw today in the side bar of my hotmail window:
My reaction in stages:
1. HAHAHA
2. Hey... I'm kinda offended.
a. what's wrong with being a nerd?
b. glasses are cool, man!
c. nerd=dork is fightin words
3. Hey, wtf do they even mean by this anyway? No tech-support necessary? Is that their biggest selling point?
4. No nerds no problem? Nerds are only ever helpful and entertaining.
5. HAHAHA... nerds.
If you have any kid's records, I know a child who would absolutely love to have them. Milky asked me via Ouija board to ask you guys to help out the bereaved family he left behind, following his unfortunate demise. He says I gotta pay for shipping costs. I told him I would, then we got in a fight, then the crypt keeper told me to leave and stop arguing with thin air.
I bought Stellastarr's Harmony for the Haunted CD today, only to discover that it's so copyright-overprotected that it's not compatible with iPod products and iTunes software, only with Windows Media Player. So I can't play it on my iPod Mini, or on my computer (unless with Windows Media Player).
I am so pissed off right now. I will take that piece of shit back to HMV tomorrow and I will get them to take it back - I have no plans of being forced to buy my music in duplicate (BMG/Sony plus iTunes Music Store) to be able to listen to it. I don't even own a CD player, just a computer and an iPod mini.
Who's the genius at BMG/Sony who came up with that? I want his head. Until that happens, read the small print on the back on your Sony products. It won't say that it's not iPod compatible, but it should say that it's only compatible with WIndows Media Player.
Sony might not be doing as well as Apple with respect to portable mp3 player sales, but alienating its CD buyers is NOT the solution.
im going to draw fight whoever comes to giantrobot silverlake on sunday between 1:30 and 3:30 so if you live in LA you should come and i will stick a pencil in your eye!