A tune from the new-to-me Bruno Mars...
So. I was reading this article in the NYT and got curious. So we went out to the Tube o' You and listened to three or four of his songs. Young Bruno is pleasant enough, I suppose, but I'm not in the market for a Michael Jackson clone. That said, there's this from that article I linked:
My pride, my ego, my needs, and my selfish waysPoignant lyrics, no?
Caused a good strong woman like you to walk out my life
Now I never, never get to clean up the mess I made, ooooooh
And it haunts me every time I close my eyes
So. I was reading this article in the NYT and got curious. So we went out to the Tube o' You and listened to three or four of his songs. Young Bruno is pleasant enough, I suppose, but I'm not in the market for a Michael Jackson clone. That said, there's this from that article I linked:
Mr. Mars, 28, the best-selling singer-songwriter of hits like “Locked Out of Heaven,” “Gorilla” and “Grenade” and, as of last Sunday, a Grammy Award-winner for “Unorthodox Jukebox,” which won best pop vocal album, was an unexpected choice when the National Football League announced him in September as the halftime performer.
{...}
“But as you go through your daily life,” Mr. Hamilton continued, “you hear more Bruno Mars music than many of the other artists who could possibly be approached. His music is omnipresent.”Mr. Bongiovanni of Pollstar pointed to Mr. Mars as a highly successful and lucrative performer who still had plenty of room to grow.{...}
“Rather than a dinosaur performing,” Mr. Bongiovanni said, “people are going to see someone whose career is actually on the upswing.”With halftime artists like Mr. Springsteen or the Who, he said, “you couldn’t make a case for them heading toward a new peak.” For Mr. Mars, Mr. Bongiovanni said, “his best days are ahead of him.”
Mark Quenzel, who as the N.F.L.’s senior vice president for programming is involved in the booking of Super Bowl talent, said that Mr. Mars would help the halftime show fulfill its goal of reaching as wide an audience as possible.“You try to figure out who’s going to be entertaining to someone who’s 18, and who’s going to be entertaining to someone who’s 58 or 68,” Mr. Quenzel said. “Because they’re all going to be watching.”
Well... good on the NFL for this choice and I applaud them for doin' so, as I really do believe America has had enough o' dinosaur rock. But Mr. Quenzel got one thing wrong: THIS 68 year old ain't gonna be watching. It's not that I don't like football, I do... but the kinda football **I** like is usually played on Saturdays. A pox on the NFL.