On Oct 18, 2006, at 3:01 PM, justifiedright wrote:

 That would take major marketing. Last year I challenged every 
 person on this board to join the Marketing Committee. As usual, I 
 was told to go hang. 


Tom,

Asbury Park has something with its connection to music that could be
the foundation for a tourism or marketing plan.  I would gladly work
or join a marketing committee if they ever even HINTED that they
wanted to use music tourism as the foundation of a tourism plan.  They
don't seem to.  How do I know? Because I tried every day for about two
years in and out of City Hall.  

There are certainly several people who understand the potential which
is there, but overall the feeling seems to be like your answer -- it'd
be great but it could never happen.  

Well, I believe it could EASILY happen but it goes against what the
residential idea people want and it goes against what people in town
like Tri-City wants.  There are a lot of people who want to cut the
chord from the past as fast as they can.

Look back at your local history as it deals with music Tom.  The
Asbury Park Rock 'N Roll Museum in the late 80s had thousands of
visitors in a few years without ANY marketing budget and before the
Internet was in place.  That museum was written about in NY newspapers
as well as Rolling Stone and even had a segment on MTV.  The visitors
came from around the entire world (tons of fans from Japan visited)
based on word of mouth.

The WNEW radio shows of the late 80s and early 90s drew upwards of
100,000 people to the beach and boardwalk twice a year for a free live
concert.  The music was free but Asbury Park vendors and restaurants
made out very well on those days.  In fact, I remember a few places
that would ONLY open for the WNEW shows and were closed all year long
afterwards.

How about when Springsteen released The Rising cd?  The Today Show
thought it was a good enough reason to camp down in Asbury Park and
provided a week's worth of free advertising on a national scale.  Not
to mention the restaurants were packed as were the hotels in the area.   

For that matter, how about looking at every time Springsteen came to
town for his rehearsal shows or Xmas shows?  The restaurants and
stores (especially when they ran the Springsteen ticket contests) did
about 400 times their regular business proving yet again that music
could drive even the downtown shopping area.

And when we announced the New Jersey Music Hall of Fame at the Stone
Pony, we had press coverage from around the world.  Ironically, the
ONLY place that thought it was a bad idea was Asbury Park's own
Tri-City News which had to come up with flat out lies to support their
claims.  Everyone else thought this was something that would be a boon
to the City - including the editorial board of the Asbury Park Press.

Nevertheless, it's hard to keep fighting for something that has worked
in many other places (Liverpool is by far the best example of a town
that was down and out which turned music tourism into the heart of its
tourism trade) when even the Mayor who is a musician feels he has
better things to do that show up at the announcement of the museum. 
And it's just as hard when some people in the town supposedly listen
to Tri City and believe what they print.  I really didn't think anyone
did until someone who wrote a letter to TCN agreeing with how stupid
the museum idea was contacted me about how he could help after seeing
that the plan on the website was completely different from the
fabrications printed in that paper.

So that's why I'm not part of a marketing committee.  To me, it looks
like their idea of marketing is reaching out to people in Tinton Falls
to have dinner in Asbury rather than reaching out to people in Boston
to spend a week in the summer here.

And the sad truth is that a plan could be done for a whole lot less
than you're proposing.  Why? Because Asbury Park has a beach, it has a
boardwalk, and it's known around the world for its music.  Just listen
to those words and tell me the town needs to wave the white flag and
surrender.  When has it EVER tried promoting those things to the
world?  Never.




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