BERLIN, Nov. 5, 2009

U2 Berlin Concert Blockade Sparks Outrage

A Barrier Blocking Non-ticket Holders' View Infuriates Fans Who Want to See a Concert Honoring the Fall of the Berlin Wall

  • U2 lead singer and activist Bono presents

    U2 lead singer and activist Bono presents "The Data Report 2008", during a news conference, in Paris, Wednesday, June 18, 2008.  (AP Photo/Jacque Brinon)

(AP)  Fans hoping to catch a glimpse Thursday of U2's free concert celebrating 20 years since the fall of the Berlin Wall will have to "scale these city walls" after organizers threw up a barrier to block the view for those without tickets.

The move has triggered outrage from Berliners and tourists alike, all of whom see the irony in building wall around a concert dedicated to the wall that has come down.

MTV Europe Awards 2008
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"It's completely ridiculous that they are blocking the view," said Louis-Pierre Boily, 23, who said he came to Berlin even though he failed to get tickets.

"I thought it's a free show, but MTV probably wants people to watch it on TV to get their ratings up," said Boily, a native of Quebec City who was among several hundred people who gathered Thursday against the roughly 12-foot (2-meter) metal fence, draped with a white tarp that blocked off the view of the stage from the street.

Music network MTV, which organized Thursday's concert in front of the Brandenburg Gate, did not respond to repeated requests for comment.

U2's publicist RMP also refused comment.

Some 10,000 tickets were made available online for the Irish rockers' free show and they were snapped up in just three hours.

The Berlin Wall fell on Nov. 9, 1989, ending almost 30 years of Cold War division between the communist East and the democratic West.

Throughout those decades, the Brandenburg Gate stood just inside of then-East Berlin. In 1988, musicians such as Pink Floyd and Michael Jackson performed in a three-day "Berlin Rock Marathon" on the western side of the concrete barrier, with the landmark as a backdrop.

Concertgoers in the West hurled bottles and firebombs at the wall, while some 2,000 youths gathered on the eastern side to listen, many shouting "The wall must go.

By Kirsten Grieshaber
© MMIX The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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by Thomas10429 November 5, 2009 7:26 PM EST
PLEASE give me a break. This is a FREE concert. FREE tickets and FREE staging and FREE music and the best band in the WORLD. FREE.

How much money are they making on the FREE concert, hunh?

Maybe it was the promoter, MTV (likely) or the city that demanded the barriers. Get over yourselves. If you want to hate someone for being hypocritical, look in the mirror.
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by Vet_Turner November 5, 2009 1:46 PM EST
The fall of U2.

His ticket prices are obscene and people who just want to get a glance of the U2 show on public streets are blocked out. Bono, take a hike!
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