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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

EXCLUSIVE: Investigation Reveals 2 Arizona Cities Spent Millions on Homelessness With Little Result
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EXCLUSIVE: Investigation Reveals 2 Arizona Cities Spent Millions on Homelessness With Little Result

Arizona’s two largest cities allocated tens of millions of dollars to fight homelessness in the past several years, but little has changed, according to a Goldwater Institute investigative report released Thursday.  “We’ve seen Phoenix and Tucson spend, combined, almost half a billion dollars on this issue with very minimal improvements in the area of homelessness,” Austin VanDerHeyden, municipal affairs liaison for the Goldwater Institute, told The Daily Signal.  The Goldwater Institute, a public policy research and litigation organization based in Arizona, launched an investigation into what Phoenix and Tucson officials are spending to address homelessness, who is receiving the funding, and the results of the investment. Follow the Money Phoenix reports allocating $140 million to address homelessness between July 2021 and March 2023. But since 2021, Goldwater Institute determined, Phoenix far exceeded this amount. According to its investigation, the policy group determined that Phoenix “has allocated over $180 million to homelessness services since 2021 through a combination of federal, state, and local funding.” Further investigation of some federal, state, and private funding budget line items for homeless solutions revealed that “over $250 million has been allocated to address homelessness in Phoenix since 2021, an astounding sum that has not moved the needle on the problem,” according to Goldwater’s report.  The result? Following this investment in fighting homelessness, Phoenix reported in May that the “total population of people experiencing homelessness in Phoenix decreased by just over 1%, from 6,902 in 2023 to 6,816 in 2024.” Goldwater calls the change “miniscule,” considering the “vast investment of taxpayer dollars.” In Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix, the housed and unhoused homeless population was 6,298 in 2018 and has risen to 9,435 in 2024. In Pima County, which includes Tucson, the Goldwater Institute found that a lack of organized public information made it challenging to determine how much the city is spending on homelessness, but the county reports spending between $50 million and $70 million a year on homelessness. This money comes through federal, state, local, and philanthropic sources, according to a 2023 report from a coalition called the Tucson Pima Collaboration to End Homelessness.  But Pima County estimates that to reach a “functional zero” homeless population, it would cost between $135.8 million and $158.5 million a year.  Pima County hasn’t released its 2024 report on homelessness, but in 2023, the county reported its homeless population at 2,209, a 1% decrease from 2022 but a 60% increase since 2018.  Goldwater’s investigation concluded that “spending for the sake of spending is not going to solve this issue,” VanDerHeyden said, adding: “Enforcing the laws that are on books, that’s what needs to be done now.”  The Homelessness Crisis Like many other cities, Phoenix experienced an increase in homelessness during COVID-19. About 15 blocks in downtown Phoenix became known as “The Zone,” home to about 1,000 homeless people living in tents and makeshift shelters.  The Zone turned into an open-air drug market riddled with crime and the city, according to The Goldwater Institute, turned a blind eye to the homeless encampment. Phoenix was forced to act when a group of local property and business owners negatively affected by the encampment sued the city for maintaining a “public nuisance.” Ultimately, the court sided with those property and business owners and the Goldwater Institute, which had filed briefs supporting their case. The court ordered the city to clear the encampment, which it did in the fall of 2023. The “number of unsheltered individuals in Phoenix decreased by 19%, from 3,333 people in 2023 to 2,701 in 2024,” according to the city. That result, Goldwater Institute notes, came after the court ordered the city to clean up its largest homeless encampment in 2023. In Tucson, the 100-Acre Wood Bike Park became the city’s biggest homeless encampment. Tents, tarps, and piles of garbage made the park look more like a Third World country than a recreational area in a U.S. city. The local Southern Arizona news station KGUN9 reported in May that about 100 people called the encampment home, with many homeless individuals living in the park for over a year. The city cleaned a section of the encampment in May, but another local news station, KOLD, reports that the homeless are still living in the park.  