vaz02 said:
im quite sure actually 100% sure that it was popmart that survived only due to t shirt sales.
vaz02 said:
It supported the album brilliantly.
Not all tours are to make money from , making money is just a added bonus.
So you think zoo tv was a failure ...... you think 5.4 million people attending one tour is a failure ..... no offence but are you for real ?
U2Man said:topic.
who would get to decide who would be allowed to attend? surely there would be more people who wanted to go than could fit into the venue.
vaz02 said:
u2 almost went bankrupt during popmart but shirt sales saved them.
Zoo tv was a sucess.
annie_vox said:they couldn't do an entire free tour... they'd go bankrupt. But they could do a couple of free shows... that wouldn't hurt. But the best thing they could do was reduce the ticket prices even if it was just a bit... that would be a great idea...
elevated_u2_fan said:
I thought it was the other way around...
Where are the "Peeling off those dollar bills" nerds when you need them?
Joey788 said:I think Zoo TV broke even for U2.
Popmart took in $80 million but it cost $100 million for the band to put on the whole tour. So they lost money for Popmart. I think that's what it said in U2 by U2.
On September 19, 1981 the folk-rock duo Simon and Garfunkel reunited for a free concert in New York's Central Park attended by more than 500,000 people.