04/30/06
Mifune :: Tower City unplugs Cleveland Tri-C JazzFest band for political T-shirts -
Categories: Announcements, News -
GEN-ERIC
@ 07:00:59 am
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Mifune began last Friday just past noon. Twenty fleeting minutes later, the music stopped without warning leaving thousands left looking at each other slackjawed for a short while until a band member in a futile attempt spoke loudly in ten words or less without a microphone to inform whoever was in earshot why the gig was over. |
Comments:
Wasn't there of course. But the shirts - or rather - wearing them in a public place in the fashion is a political statement. Might be right, might be wrong but it is what it is.
Now if they had Millard Fillmore on their shirts .. that might be different. Or Donald Duck. Context matters.
Which isn't to say I care about the shirts as shirts - just saying.
Separation of church from state is one thing, but it ought to be a crime to separate art from state.
I'm not sure that is what is going on. A private company owns the space yes? They made a descision to halt the concert. It may have been a good biz act or a poor one but it's not a First Ammendment issue.
Do not know details of ownership.
The Tri-C JazzFest is a community college jazz festival who I assume booked Mifune.
Which means the event was run by a private-public partnership.
Would you then say your story or opinion would be different
if their was a public component to this event?
That is the crux of the problem here. If the space is owned by a private concern it's not censorship, it's time to shop elsewhere.
Would you then say your story or opinion would be different
if their was a public component to this event?
I don't have a story here, only an opinion. I don't, however, generally like what-if games. It is what it is.
http://www.towercitycenter.com/tcc_contactus.asp
Anyone who thinks this is an outrage should call or email with your complaints and comments on Monday. The management of this place should realize that they can't just "shut up" whoever they want.
Why can't they?
Because to the very public component of Tower City's existence as the central hub of the area's public transportation system. Tower City was constructed with $15 million of taxpayer dollars to renovate the train hub in the basement of the facility. The only possible access from the street to the train station is through the mall -- there is no external access -- and therefore, the main mall passageways, where the band was performing, is considered a public accessway.
That is the part I was missing, thanks.
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