What's life like inside of Tucson's biggest homeless encampment? More tonight on @kgun9 and https://t.co/e9vheVoBeH pic.twitter.com/VxQPBWjhgI— Adam Klepp (@AdamKleppAZ) May 6, 2024 Who Has the Money? Phoenix entered into contracts with vendors that provide services related to the fight against homelessness. Combined, the contracts total about $180 million, according to Goldwater’s research.  A task force worked to determine which organizations should receive contracts and “four of the 19 members of the task force were associated with organizations that had contracts with Phoenix (Southwest Behavioral Health, Chicanos Por La Causa, Central Arizona Shelter Services, and Mercy Care),” according to the report.  “It is unclear how, if at all, the city addressed the potential conflicts of interest that could arise from vendors who provide homelessness services to Phoenix making recommendations on homelessness,” Goldwater notes. Money allocated for homelessness in Pina County was more challenging to track, according to the report.  “Goldwater reviewed contracts and administrative expenses available on Pima County’s website in a further attempt to calculate spending on homelessness since 2021, including prevention,” the report explains. “According to this methodology, Pima County’s contracts with vendors totaled almost $27 million, including some administrative expenses between 2021 and 2024.” 2024-6-6-No-End-In-Sight-Goldwater-FINALDownload “Phoenix has prioritized creating more indoor shelter than ever before in the last several years, adding 592 new permanent beds in 2022 and 480 temporary beds in 2023,” Kristin Couturier, Phoenix’s senior public information officer, told The Daily Signal. The city plans to add an additional 790 permanent beds in 2024 and 2025, Couturier said. “While we know shelter alone does not end homelessness, it is a crucial first step for many people to connect with the right resources and support to end their homelessness,” she said, noting that over the past year the city has increased its housed homeless population and decreased its unhoused homeless population. The Daily Signal asked the Pima County Office of Housing Opportunities & Homeless Solutions about the results of the $50 million to $70 million the county estimates it spends annually on homelessness. Jenifer Darland of that office told The Daily Signal: “Pima County government as a funding recipient receives only a share of federal and state funding to address homelessness—approximately $3 million in U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) grants, and this year, approximately $4 million in state awards.” A Path Forward “Despite the enormous funds that Phoenix and Tucson have devoted to addressing homelessness, a permanent, sustainable solution appears elusive,” according to Goldwater’s report.  Both Tucson and Phoenix allocated COVID-19 relief funding to fight homelessness, a funding source that eventually will run dry.  “We don’t have all the money in the world. So we will have to make tough decisions,” Phoenix City Manager Jeff Barton told the City Council earlier this year. In its report, the Goldwater Institute cautions against simply asking “where to find more money,” and instead suggests that leaders in Phoenix and Tucson should ask “whether funding alone, no matter how extensive, is the answer to homelessness in these cities.” Voters to Have a Voice Amid their state’s struggle with homelessness, Arizonans will have the opportunity to vote for a ballot initiative in November that would allow property owners to apply for a property tax rebate if the city or locality where the property is located doesn’t enforce the law and private property is affected as a result. If the ballot initiative prevails, Arizona property owners could apply for a tax rebate if their property was affected by activity pertaining to “illegal camping, loitering, obstructing public thoroughfares, panhandling, public urination or defecation, public consumption of alcoholic beverages, and possession or use of illegal substances,” Ballotpedia reports.  This report was modified within minutes of publication to clarify that the Goldwater Institute filed court briefs in support of property and business owners’ lawsuit against the city of Phoenix. The post EXCLUSIVE: Investigation Reveals 2 Arizona Cities Spent Millions on Homelessness With Little Result appeared first on The Daily Signal.
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

