Well, concerts are actually back, folks.
Ron DeSantis just Tweeted a picture of an enormous crowd (in Florida, of course) at the biggest musical event since the COVID fiasco began. It was some kind of festival with music I would have hated, but I couldn't have been happier to see it.
So now I'm buying tickets to various concerts.
One of them is Genesis, where Phil Collins originally made music.
Genesis had some pop hits in the 1980s, but man were they creative and progressive (in a non-evil way) in the 1970s.
Well, defying all expectations they're back again for what will surely be their final tour, and I'd like to go. I think the last time I saw them was in 1990 or 1991.
But whoa: the prices for good seats are out of this world -- like in the thousands of smackers.
I'm not entirely sure the show will be worth that. Phil himself had to perform seated on his last solo tour because of a spinal injury, and that may be the case this time as well. And although one can still have plenty of energy seated, well, the vibe just isn't the same.
I'm going to roll the dice and see them anyway, because I've missed live music too much.
All live performances are like that, though, aren't they? Nobody is going to let you go to the show and then decide if if was worth your ticket price by letting you not pay after it's over.
But a good friend of mine whom I've created two products with is doing precisely that.
He's saying:
I will teach you how to start building a side income online, and if you aren't absolutely thrilled with my presentation, if you aren't convinced it's worth every penny and will help you, you don't have to pay.
I've never heard anyone make an offer like that.
A guy with the guts to make an offer like that is probably teaching you something valuable.
Be there (virtually):
Tom Woods