So I got GA tickets to Gorillaz and I wanted to see how early should I get to the venue before they open the doors so I can be in the very front? So if you’ve been in GA at a Gorillaz show pls lend me your wisdom
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HSLOT MSG girlies:
(posted MSG policy below)
OVERNIGHT LINES WILL NOT BE PERMITTED. For everyone’s safety, please respect this policy.
General Admission (“GA”) ticketholders must enter via the Chase C Entrance located on 33rd Street & 8th Avenue for Harry Styles shows on August 20 – September 21. This is the ONLY ENTRANCE you may access with a GA ticket.
Starting at 9:00AM on each show day, sequentially numbered wristbands will be issued on a first come, first served basis. A GA ticket will need to be presented in order to obtain a wristband. The wristbands will be distributed at the Chase C Entrance which is located at the West 33rd Street and 8th Avenue glass doors. Guests are asked to leave and return no earlier than 5:00PM.
Guests are not permitted to “hold” a place in line for other guests who are arriving later.
At 5:00pm guests will present their sequentially numbered wristband, enter at Chase C Entrance and have their tickets scanned. GA ticketholders will be admitted to the GA floor once doors open, scheduled for 7:00pm. A numerical wristband is not required for entry, only priority entry.
The wristband must remain on the guest’s wrist while in line. Any guest found with a tampered wristband will have their wristband confiscated and will lose their place in line.
Guests are permitted to have a reasonable amount of food and non-alcoholic beverages while in line. Guests will be permitted to bring in an empty reusable water bottle that is non-breakable and no larger than 32oz.
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I went into Ruth expecting a dreary read. How could a Victorian "fallen woman" story be anything other than dark and depressing? So I was shocked right from the beginning to find a sweet, gentle, romantic story. The dressmaker's apprentice who sits in the coldest, darkest part of the workroom because that's where there's a panel painted with flowers that remind her of her country home? How could I not adopt her as a favorite character? Ruth's innocent, romantic outlook on life gave us some beautiful descriptions of the scenery of both city and countryside, and my imagination went on overdrive to create very vivid images of the story. Even the love story, which we know is going to go very wrong, starts out sweet, with a kind, charming love interest who only shows flashes of just how wrong his character is going to go.
Even after Ruth's fall, the story is so gentle, putting Ruth among kind people who are willing to risk and sacrifice a lot to help her. And then the story gets almost too gentle--after some initial struggles with depression, Ruth resolves to bear her troubles patiently and work toward virtue, and her sweet, too-innocent character gets flattened out into someone who's just Good. Life just goes on, with things generally going well, and every potential turn toward drama results in someone deciding to be reasonable, which can make the story drag.
But, in a story like this, the lack of drama becomes the plot twist! It is refreshing to see characters who don't always jump to the worst conclusion or take the worst action, who pause and consider the whole story and act like decent human beings.
And in the places when the drama does kick in, it's good drama. Painful drama. It's also (especially in the last section of the story) melodrama. There were sections of the book where I was rolling my eyes at the cookie-cutter Victorian path the story was taking--but then there'd be one line or one moment that would just stab me in the chest because of how beautifully specific it was to this story. Just enough to elevate it from something bland to something unique and fascinating.
I often had the thought that this book could be about a third of its length without losing anything--yet it should also be just as long as it was. If the story cut all its repetitive musings about Ruth's regret, and used that space to develop the side characters and and show the plot instead of telling us about it, it would be a much deeper story. I found myself wishing Gaskell had reworked this one later in her career--the way that North and South was a more skillful reworking of the issues explored in Mary Barton. In a way, she sort of did in Wives and Daughters, with the story of Molly the quiet innocent getting tangled up in the intrigues surrounding her headstrong, flirtatious stepsister Cynthia serving as a more layered, personality-flipped version of the story where headstrong, sheltered Jemima gets tangled in the story of quiet, sweet Ruth and her past romantic intrigues. (The doctor at the end of the story also feels like a proto-Mr. Gibson).
Yet I'm still fascinated by the themes specific to this story. Contrary to expectation, this "fallen woman" story isn't about sex, or gender, or how unfairly women are treated (though it does touch on that in the end). It's about sin. It's not questioning why Ruth's behavior is considered a sin or looking to dismantle the society saying that it's a sin. It comes from the Christian perspective of saying that sin is real and harms people--so how are we going to deal with that?
The story shows lots of people struggling with temptation, failing, and dealing with the consequences (or harming others with the consequences). Sin is always a case of either not caring enough to do the more difficult, good thing, or a case of "the ends justify the means", where people rationalize their bad behavior as something necessary in this specific case. It always leads to harm, but some people--and some sins--suffer greater consequences in the eyes of the world, whether or not they deserve it. I wish the story had developed and resolved this theme better in places, but the raw material there is fascinating food for thought.
This book is Gaskell at her preachiest, but also Gaskell at her kindest. It explores deep, difficult issues in a very loving way. As a story, there are ways it could be better, but I'm very glad I read it. Perhaps I'm making a point to be kinder to it because I know it's the type of story that today's readers tend to judge harshly. But amid my issues with the story, there are some lovely images, some great messages, and some wonderful characters that going to be living in my heart for a long time.
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Listening to “All Night Long” from General Admission makes me so happy, like even when he’s literally talking about waking up in a ditch from a car accident he sounds so happy and full of life and like he never gave up and then he did it, that boy Kells 🥰❤️🔥🫶
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Your hair better not look like that when i come mike im going to bring a pair of scissors
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