End of Wall Street? Texas Stock Exchange to File SEC Paperwork - Report
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End of Wall Street? Texas Stock Exchange to File SEC Paperwork - Report

Texas continues its rise to prominence when other states are falling short. Plans are in motion for a new Dallas-based Texas Stock Exchange to officially launch in 2026, CNN reported. The TXSE group will file with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission later this year with over 24 investors and...
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

Months After Admitting 'Maybe Trump Is the Answer,' Top Rapper Says Black Community Now Identifying with 45
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Months After Admitting 'Maybe Trump Is the Answer,' Top Rapper Says Black Community Now Identifying with 45

After years of peddling the narrative that Donald Trump and his supporters are all a bunch of ignorant racists, Democrats must be perplexed at the support Trump has been gaining among black voters this election cycle. The well-worn dual strategy of pandering and fear-mongering has, for once, fallen short for...
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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
1 y

UK Cancer Group Panders to Transgenders by Asking Insulting Question
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UK Cancer Group Panders to Transgenders by Asking Insulting Question

A U.K. ovarian cancer organization decided to pander to transgender activists in a social media post as part of LGBT "Pride Month" on Tuesday. "Did you know that anyone with ovaries, regardless of gender identity, can be at risk for ovarian cancer?" Ovarian Cancer Action said on X. "Let's raise...
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Conservative Satire
Conservative Satire
1 y ·Youtube Funny Stuff

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100 Percent Fed Up Feed
100 Percent Fed Up Feed
1 y

[WATCH] Deborah Birx Wants To PCR Test “Every Cow, Weekly” For Bird Flu
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[WATCH] Deborah Birx Wants To PCR Test “Every Cow, Weekly” For Bird Flu

The ‘experts’ are attempting the same scam they utilized for COVID-19 with bird flu. With the useless PCR tests that will test positive for anything, corrupt public health bureaucrats and Pharma cronies want to fearmonger Americans into another scamdemic. However, there’s an added bonus with bird flu. They also want to test cows. “We’re not testing to really see how many people have been exposed and got asymptomatically infected,” Deborah Birx said. “We should be testing every cow, weekly,” she added. “We could be pool testing every dairy worker,” she continued. “I do believe that there’s undetected cases in humans because we’re once again only tracking people with symptoms. When we did that with COVID, the virus spread throughout the northeast undetected,” Birx said. The same scam used to shut down the world. WATCH: Deborah Birx says we must test every cow in America (on a weekly basis) for bird flu. "We should be testing every cow, weekly," Birx says adding, "we could be pool testing every dairy worker." There are around 40 million cows in the United States. Trust the science! pic.twitter.com/0xnCAE0T9e — Jordan Schachtel @ dossier.today (@JordanSchachtel) June 5, 2024 “Birx is on the advisory board of BGR, a D.C. lobbying org with a client roster that includes Pfizer, Abbott Labs, GSK, and J&J. She’s also the CEO of a publicly traded company called Armata Pharmaceuticals, which is controlled by a Pharma asset management corp,” Jordan Schachtel wrote. Much more detail on why Deborah Birx may stand to gain from a manufactured bird flu pandemic https://t.co/A7qAFSTiWX — Jordan Schachtel @ dossier.today (@JordanSchachtel) June 5, 2024 Schachtel wrote at The Dossier: Since leaving government work, Birx has already earned millions of dollars in the private sector, and has found herself quite a few lucrative opportunities in the Pharma space. Birx now sits on the advisory board of BGR, one of the most powerful lobbying firms in Washington D.C. Their Pharma client roster includes the likes of Pfizer, Abbott Labs, GSK, and Johnson & Johnson, to name a few. Birx is also the CEO of a publicly traded company called Armata Pharmaceuticals, through which she was granted about 275,000 shares. As of Wednesday, her holdings in Armata are valued at about $728,750. Birx also earns a base salary of $525,000 per year, and she can earn a massive performance bonus based on the value of the company. Armata is 70% owned by another publicly traded company called Innoviva, which describes itself as a “Healthcare Royalty and Asset Management” company. Innoviva’s top shareholders include BlackRock and Vanguard, which, through their clients’ positions, control about 25% of Innoviva. Birx also holds several additional board seats in startup and seasoned Pharma endeavors, some of which may stand to acquire significant government funding in the event of a manufacted pandemic scenario. Though it would be impossible in a rational, science-based society, the people who deliberately misled the public about Covid risk, its origins and its management, enriching themselves in the process, are still out there orchestrating a repeat.https://t.co/TNYvYFF6oD — David Bell (@bell00david) June 5, 2024 Birx’s comments coincide with the World Health Organization claiming an individual’s death in Mexico was due to the “first laboratory-confirmed human case of infection with an influenza A(H5N2) virus.” JUST IN: World Health Organization Claims Death In Mexico Linked To Bird Flu Strain The patient, a 59-year-old resident of the State of Mexico, had no history of exposure to poultry or other animals. “The case had multiple underlying medical conditions. The case’s relatives reported that the case had already been bedridden for three weeks, for other reasons, prior to the onset of acute symptoms,” the WHO stated. "WHO is hoaxing the world again. First off, he died on April 24(?). He was morbidly obese, acquired type 2 diabetes, was confined to a bed, and had complete kidney failure. None of it was related to bird flu: Why were they even running bird flu tests on this guy?" Schachtel said. "The[y] use a PCR test with the setting set so sensitive that it gives a false positive most of the time. This was the same scam they used during Covid-19 to make the number of 'positive test results' go so artificially high. Huge numbers of people died with a positive test, but actually died from something else entirely," Wall Street Silver commented. The use a PCR test with the setting set so sensitive that it gives a false positive most of the time. This was the same scam they used during Covid-19 to make the number of "positive test results" go so artificially high. Huge numbers of people died with a positive test, but… https://t.co/KKLaBAfq8p — Wall Street Silver (@WallStreetSilv) June 6, 2024 Hopefully, nobody falls for this absolute nonsense. Watch the full interview with Birx on CNN.
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The People's Voice Feed
The People's Voice Feed
1 y

