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#1301 Re: Guns N' Roses » It's happening. » 335 weeks ago
If they don’t announce the album at/by Miami, it ain’t happening in 2020.
#1302 Re: Guns N' Roses » It's happening. » 335 weeks ago
Randall Flagg wrote:If they’re starting to tour in March, wouldn’t they want the album out by then? Metallica waited for Hardwired and gives a free copy with every ticket sale. Isn’t the formula: album>tour?
I just don’t understand why they’d break their own financial interests by touring before the album is out. If they’re free to tour, that means it’s done. Is there going to be some secret release?
If this is true, wouldn’t an album release be likely to happen by Christmas, to give time for production before the tour?
Money is made by touring. Dates being announced now is a cynical Xmas ticket grab. I like it, shows good business acumen.
Because this is going to significantly increase the amount of people interested? If Guns in playing two shows in Germany, every Guns fan in Germany is going to go and fill both stadiums. Them selling tickets is a given. Getting people to buy their album, and not just listen to it on spotify, pandora, youtube, whatever, is the challenge. That's where the acumen comes in.
#1303 Re: Guns N' Roses » It's happening. » 335 weeks ago
If they’re starting to tour in March, wouldn’t they want the album out by then? Metallica waited for Hardwired and gives a free copy with every ticket sale. Isn’t the formula: album>tour?
I just don’t understand why they’d break their own financial interests by touring before the album is out. If they’re free to tour, that means it’s done. Is there going to be some secret release?
If this is true, wouldn’t an album release be likely to happen by Christmas, to give time for production before the tour?
#1304 Re: Guns N' Roses » New Album Thread » 335 weeks ago
I don't care if there's nothing new, I'm going. I skipped out on the 2002 UK gigs because I was a poor student, and I've kicked myself ever since; missed out on my one chance to see Buckethead live.
I know if I bail on these shows because "no new songs" or whatever, I'll regret it down the line.
Good for you dude. I did the same thing in 2002, cause I was a poor college student too. I don't understand those that claim to be fans, can afford it, and then sit out a show when the band is close. Watching YouTube videos isn't seeing GN'R live.
#1305 Re: The Sunset Strip » The Irishman » 335 weeks ago
I've watched it twice now. I just think it's the perfect movie.
#1306 Re: The Garden » US Politics Thread » 335 weeks ago
https://www.yahoo.com/news/fbi-inspecto … 00334.html
(Bloomberg Opinion) -- The long-awaited report from the Justice Department’s inspector general on the origins of the FBI’s investigation into President Donald Trump’s 2016 campaign is now public, and it finds that the initial investigation was deeply flawed but nonetheless justified. The senior officials and agents who opened the investigation, says the report, made serious mistakes but were not motivated by political bias.
Some Democrats, predictably, are claiming vindication. Some Republicans, just as predictably, are challenging its findings. Neither side is completely wrong — or right, for that matter — but the Democrats might want to show a bit more humility.
The report is devastating about the FBI’s court-ordered surveillance of a Trump campaign aide in what was known as “Crossfire Hurricane,” the investigation into whether Trump and his campaign colluded with Russia’s interference in the 2016 election. In the words of Hina Shamsi, the director of the ACLU’s national security project: “When the Justice Department’s inspector general finds significant concerns regarding flawed surveillance applications concerning the president’s campaign advisers, it is clear that this regime lacks basic safeguards and is in need of serious reform.”
In particular, Inspector General Michael Horowitz’s report concludes that the bureau’s application for a warrant to electronically spy on a former Trump campaign aide, Carter Page, was riddled with errors of fact and omitted exculpatory information. The application relied on political opposition research from a former British spy, Christopher Steele, whose credibility was exaggerated in the surveillance warrant application to a secret court.
On its own, the fate of Page is not important. It matters because his surveillance gives the public a window into how the process for obtaining electronic surveillance warrants from a secret court can be easily gamed. Because surveillance of a suspected foreign agent or terrorist must be kept from the target, these court proceedings rely on FBI and Justice Department lawyers for the exculpatory information that a defense attorney would provide in an open court proceeding. In the case of Page, that process failed.
The report says, for example, that FBI agents did not share with attorneys reviewing the warrant that Page had actually been cooperating with another U.S. intelligence agency on Russia, even after one of those attorneys specifically asked for such information. It also says the first warrant request failed to include that Page told a confidential FBI informant that he had never met former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort, contradicting Steele’s claim that Page was acting as a conduit between the Kremlin and Manafort for dirt on Hillary Clinton.
