| "A 24-hour musical extravaganza across seven continents, featuring as many as 150 of the world's top recording artists, introduced by an army of 'celebrities and thought leaders' (think: Cameron Diaz and Richard Branson ), playing before a total live audience of a million people, and reaching 2 billion more via television, radio and the Internet on July 7." as described by former Vice President Al Gore . Read the full story at by William Booth The Washington Post Online. |
| Burning Man 2007 |
| Written by David Neubert | |||
![]() Photo:herby_fr, Creative Commons, Flickr I'm taking a week away from stock research, trading, credit meltdowns and blogging for The Panelist. I'm leaving the Default World and heading to the to a dry salt lake bed called Black Rock City. I heard there might be Internet access. If there is, I'm going to try to report on how people spend money at Burning Man. Because far from the hippy-dippy laid back party everyone thinks it can be, I noticed people spending huge amounts of money at Burning Man. They spend it on art, on preparations, on vehicles, on sharing, on gifts, on music, on propane, on travel, on food and a whole range of equipment gear and supplies. Perhaps it should be called a Burning Money Man. As some artist figured out last year in this photo I took of the night of The Burn. Photo:Rubin 110, Creative Commons, Flickr Here's something similar to what I said last year:
Disclosure: I did buy Thornburg Mortgage (TMA) Common and Preferred (TMAPRC) last week.
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