NASA Scientists: Recent ‘Global Warming’ Caused by Green Air Policies
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NASA Scientists: Recent ‘Global Warming’ Caused by Green Air Policies

According to new findings from a team of high-powered NASA scientists, nearly all of the recent global temperature increases are actually due to the introduction of fuel shipping regulations… That is those draconian regulations which [...] The post NASA Scientists: Recent ‘Global Warming’ Caused by Green Air Policies appeared first on The People's Voice.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

Cactus | Temple of Blues – Influences & Friends – New Studio Release Review
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vintagerock.com

Cactus | Temple of Blues – Influences & Friends – New Studio Release Review

World-renowned drummer Carmine Appice helms the ultimate tribute to his legendary rock band Cactus, with a new, all-star album from that band, add their friends, on Temple Of Blues – Influences & Friends. The “friends” who appear on the album include Joe Bonamassa, Ted Nugent, Kenny Aaronson, and Billy Sheehan, to name but a few, plus original Cactus guitarist Jim McCarty slicing and dicing his way across a few tunes. The band’s current members are also here — vocalist, guitarist, and harp player Jim Stapley and bassist Jim Caputo — plus guitarist Artie Dillon, added to handle additional guitar duties. A wild growly new read on the band’s classic “Parchman Farm,” begins the album featuring Appice’s rolling snare in a battle with Jim Stapley’s harmonica. This one also features Billy Sheehan on bass with a high-flying Joe Bonamassa guitar solo. It’s a killer way to start off this collection that frankly never really let’s go. “Guiltless Glider” gets truly nasty halfway through with bass player Phil Soussan (Ozzy Osbourne) adding what might be best rumbling bass playing across all these tunes. Carmine barely holds the beat together (in a good way) on “One Way Or Another,” featuring Ted Nugent, and things slow down just in time for what is my very favorite here, the Warren Haynes-led “No Need To Worry.” As well as playing drums, Carmine Appice lends his considerable backing vocal prowess to this slower killer blues. The full current Cactus band manages round-out the radio-friendly “Can’t Judge A Book By Its Cover” while Appice dips way back by having Vanilla Fudge band mate Mark Stein singing lead on a noisy (in a good way) “Long Tall Sally.” Fernando Perdomo provides the stinging guitar soloing. Yes, it’s many years on for lots of the players here and for the Cactus brand, but I dare say you are not going to hear an album as hard hitting and simply blues-rock perfect as Temple Of Blues – Influences & Friends. ~ Ralph Greco, Jr. The post Cactus | Temple of Blues – Influences & Friends – New Studio Release Review first appeared on VintageRock.com.
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1 y

The Carmine Appice Interview (2024)
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The Carmine Appice Interview (2024)

