Driving home from work i heard this on the radio.... (well not this exact one... but they confirmed Bon Jovi to play....
Al Gore Sets Global Warming Concerts With Snoop Dogg, Bon Jovi
By Kim Chipman and Alan Ohnsman
Feb. 15 (Bloomberg) -- A group headed by former Vice President Al Gore is planning a single day of concerts on seven continents featuring more than 100 performers, including Bon Jovi, Snoop Dogg and Fall Out Boy, to promote awareness of global warming.
The ``Live Earth'' shows will take place July 7 in London, Shanghai, Sydney, Johannesburg and locations to be determined in the U.S., Brazil and Japan, Gore and music producer Kevin Wall said today in Los Angeles. Details of a show in Antarctica will be announced next month, Gore spokeswoman Kalee Kreider said.
The concerts are part of ``Save Our Selves,'' a new campaign founded by Wall, the producer behind the 2005 Live 8 concerts that raised money for Africa. General Electric Co.'s NBC Universal Inc. television and movie unit will televise the shows in the U.S. Gore and Wall said they expect ``Live Earth'' to be the most viewed event ever, reaching more than 2 billion people through television, radio, the Internet and film.
``The goal is to trigger a mass movement across the globe to combat our climate crisis,'' spokesman Yusef Robb of Save Our Selves said in an interview.
Proceeds from the concerts will go to the Alliance for Climate Protection, a group Gore heads that includes Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Managing Director Theodore Roosevelt IV and Brent Scowcroft, national security adviser to President George H.W. Bush. Tickets will go on sale next month.
Gore, 58, has long called for stronger U.S. action on climate change, co-sponsoring the first congressional hearings to study the issue in the 1980s. The movie ``An Inconvenient Truth,'' which features Gore lecturing about the dangers of global warming, is a contender for two Academy Awards, including best documentary feature.
The former vice president also has been nominated by two Norwegian lawmakers for a Nobel Peace Prize in recognition of his efforts to raise public awareness of global warming. Such accolades have stirred speculation that Gore might make another bid for the White House. Gore, who lost to Republican George W. Bush in 2000, said he has no plans to run for president.
To contact the reporters on this story: Kim Chipman in Washington at
kchipman@bloomberg.net ; Alan Ohnsman in Los Angeles at
aohnsman@bloomberg.net .
Last Updated: February 15, 2007 15:40 EST