Somehow, Miss R and I managed to get tickets to Live Earth at the apparently all-new Wembley Stadium. Although it looks and feels just like Cardiff's Millennium Stadium to me - except there's a huge gaping hole in the roof for some reason. Rather silly of them.
Anyway, we got past Wembley Stadium's woefully inadequate security team, and looked for our seats. After litearally being misdirected up and down the wrong set of steps, it turned out that our seats had already been taken by ... some black netting. And the stadium's solution? "Well, you can stand on the pitch" - neglecting our weary feet.
So we ended up being seat gypsys, and grabbing various people's seats as soon as they vacated them, rather like the seat-standers at an Oscar ceremony. We did manage to eventually migrate to two great seats near the front of the stage, where I had a great view of the camera crane swooping over the crowd at regular intervals. And someone trying to unfurl a banner that declared that "Robbie Williams is gay". I wonder why that never made it past the TV cameras...
At one point, while the Red Hot Chilli Peppers were storming the crowd, a stocky bald man came down and tried to shove his way into a spare seat in the row in front, which the guy was (understandably) having none of. So said bald man stood there for a while, watching the Chillis. Then he shouted at them "You fu--ing c--t" and stormed off. I have no idea why.
The general atmosphere at the concert was much less that of a global gathering of environmentally-minded music fans, and more middle-class yuppies having a nice day out sitting in the sunshine watching music. The constant inane corporate propaganda about how to reduce carbon emissions (Top tip from Ben Affleck: buy your music digitally and save on CDs!) didn't make much of an impact on anyone at the concert, judging by the number of plastic cups strewn across the stadium. It certainly didn't seem to hit Thandie Newton. She's a talented actress, very easy on the eyes and has a first-class degree in anthropology from Cambridge University, but telling the crowd that she drove to Wembley Stadium was not a good idea. Even if it was a Prius.
At the moment of the great switch-off of the Wembley Stadium lights (prior to an exceedingly dull speech from Terrance Stamp), the stadium was lit up - with digital camera flashes. Which rather defeats the point.
In another breathtaking moment of hypocrisy, the MSN's video streaming of the Live Earth concerts is sponsored by car manufacturer Chevy, who produce six different kinds of SUVs. Am I the only person who can't see the problem with this?
The music itself was pretty good - although I was surprised to find it was the likes of The Foo Fighters, Red Hot Chillis and Metallica that got the audience going. Thankfully, James Blunt did *not* play the most hated song of all time.
Oh, and it took us two hours to get to our Kensington hotel from Wembley Stadium. For future reference.
Next time, I might just watch it on TV!
Tuesday, 10 July 2007
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