By Ralph Greco, Jr. We certainly can attribute iconic rock star status to drummer Carmine Appice. He’s a founding member of both Vanilla Fudge and Cactus. He was also part of one of the best power trios in rock — Beck, Bogert & Appice. He spent the mid to late 70s as drummer and songwriter with Rod Stewart for a score of hits (including “Da Ya Think I’m Sexy” and “Young Turks”). From there, he went onto work with everyone from Ozzy Osbourne to Pink Floyd. In more recent years, he’s become an author, producer, and inductee in the Modern Drummer Hall of Fame. For 2024, Appice has delivered a new Cactus record called Temple Of Blues – Influences & Friends, a collection of blues standards, covers, and classic Cactus cuts. The album features a star-studded roster of guest stars, including guitarists Joe Bonamassa, Ted Nugent, Pat Travers, Warren Hayes, Vernon Reid, Steve Stevens, Johnny A (The Yardbirds), Ty Tabor (King’s X) and bassists Billy Sheehan (Mr. Big), Dug Pinnick (King’s X)  Tony Franklin (The Firm, Blue Murder), Phil Soussan (Ozzy Osbourne, Billy Idol), Rudy Sarzo (Quiet Riot, Ozzy Osbourne), Kenny Aaronson (ex- Joan Jet and The Yardbirds), as well as members of  Government Mule, Vixen, Rainbow, Zebra, and Whitesnake. In the following exchange, we touched on the album, as well as other aspects of Appice’s colorful career. ~ Let’s start off with how Temple Of Blues – Influences & Friends came together?  Basically, I have been friends with the owner of the label releasing this new album forever. He has a few Cactus records that do well on the label, and he came to me and said, ‘I wanna do a Cactus record with people who are influenced by Cactus.’ I said, sure I could do that. So, he gave me a budget and I started to think…how am I gonna do this? Did you start by making phone calls? Actually, I started with the drums, believe it or not. Beginning with the first song, “Parchment Farm,” I was just playing and humming the song for myself to a click. It’s in the same tempo from when we did it years ago, 247 beats per minute. Pretty fast, you know? Oh yeah, that’s definitely a blistering track!  Yeah, I thought, I don’t have to have to make this better. So, I put it down and then I would sing the song. And I would do that pretty much for every song after that. Then I’d get the singer of Cactus, Jim Stapley, and he put down a guitar, a vocal, and harmonica where needed, and then we had basic demos. Then you rounded up the friends? Yeah. I called Ted Nugent, and I said, “Hey, I’d love you to play on this?” And right away he said, “Yeah, man, I’m in,” So I said, “What song you wanna play?” And he told me he wanted to play on “One Way Or Another.” Billy Sheehan, he said anything I wanted him to do would be great, just to be on a tribute to Cactus was enough for him. And he said he wanted to play on “Parchment Farm,” and I said I also wanted him to take the bass solo on “Oleo.” And I just started putting it all together. Was there anybody you called who surprised you with their love of Cactus? I called Steve Stevens, he’s a friend of mine. I was very surprised though how much he was into Cactus. Sure, everybody I called knows me, but I am never sure how much they’ll be into something like this. But Steve said that he grew up in New York and loved us, right? So, I thought well, here’s a friend and an influence — influences and friends — and that’s how the concept evolved. The only one that was really crazy was Joe Bonamassa, but not so much that we got him but how it went down. I was on his podcast, and he admitted that “Parchment Farm” blew his brains out. I said, “No kidding, well, we’re redoing it on a Cactus influences album and I’d love for you to play on it.” So I got him to commit during his podcast. After playing as long as you have, with as many amazing players as you have, here and across your past, can you say there is one through line to how you have approached this for all these years and all the different projects you’ve been involved with?  Well, it’s all it’s hard rock, right? Whatever I play I tend to put my Carmine sound to it. I just play what I want. From “Hot Legs,” with its boundaries of being funky, you know, to all of it, that’s where I came from, listening to all different things, from R&B, mostly R&B, and rock. I came up singing too, you know. So, it all gets in there. And how has your approach to recording changed over time? Or has it not at all? Like say, how you put this new record together.  I have a studio at the house I live in now, in Florida. I have a guest house that I made for a combination studio and gym. My drums are always set up there. I never move them out. When I do gigs, I have another kit. Most of my kits are set up when I do gigs, but the kit I have at the house, the way the mikes are set, all of that I never move now. I finally have it all based on the way I always wanted it, and I record right there. Keeping a consistency of the way things sound, right? Yes, this way if I record something today, a month from now, and if I don’t like something, I can go in and fix it. I never had that before and when I moved here, I set that up in August of 2020. My brother Vinny is a computer tech, so he built my recording system, showed me how to use it. For me, it’s the best. So, given all that, how have you seen your playing progress over the years? What’s changed, if anything, in how you approach playing the drums now?   