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U2 fans get 360 degrees of rock

Eclectic-but-aging crowd turns out, some all day long

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The current president appeared in a video graphic and a former one -- Bill Clinton -- was in the press box. But the night belonged to U2, the rock 'n' roll royalty that convenes a party at Sam Boyd Stadium about once every president or two.

And frontman Bono, who's had the ear of those presidents for his social activism, needed only to spin around in circles a couple of times, arms overhead, to rechristen the stadium for a sold-out crowd of more than 40,000 for the "360" tour.


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  • But, as he sang in the second song, "Get On Your Boots," it was too nice a night "to talk about wars between nations."

    "Every religion has its Mecca," Bono told the crowd. "We (entertainers) end up here, sometimes on our knees, but we come to Vegas."

    He introduced his bandmates with comparisons to every entertainer from Bette Midler to David Copperfield before declaring, "My name is Wayne Newton."

    Before long, he was leading a "Viva Las Vegas" sing-a-long.

    The Irish rockers and Sam Boyd Stadium don't get together too often, but when they do it's an affair to remember, fleeting but passionate.

    It started in November 1992 with the "Zoo TV" tour, the first 80-foot stage with 1,200 tons of giant TV screens the stadium had ever known. It continued when the "PopMart" tour launched in April 1997. Parking-lot bootleggers rolled tape (yeah, it was tape back then) on the nightly rehearsals.

    But even after a lot of practice, that date was best known for the boys getting stuck, "Spinal Type"-style, inside a giant lemon.

    Now the tour is sponsored by BlackBerry and everyone used their smart phones to talk to friends on the other side.

    The massive "360" stage made it look like the stadium came out on the losing end of a flying saucer invasion, almost a living-room show compared to a recent stop at the new Dallas Cowboys Stadium where photos reveal the earthlings won.

    Not many bands can host this kind of party. Festivals such as Vegoose -- already come and gone since the last U2 stop -- mostly replaced single headliners for gatherings of this magnitude. Other stars on the short list, namely the Rolling Stones, opt to play big-money indoor dates on the Strip instead.

    The weather smiled on the band's choice to take the path less Vegas on one of those fine desert nights that wasn't too hot, too cold or too windy. The crowd had clearly aged along with the band. Tailgating was light and refined; one party of about two dozen even hired a hosted bar with table cloths and a bartender in bow tie.

    As he cooked chicken fajitas for a group in the parking lot, Las Vegan Rick Wylie said he was here for the Zoo TV tour in 92 as well, but there was no cooking then.

    "Just heavy drinkin'" he said with a laugh. "That's when we could handle a hangover."

    More current pop stars, Black Eyed Peas, were added as the opening act, possibly to youthen the demographic of a stadium light on the "Now Generation" they sang about.

    The crowd was more on the cordial side until frontman will.i.am. won them over with sincerity, a shout-out to U2 and other bands who manage to "stay together for the love of the music," and a little humiliation of those who would be "chillin' lackadaisical" up in the stands while Fergie did her "Boom Boom Pow."

    Friday also offered a pleasant morning to those who started arriving at 6 a.m. to line up for a preferred spot on the general-admission floor.

    Fans debated whether it was better to be inside the race-track ramp that circled the stage or on the outside of the rail.

    "We're just addicted to it, to be honest with you," said Pat Dalug, the Princeton, N.J., man who had a place near the front of the line. "Some people don't understand, but we understand. I always tell my wife -- it's better than smoking crack."

    Dalug even was on the clock, sort of, passing out sunblock samples. As he eyed other fans sipping coffee or napping on air mattresses, he noted, "You forget about all the problems, all the responsibilities."

    "Chicago was a little crazy," Dalug added. But neither U2 nor its fans are spring chickens anymore. "If you get arrested, it's on our record. We're not underage anymore."

    Boris "Bowman" Poehland from Hamburg, Germany, was trying to follow as many shows as he could in the United States.

    "This show is all about different perspectives," he says. "I've been almost everywhere with this show."

    But, he confessed, "U2 is the name of my traveling agency. I love this band, but it's only 40 percent the show. Sixty percent is traveling around the world meeting old friends, meeting new friends, being in G.A. line for two days. That is the fun."

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    1U2FAN wrote on October 26, 2009 08:59 AM: U2 gives more than any other band could dream of!
    I've been a loyal fan for over 30 years!


    Julian Lupo wrote on October 24, 2009 11:21 PM: What about the kid that got on stage with Bono...that was AWESOME!!!
    By the way that kid was me.


    Eddie Gin wrote on October 24, 2009 09:09 PM: leftist fool;póg mo asal.


    Too_many_Crockers wrote on October 24, 2009 05:07 PM: I don't listen to U2 any more. Indeed, I tried trading my old U2 CDs at the record shop. The buyer wouldn't bid. Apparently LOTS of people are dumping their U2 CDs. You can still get a good price for your old Toby Keith CDs though. ROTFLMAO.


    HeHateMe wrote on October 24, 2009 03:54 PM: The concert was incredible! If you don't like Bono or U2, don't listen. idiots.


    SamT wrote on October 24, 2009 02:25 PM: Biggest draw or not, U2--Bono, in particular--needs to bury the radical leftist bloviating, on stage.

    Perhaps, if the Republic of Ireland created an order of knighthood, to bestow on Bono, he'd shut his hypocritical, tediously meddlesome mouth. That said, U2 is a superb band playing superb music.


    billy bob wrote on October 24, 2009 02:19 PM: Bill in Las Vegas button down the hatches on the strip clubs, prositutes, and young girls. I didn't have sex with that woman is in town slick willy


    Shill wrote on October 24, 2009 01:53 PM: Bono is a globalist New World Order shill. He's

    He is Into global goverance.

    He's an enemy of our Constitution. An enemy of our freedom, liberty and sovreignty.

    People - educate yourselves about the coming Global Government who wants America dead. Find out about the New World Order.

    We are under attack from within and from outside.


    mar wrote on October 24, 2009 01:17 PM: Excellent concert. Both bands made an effort to circle the circular stage so all could see them and the music was great. As for Bono, we all know what his political views are. I attended for the music, nothing he could say would change my mind and most of the save Africa crap came at the end of the show. Politically most of us would welcome President Clinton back considering what we have now.


    Al Capone wrote on October 24, 2009 01:09 PM: Bono is the Equivalent of Frank Sinatra.Can anyone imagine this guy at the Ceasar's venue.Be alot like Ole Frankie. U2,A band for the ages.A musical institution with real messages.Try doing that all you Punkie bands.Please !


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