All told, the report cites 17 serious errors of fact and omissions in the Page surveillance warrant. “These errors and omissions resulted from case agents providing wrong or incomplete information,” it says. The omitted information meant that “much of that information was inconsistent with, or undercut, the assertions contained” in the surveillance warrant applications.
And while investigators did not find documentary or testimonial evidence of “intentional misconduct” on the part of the bureau’s case agents, the report says they did not receive “satisfactory explanations for the errors or problems we identified.”
All of this counts as an abuse of the FISA process. Not too long ago this was something that concerned Democrats, who led the charge to create the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act after horrendous surveillance abuse was uncovered in the 1970s. That legislation created a role for the courts to oversee the surveillance state’s electronic eavesdropping.
Now Democrats act as a firewall for that surveillance state. Some of this is because Trump has used his perch at the White House to attack the credibility on the FBI and the intelligence community in general. Echoing the online conspiracy theories of fringe left and right, Trump refers to these institutions as the “deep state.” Democrats have sought to defend the legitimacy of these institutions.
But their reaction has also blinded them to real abuses. Consider the January 29, 2018, memo from House Intelligence Committee Democrats defending the FISA warrant of Page. It asserts that the FBI would have been “remiss in their duty to protect the country had they not sought a FISA warrant and repeated renewals to conduct temporary surveillance of Carter Page.” This position now looks absurd.
The ranking member of that committee at the time was Representative Adam Schiff. Today he is assembling the impeachment case against Trump. Last year, the broad outlines of the Horowitz report were undoubtedly known to Schiff and his colleagues. In 2018, Schiff could have acknowledged the FBI’s errors in the Page warrant and sought the kinds of reforms that Horowitz recommends in 2019.
Instead, Schiff decided to accuse his Republican colleagues of misleading the public about the Page warrant. Psychologists have a term for this: They call it “projection.”
#1307 Re: The Garden » US Politics Thread » 336 weeks ago
That Hillary would have beat Trump, along with listening to Bill. Kamala Harris campaign was Hillary bad. The youth obsession won't work for anyone not named Obama.
We’ll see. Buttigieg is primed to capture the under 25 demographic that helped Obama. Though he’s not nearly as charismatic, the same “we have to elect a black president!” mindset easily can be changed to “we have to elect a gay president!”
Seriously though, there will be foreign relations consequences for that. Middle Eastern and Latin American leaders have an image problem.
#1308 Re: Guns N' Roses » GN'R to Play Super Bowl Fest, Miami, 31st January 2020 » 336 weeks ago
Randall Flagg wrote:Out of curiosity, how many posters that think this is a big deal are teenagers or in their 20s? I refuse to believe posters who went through the CD era are this gullible.
hard to say. people are weird
https://i.imgur.com/C1HVjGb.png
(note the number of likes)
We’re all in agreement that person is nuts, right?
#1309 Re: Guns N' Roses » GN'R to Play Super Bowl Fest, Miami, 31st January 2020 » 336 weeks ago
Out of curiosity, how many posters that think this is a big deal are teenagers or in their 20s? I refuse to believe posters who went through the CD era are this gullible.
#1310 Re: Guns N' Roses » New Album Thread » 337 weeks ago
Declan94 wrote:sp1at wrote:We interviewed him years ago, he is a stand up guy. You need to be less the minus four guy and stop firing out misinformed opinions.
i'm sure he is a nice dude but almost everything he has said has either been false or just straight up lies i'm not saying it's his fault maybe that's what management want him to say but it does get annoying when he confirms a new album or denies a song that exists saying that it doesn't exist and for us fans it does get frustrating we just want a straight up answer that's all
If it helps, he says in the same interview that Axl is secretive, which is where you are maybe coming from.
I think with regard to the release of albums, it would be easy to disregard what Fortus says because the process of releasing albums has been frustrated a lot of times by the record company
They just made $500 million touring the past 3 years. They don’t need a record company. Metallica doesn’t. Either they want to record new music, or they don’t. They don’t need anyone’s permission or help. They can afford studio time. They can hire a producer. They don’t need to release physical media.
This “hopelessly devoted to you” nonsense many fans have needs to stop. I recently re-read Chinese Whispers, and if there’s one message to take away, it’s that no one, not even “insiders” has a clue what the future holds.