It’s all come from experience. I don’t have to raise my hands so high to get a heavy hard hit. I learned how to snap it like a karate chop to get the big sound. Also, I play with the thicker bottom of the stick — most people don’t do that, right? I show people, if you play with the regular tip, you get a sound, but you turn it around so it’s a much fatter sound. I noticed that when my good friend Nicko McBrain (drummer extraordinaire of Iron Maiden) had his mini stroke. You probably heard about this. Yes, I did. It was last January. He’s playing music everybody knows very well, Iron Maiden fans know every fill. So yeah, he’s like, “God, how do I get back to being able to do those fills the way I always do it?” And I just said, “Change it up.” Where I play to maybe a theater or club-sized audience, Iron Maiden’s crowds are huge and his fans expect to hear every fill. Nicko says, “That’s how I always played it, so I have to play it that way.” I just don’t sit there and go through every fill, worry about playing the song like I did whenever. I’m not known for that. Certain drummers are like a Neal Peart and Nicko. But in my generation, it was Ginger Baker, me, John Bonham, Keith Moon, Mitch Mitchell. We didn’t play like that. Playing to the feel of the moment.  Yeah, but even with somebody like Nicko — and what I didn’t know — is that he can play funky as hell. I was involved in something we did with Pat Travers, and he played funky as hell. How would you know, right? Yeah, that’s kind of a surprise, but then again, I have only ever heard him in Maiden.  Yeah, I didn’t know either. So, I called Nicko and said, “Man, you are funky!” And he told me that before he got into all the Iron Maiden stuff, he played everything. He’s a good guy and does a great job. But who would have known from the stuff he is best known for. Are there any plans to do anything on the road with Cactus supporting the new album?  We’re doing three shows coming right up, and then we’ll come to the New York area at the end of June. I think we’re doing the Iridium one night, maybe two, then we’re going out to some other gigs like upstate New York and I think we have more somewhere. So, basically, it’s shorter runs for you these days, no bigger, longer tours?  Yeah, you can’t do big tours unless you’re a big group. And even then, I mean, I’m not gonna sit in the bus or van for 30 days. We are kinda of circling around a question I often ask guys and gals who have been in the business for a while now. I mean, the business is completely different from when you first got in it. So, overall, what’s your feelings on how the music business is now?  It sucks. Spotify streaming ruined everybody. There’s no money. When you record and maybe get an advance, that’s probably all you’re gonna see. We went to Sweden Rock and we made some money. People in Europe came out, so that was cool, but it’s too much to go out for two days, three days, right? Even if you go there for two weeks, it’s a grind. But the business itself, that business model today is terrible. The only way to make money is to go out on the road and sell some merch. And if you don’t have a good merch situation going, it’s hard to make any kind of money. Not to mention the price of tickets. Just for a fan to come out — who has that kind of money these days?  Exactly. I mean my friend is going to see Billy Joel. He’s paying $1000. Who is paying these prices? I looked at program of a show we played. It was Vanilla Fudge, Jimi Hendrix, Ted Nugent and the Asbury Dukes, and the ticket price was three dollars. Think about that! You mentioned “Hot Legs” earlier. Are you in contact with Rod Stewart these days?  Sure. In fact I have another show called The Rod Experience. It’s a show with a guy that looks exactly like Rod — sings like him, has all the rights movements…maybe even better probably better. And we do two segments. The first segment I call ‘the wimpy segment,’ you know those tunes like “Some Guys Have All The Luck,” and they do like five or six of those songs with another drummer. Then there’s an intermission and then I come out and talk to the audience, say some stupid shit, then I sit down and we rock through tunes like “Passion,” “You’re In My Heart,” those tunes that I never get to play anymore but was involved with. So now we got a lot of gigs coming up. The rest of this year, matter of fact. January next year, we’re playing with a 60-piece orchestra. I know you lived in LA for years, but frankly always think of you as an East Coast, New York guy. You mentioned that you live in Florida now. Have you adjusted to what I am assuming has to be a slower pace down there?  Yeah man, it’s slower. You’ll call up somebody to come over and get something done, they call you back and maybe get out to you. So I call a guy I know who was originally from New York, and he gets right on it, saying because he’s right on it? Generally, people always ask me, “Do you play golf? Are you happy?” I don’t know. They ask, “What’s your hobby?” I always say, “It’s playing the drums.” The post The Carmine Appice Interview (2024) first appeared on VintageRock.com.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
1 y

"Irvine Welsh who wrote Trainspotting said it was the best thing he'd seen in years." Watch the trailer for Kneecap's self-titled biopic, the loudest, funniest, most provocative movie you'll see in 2024
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"Irvine Welsh who wrote Trainspotting said it was the best thing he'd seen in years." Watch the trailer for Kneecap's self-titled biopic, the loudest, funniest, most provocative movie you'll see in 2024

Kneecap's riotously funny biopic is hitting cinemas in August: the band tell Louder why making it was a gamble that paid off
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