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Welcome back, Pepsiman. We missed you and the kids. Ha!
but welcome being told I'm wrong.
OK. You're wrong!
Well, knowing that I think the Twins should buy those stocks. Why bother with this "loser". Right?
Great post. I did think, with Zach's connections and prior successes, that we'd have a bit more reputable funding source or at least, more protections. GHS is, from my research, a typical penny funder. Not at all what I expected here based on the reputation of Zach. Also, Jock has many connections, WHY did we need to go to GHS...
Because VNUE is a penny stock. This isn't rocket science. Get a GRIP!
Now that's what some call "hard news". LOL!
Please consider this to be instructional.
When a stock stops selling it's worthless.
VNUE has market value.
Yes. It is!
Time to get onboard.
Don't want to miss the gravy train.
What business have you been in to know?
Where is the evidence for your contention? Fair question.
I've been in this stock since Sept of 2015.
This board is beginning to take on the characteristics of a weather vane.
One week Zach is the greatest thing since sliced bread. The next week he's week old bread.
Very astute analysis you provided.
Yet, I would disagree about the expected time frame. In this info age,
your prognosis could easily be contracted to less than half that time.
Go VNUE!
Nah!
It's going higher.
Thanks for pointing that out to us.
I was unaware of that nuance.
That should calm some fears.
Now I just hope the bureaucracy can catch up.
Well, at least VNUE is still trading above its 200 dma.
Nicely done, Snowfinder. Nicely done.
We can forget about running out of money now. That ship has sailed.
I truly think we are on our way now.
WAKE UP, FOLKS!
HAS EVERYONE SLEPT IN THIS MORNING?
Louis Rukeyser of "Wall Street Week" fame liked to say...
"Do any of those stocks have names"?
My average cost is only .0014 per share.
I'm hoping the feds don't increase the cap gains tax rate until next year.
Yes, I really did meet Zach and I thanked him for making me rich with VNUE stock. Still have 35 million shares in my account and anticipate making even more money this year from VNUE.
Well, I had a fine day in paradise; i.e., Clearwater, Florida.
RockHouse Live is a handsomely designed music oriented bar/restaurant in a fabulous location, surrounded by top hotel chains and tourist oriented themes. It's clean, crisp and friendly with affordable food and drinks.
The pictures and videos we've seen don't do the place justice.
I did get a few minutes to thank Zach for making me shareholders a lot of money over the past eight months or so. He is very upbeat and loves what he does. And, I'm pleased.
Must have been your day in the barrel.
Ted,
You might just have a future in presidential speech writing. LOL!
I just arrived in Tampa this afternoon and plan to go to Clearwater tomorrow to have lunch at Rockhouse Live and look up Zach to thank him for making me rich.
News about RockHouse Live Clearwater
bing.com/news
Clearwater RockHouse LiveRibbon Cutting is Friday at 4:30 PM
The funding will come from a profit motive oriented company, not from our profligate government.
What?
My guess is VNUE will be uplisted effect May 1st.
Thank you for that, Phantom.
I heartily agree.
May should be quite fruitful for VNUE stockholders.
Pardon my mirth.
Do you really think management is going to divulge its strategic plans to you?
Running a restaurant business is not even remotely comparable to running a multifaceted corporation such as VNUE.
VNUE is Not just a restaurant business.
You are so wrong. You fail to factor in the future franchise sales.
The month of May forward should prove quite profitable for VNUE and its shareholders.
RockHouse Live was started by Jock Weaver and Zach Bair at their expense.
VNUE was gifted 4.99% of the venture so any profits go to VNUE that represent its share of the profits, or 4.99%.
And, when RHL franchises are sold VNUE will participate in the sales. Pretty sweet deal for VNUE.
I have been in this stock for nearly 6 years. I have never been as bullish on VNUE as I am right now. In fact, I think the month of May forward will prove quite profitable for VNUE and its stockholders. To think otherwise, based on what we know, seems myopic.
Also, as positive news emerges it's likely we will see a small boutique research firm produce a positive report highlighting VNUE. That will boost the price and expand the investor base. Newsletter writers make money by putting subscribers in winning stocks. This is a winner!
Ha!
No argument from me on that.
In fact, it's even likely to happen.
I plan on riding this marvelous "charade" all the way to a buck within a year. Hang in there, folks, we are on board with a winner!
Found this story on Yahoo Entertainment...
