Posted on 02/01/2009 5:04:40 PM PST by slomark
Bruce Springsteen now says he shouldnt have made a deal to sell his greatest hits CD exclusively at Wal-Mart.
Fans criticized The Boss because Wal-Mart has been accused of unfair labor practices. Springsteen, on the other hand, has always supported workers rights.
It was a mistake, Springsteen said. Our...
(Excerpt) Read more at ihatethemedia.com ...
“...and I keep hoping he doesnt have a heart attack during his show.”
I kept thinking that, too! I was listening for the ‘thud’ from the other room. ;)
I grew up on the Jersey shore (same age as Bruce). When young, he was not very political. But once he married the Phillips woman and moved to LA, he changed. He went from a clumsy kid from Highway 9 to movie star favorite.
I haven’t listed to him since “The River.” His music had leftist overtones (ala Woody Guthrie), but he didn’t emerge as a symbol of liberalism until Hollywood turned his.
Another millionaire liberal, willing to give away everyone else’s money.
I used to like him before he became political. Don’t get me wrong, he has the right to support whom he wants to support and to say what he wants to say. But once you come out and say how useless the president is, and insult him, then you run the risk of offending 46% of your potential audience.
Every time an artist starts spewing hatred towards people I support, that’s one more checked off my list. I don’t get rid of what I paid for, but I don’t spend another penny.
My list is long.
tomorrow morning, watch all of the commercials back to back on the internet.
I gotta say....I used to be a Springsteen fan in the ‘80’s and I was thoroughly disappointed in his performance. Either his voice is worn out or my hearing has changed, but he sucks.
Very sad.
I remember him going tooth and nail after tee-shirt vendors using his image. Legally correct, but I thought it peculiar that this man of the working class would go after those poor guys.
I don’t make the mistake of buying anything by Springsteen.
Sorry, can’t boycott his CD as I would never buy anything with him on it anyway. He doesn’t need my money, and I don’t need his “music”. I bought his first album back in the 70’s, played it once.
It sucked.
The commercials are stupid and mean spirited this year...
.. and I left-(sil's home) during the halftime (purposely left when it came on) & timed it well enough to arrive home just when the halftime was over.
No liberal Springsteen for me.
I’ll wait until the CD is on the half-price table, buy it, and mail it unopened to Bruce.
Maybe if we ignore him he will go away.
It started for him right before he released The River, when he did the "No Nukes" concerts. But at least back then he wasn't so strident. And he music was much better.
I used to like him a lot, but now he's off my radar screen. Haven't bought record of his since the 1990s.
he = his
I'm guessing they'll be available in the bargain bin soon enough.
*Sigh*. I just HAD to watch (begrudgingly) the guy during halftime. Husband (lib) INSISTED that the kids and I watch.
He’s ‘past it’....he had a hard time with the ‘drop and slide’ on the stage. I was just thankful he didn’t spout ‘politics’....but I noticed a couple of ‘O’ hand gestures in the immediate audience surrounding the stage. Also noted to self that the cams did NOT cut to the rest of the audience in the stadium (may not have looked as ‘enthused’). JMO.
” It started for him right before he released The River, when he did the “No Nukes” concerts. But at least back then he wasn’t so strident. And he music was much better.
I used to like him a lot, but now he’s off my radar screen. Haven’t bought record of his since the 1990s.”
I posted my memory of Bruce’s rise to fame on the Super Bowl thread. Before his first album was released, he was plastered all over the covers of major magazines. He had some great promoters. This was back in the day when we were really into finding our own music—you’d hear an obscure group, talk about it, your friends would buy the music, and there would be a “star.” Bruce didn’t do it that way. I always felt he was a manufactured pop star, much like the Monkees were sold to us as a Beatles-type substitute.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.