
Wednesday, May 13, 2009
These Animals Need Our Help!

Monday, May 11, 2009
Something Worth Savouring!

2009 Gala Fashion Show
Something Worth Savouring!
Indulge in a delicious 3-course meal while savouring the latest haute couture from Richard Robinson Academy’s graduating protégés.
Celebrating 25 Years of Support
St. Joe's Women’s Centre
On May 14th 2009, St. Joe’s Women’s Centre will be celebrating 25 years of commitment and dedication to providing programs that service the needs of vulnerable women and children, in a supportive and safe environment. Social and educational programs are offered to promote empowerment, autonomy, and dignity in a non-judgmental atmosphere.
Join us on Thursday May 14, 2009 for our Silver Celebration. We will be hosting a Gala fashion show and dinner complete with prizes! Collections from graduating students of the Richard Robinson Academy will be showcased as we enjoy a fun filled evening. Get involved and get inspired with something worth savouring!
Limited tickets to this wonderful event are $100 pp and includes your dinner and fashion show. Tickets may be purchased via fax or phone at Fax: (613) 233-4594 or Phone: (613) 231-6722.
Doors open at 6:00 pm for seating and dinner.
Dinner – 14 May 2009
Canapes
Vegetarian Vietnamese spring rolls with a sweet and spicy dipping sauce
Tomato boccocini skewers with a pesto drizzle
Asparagus and prosciutto bundles
Salad
Spring salad leaves with a dressing of “petits fruits” and a terrine of bison (vegetarian option also available)
Entrée
Choice of:
Maple glazed seared fillet of salmon with a light fruit salsa and a parmesan, white wine sauce
Chicken Wellington, supreme of chicken stuffed with asparagus, goat cheese and red pepper served with a roasted red pepper coulis
Dessert
Triple layered chocolate mousse cake. Decadent layers of Dark, milk and white chocolate mousse with a rich raspberry coulis.
Hurry! space is limited
Tickets: $100 and only available in advance.
Purchase your tickets today613-231-6722 (ext. 224)
Thank you to all our sponsors!
151LaurierAve.E., Parish Hall, St. Joseph’s Church
613-231-6722
Wednesday, May 06, 2009
Best Caesar Salad Dressing Recipe on Earth

I've been inundated with requests for my caesar salad dressing recipe!
Well, ok, one request from listener Caroline Parent, and one request from our producer Hammer. Two requests! That qualifies for the word 'inundated', in my opinion.
Here it is: (with thanks to the person who gave the recipe to me in the first place, Jay Mantha)
1/4 tsp dry mustard
2 - 3 drops tabasco
4 - 5 drops worcestershire sauce
2 - 3 cloves crushed garlic (or to taste, I use more!)
1 tbsp lemon juice
2 tbsp red wine vinegar
6 tbsp vegetable oil
5 or 6 tbsp grated parmesan or romano cheese (romano has more 'kick'!)
pepper to taste
4 - 5 inches anchovy paste (optional)
* 1 egg (later)Blend all ingredients in blender. Mix in an egg. Pour dressing over chopped romaine lettuce & toss with croutons and freshly shredded parmesan cheese (and cooked bacon if you want!) Refrigerate unused dressing.
Tuesday, May 05, 2009
Big Sky Ranch Summer Day Camps for Kids


Monday to Thursday: 7:30 am - 5:30 pm
Big Sky Ranch is a sanctuary for abused and unwanted animals. Come and meet new friends in an experience of a lifetime.Every summer Big Sky will sponsor 1 child per week to attend camp for free. For more information on this please contact Andy at the ranch. Let us show your children how to care for and keep these animals with a western twist of activities such as:
Horse Shoe Toss
Gold Nugget Treasure Hunt
Scavenger Hunt
Trail Hikes
Arts and Crafts
Hay Rides
Water Games
Bobbing for Apples
Learning How to Saddle and ride a Horse
Lassoing Lesson
Feeding the Animals
Grooming the Animals
Exercising the Animals
Collecting Eggs
AND MUCH MORE!!!!Book Now - limited spaces available$175/week and then $150 for each additional week
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Tyler's Garage Sale!