ABBA's Bjorn Ulvaeus urges reforms to pay songwriters their due
Maggy DONALDSON
Sat, April 17, 2021, 2:17 AM·4 min read
Bjorn Ulvaeus, a member of Swedish disco group ABBA shown here in 2016, is taking on the cause of fair payments to songwriters in the era of streaming
1/4
ABBA's Bjorn Ulvaeus urges reforms to pay songwriters their due
Bjorn Ulvaeus, a member of Swedish disco group ABBA shown here in 2016, is taking on the cause of fair payments to songwriters in the era of streaming
ABBA after winning Eurovision for "Waterloo" (from L to R, up) Björn Ulvaeus, music producer, writer and manager Stig Anderson, Swedish record producer, composer Sven-Olof Walldoff and Benny Andersson, Anni-Frid Lyngstad (Frida) and Agnetha Fältskog
2/4
ABBA's Bjorn Ulvaeus urges reforms to pay songwriters their due
ABBA after winning Eurovision for "Waterloo" (from L to R, up) Björn Ulvaeus, music producer, writer and manager Stig Anderson, Swedish record producer, composer Sven-Olof Walldoff and Benny Andersson, Anni-Frid Lyngstad (Frida) and Agnetha Fältskog
Bjorn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson, shown here on the red carpet for the world premiere of the film "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again" in London on July 16, 2018, are the songwriters behind many ABBA megahits
3/4
ABBA's Bjorn Ulvaeus urges reforms to pay songwriters their due
Bjorn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson, shown here on the red carpet for the world premiere of the film "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again" in London on July 16, 2018, are the songwriters behind many ABBA megahits
The pandemic's negative impact on touring has shone a spotlight on streaming income, which top superstars like Drake, shown here in 2013, or Taylor Swift benefit from but which sidelines music's middle class
4/4
ABBA's Bjorn Ulvaeus urges reforms to pay songwriters their due
The pandemic's negative impact on touring has shone a spotlight on streaming income, which top superstars like Drake, shown here in 2013, or Taylor Swift benefit from but which sidelines music's middle class
Bjorn Ulvaeus, a member of Swedish disco group ABBA shown here in 2016, is taking on the cause of fair payments to songwriters in the era of streaming
ABBA after winning Eurovision for "Waterloo" (from L to R, up) Björn Ulvaeus, music producer, writer and manager Stig Anderson, Swedish record producer, composer Sven-Olof Walldoff and Benny Andersson, Anni-Frid Lyngstad (Frida) and Agnetha Fältskog
Bjorn Ulvaeus and Benny Andersson, shown here on the red carpet for the world premiere of the film "Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again" in London on July 16, 2018, are the songwriters behind many ABBA megahits
The pandemic's negative impact on touring has shone a spotlight on streaming income, which top superstars like Drake, shown here in 2013, or Taylor Swift benefit from but which sidelines music's middle class
The Covid-19 pandemic's rampage through the music world has laid bare the industry's flaws, shining a bright light on "the plight of songwriters," says ABBA's Bjorn Ulvaeus.
The renowned artist behind the disco pop group's megahits like "Dancing Queen" and "Mamma Mia" co-wrote a report released Saturday entitled "Rebalancing The Song Economy," which urges revamping pricing structures to ensure fairness for writers behind the music.
Ulvaeus, 75, became president of the International Confederation of Societies of Authors and Composers (CISAC) -- a Paris-headquartered rights network representing some four million creators and publishers across the arts -- last year, as the spread of coronavirus began devastating livelihoods worldwide.
Pre-pandemic, performing artists could count on income sources like concerts and merchandise, but "most professional songwriters are just that" -- songwriters, he said.
Now everyone is relying on streaming, which accounts for 83 percent of US music industry revenue, according to the Recording Industry Association of America.
But many artists have long said they aren't reaping the benefits, and the pandemic is exacerbating the issue.
Streaming giants pool subscription money and divvy it up based on aggregate play counts to rights-holders or management organizations, who distribute it according to their agreements.
Artists have long disparaged that dominant model, holding it favors the globe's biggest stars at the expense of music's middle class.
Right now, "80 percent goes to the Drakes, the Swifts. The niche jazz artist gets almost nothing, if anything," Ulvaeus told AFP.
"But the niche jazz artist might have 10,000 people out there who love him or her -- and if all that money went to him, he could make a living out of that."
Apple recently disclosed it pays, on average, a penny per stream, approximately double what Spotify -- which has far more users and thus more streams -- pays rights-holders.
Story continues
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I meant to write the word "crystallize".
It's getting late here in Florida.
I have been an investor in VNUE since September of 2015.
I can now say VNUE is on the cusp of a huge breakout which will likely crystallin into much higher valuations this calendar year. All the ingredients for success are falling in place. I don't need to recite the litany of achievements and dynamic plans. Others have already proferred them on this platform.
Good luck to all of us, both long time investors and newbies to VNUE.