10/16/10

Bon Jovi: Concerts for the Coast and I was there Part Deux

Here are some pictures I took:
The man with the finest ass in Rock N Roll
Jon during Blood on Blood
Richie during Whole Lotta Leaving
Reading the teleprompter while dancing, now that's multitasking.
Gutter Pimp Ustreaming the concert.  All Hail Gutter Pimp (even though he's a Cowboys Fan [BOOOO!])!!!!!!
Um, who is this sexy man???
Are you still with me???
The rest of the pics are Here.  I don't watermark my images (images are open season once they go on the net, so....  I don't hold any illusions) so if you use them please credit me.  Feel free to leave a comment or favorite them.  I took over 800+ so stop by throughout the day.  Also here's the opening w/Blood on Blood I uploaded to You Tube

Bon Jovi - The Concerts for the Coast Happened, and I was there. Part 1

So this is my weekend Friday and Saturday.

Went to work Friday, left early, hitched a flight to Pensacola on Continental thanks to their Fantastic One Pass program that I hope doesn't go away due to the merger with United and their sucky Mileage Plus program. Arrived on one of those Flintstones jets where you actually go up stairs to get on the plane and then you self propel the plane with your feet. I thought I was going to die.
Met Stacy & her husband Mike (who is a Cowboy's fan but otherwise a very cool person) and Lauri. We end up cramming ourselves and our luggage into Stacy & Mike's car as they drove 14 hours from West Texas. Stopped along the way and bought some essentials. Then headed for Gulf Shores for Condo of Sin Gutter Girls weekend. We have rented this 3 bedroom condo right on the beach in Gulf Shores. I've never been to this part of the gulf coast its really nice. The waves are breaking right under the balcony.

We were all tired by the time we settled in for the night.

Friday morning we got up and planned to be at the venue around 1 because allegedly fan club could get the VIP tickets at 2 PM. We got there and couldn't find the Fan Club tent. Some nice guy who worked for the City of Gulf Shores escorted us to the tent. We got our wristbands and were told we could go into the venue & get in line with all the other VIP's and Fan Club peeps.

10/14/10

Bon Jovi: Some of Jon's Denim goes into the New Jersey Hall Of Fame

All I can say about this is, in my home state we honor people with exhibits at Rest Stops.


By Amy S. Rosenberg
Inquirer Staff Writer

ASBURY PARK, N.J. - Mrs. Govett did not mince words on the report card of the second grader named Jack Nicholson at the Roosevelt Elementary School in Neptune.
"Jack's work is excellent, but he needs more self control."

Is it any wonder that young Jack grew up to be the arguably still out-of-control actor whose work is nevertheless considered excellent?

Nicholson's prescient and insightful report card - undated but presumably circa 1944, when he would have been 7 - is one of a handful of donated artifacts at the inaugural exhibition of the New Jersey Hall of Fame, which opened Wednesday on the boardwalk in Asbury Park.

Also on display: Susan Sarandon's 1963-64 Edison High School cheerleading jacket, red flannel and hooded, with "Sue" embroidered on the left front and "64" on the arm.

Rusty Paul, the son of guitar legend Les Paul of Mahwah, was on hand for the ribbon-cutting for the exhibition, which also features a 1952 Les Paul Goldtop Guitar, distinguished by strings that were incorrectly threaded underneath a trapeze tailpiece instead of over it.

"Two thousand of them were made," said Rusty Paul. "My dad stopped them."

Paul said his father, who died a year ago, would have been honored to be included in the show. "I helped put him in the Hall of Fame," said Paul, who still lives in the house he grew up in, on Deerhaven Road in Mahwah, and himself travels with a band. Paul is still thinking about the Hall of Fame induction ceremony in May, which brought out an impressive array of Jersey royalty: "Jack Nicholson showed, Bruce Springsteen, Frankie Valli - all the good guys."

Until now, the Hall of Fame's public face has existed only as a website and an induction ceremony, which follows an online voting process open to the public.

Nicholson, Paul, and Sarandon are among 42 inductees into the Hall since 2008, ranging from Thomas Edison (whose 1903 Gem Model phonograph was also on display) to Bruce Springsteen (no artifacts yet, but Asbury Park itself is one big Bruce artifact) to Harriet Tubman and writers Philip Roth and Judy Blume.

The inaugural exhibition space at 1200 Ocean Avenue in Asbury Park is temporary. Eventually, there will be a permanent N.J. Hall of Fame in Trenton, plus regional museums in Newark and Atlantic City.

The mission of the Hall of Fame is to present "powerful role models" for the children of New Jersey, way beyond Snooki and the housewives.

On the walls is an exhibit of 30 large photographs of New Jersey celebrities (ranging from Whitney Houston to James Gandolfini, Queen Latifah, Meryl Streep, and, again, Nicholson) taken by celebrity photographer Timothy White. This winter, the exhibit will travel to the Cheesequake Rest Stop on the Garden State Parkway.

Don Jay Smith, the executive director of the Hall of Fame, said he was actively seeking more artifacts. Already on the way are Jon Bon Jovi's denim jacket, adorned with Bon Jovi and New Jersey patches, and a suit worn by Jersey Boy Frankie Valli.

(No word if The Situation will be donating his six-pack. Oh, wait, he has a long way to go to the N.J. Hall of Fame.)

Other inductees who might have interesting artifacts include Frank Sinatra, Bill Bradley, Toni Morrison, Althea Gibson, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Abbott and Costello.

"New Jersey has been fertile ground for some remarkable accomplishments," said Smith.

Smith said Bon Jovi thought long and hard over what to donate, considered a gold record, but settled on the more homespun denim jacket. "This was really important to him," he said.

The family of Les Paul, meanwhile, first offered Smith a guitar valued at $1 million, which he declined, not wanting to take responsibility for putting such a valuable item on the Asbury Park Boardwalk, revitalized or not.

The exhibition space was donated by Madison Marquette, the development company that has spearheaded the comeback of Asbury Park, which has gone from the poster child for failed resorts to the envy of boardwalk towns everywhere. The exhibition is just a block or two from the Stone Pony and the Wonder Bar, both fabled Springsteen hangouts, just steps away from Madam Marie.

"People are donating some of their most cherished items," said Gary Mottola of Madison Marquette. "For Susan to give her own personal high school jacket, for Jack to give his report card, shows they really care about New Jersey."

Getting back to young Jack, it should be noted that Mrs. Govett tried again for second period. "Jack should be more self controlled," she wrote.

Each time, Nicholson's mother, Edith Nicholson, dutifully signed the report card. Never mind the one C in conduct and two C's in "shows self control." Let's hope Mrs. Nicholson focused on the A's her son scored on everything else, from Oral English to Numbers to Observable Health Habits and even "Works Well with Others."

And in the end, the rambunctious Nicholson won his teacher over. The final notation: "Promoted to third grade."

Jon's denim jacket, I know which jacket they're speaking of yet Google is being uncooperative this early in the morning.

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