Thursday, April 23, 2009
Beat Bob's Bank Buys a Bassett!
Well, we just received an email from Carol and instead of the barbeque, Carol took her winnings and adopted a one year old bassett hound named 'Hooch', from Bassett Hound Rescue in Rigaud, Quebec. I love this story!!! Fantastic. Here is a photo of 'Hooch' with Carol's sons, Adam, Kyle and Wil!
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Spring is Like Friday!

So, in summary:
'Spring' is 'Friday'
'Summer' is 'Saturday'
'Autumn' is 'Sunday'
'Winter' is 'Monday'
This is the point where people usually tell me that I have too much time on my hands.
-
The above picture of 'crocus' was taken in my garden about an hour ago. I am a gardening nut and I love the fact that this past-time has become so popular!! The recession has been ridiculously difficult for everyone, but some good things have surfaced as a result of the economic downturn- like people's desire to get down and dirty in the garden. A news story came out this week suggesting that a $70 investment in tools, soil, plants, etc would eventually yield about $500 worth of vegetables! Putting in a vegetable garden has never made more sense.
I don't have a vegetable garden. I have a daylily garden, a rock garden, a zen garden, a sloped garden, and a patch of 'anything goes' , but I've never had a vegetable garden. I might have to make one this year. I'll start with zucchini. I want to see if I can grow one of those 4 foot long zucchini. Or a 500 pound pumpkin. Or a 300 pound turnip. Since my husband doesn't really like vegetables, I may as well make my vegetable garden like some sort of science experiment gone wrong.
Earth Day is coming up this Wednesday! I love the fact that retailers are starting to put the brakes on plastic bags. I do own cloth grocery bags but I admit that I often forget to bring them to the store with me. Its just so easy to accept those horrible plastic bags. But as of Wednesday, Loblaws is going to start charging (I think its 3 cents?) per plastic bag. Not a huge price to pay for a bag, but it does send a message. Walking out of a store with your groceries stuffed into 10 plastic bags is soon going to be akin to throwing an empty Coke can out the window of your car. It just won't be socially acceptable. Experts knock us over the head with information about climate change and the environment. But the most effective way to get people to pay attention? Have us turn on each other. Sure, as of Wednesday, you will still be able to get plastic bags at the grocery store. But if you continue to use plastic bags, you may get icy stares. Other cloth-bag-using shoppers will look at you with disdain. Some may even snort at you. Al Gore really got the climate change ball rolling with his 'Inconvenient Truth'. But I guarantee that the single most important revolution towards a positive future for our environment, is having someone snort at you because you are using a plastic bag.
Wednesday, April 08, 2009
Disco Inferno Vegas Night!

Friday, April 03, 2009
Please Help to Find Austin!

Sherry Cleveland, who's beautiful dog has been missing since March 23rd. If you are in the LAGGAN/CORNWALL/DUNVEGAN AREA, and you know of Austin's whereabouts, please contact Sherry at phone number(s) above! p.s. we know how dogs can run, so even if you are not in the Cornwall area, and you've seen this dog, any information would be greatly appreciated!
Sam is the Man!!

We love getting your letters, and this one was priceless. It comes from Nathalie Lamy, who played 'Beat Bob's Bank' with us this past Wednesday. Unfortunately Nathalie didn't win any cash (at one point she was at $410, but she went on to be overdrawn), but she did get a 'I played Beat Bob's Bank and all I Got Was this Lousy T-shirt' t-shirt. A consolation prize, as they say.
Pictured above: her son Sam in the t-shirt.
Here is Nathalie's note to us:
Hi,
I won your wonderful t-shirt playing beat Bob's bank on Wednesday. When my 8 yr old son came back from school I explained my whole Bob adventure, loosing 410$ but winning a Bob fm t-shirt and he was delighted! He could not believe that _I scored_ a Bob fm t-shirt! He put it on, slept in it and wanted to go to school in it but I had to draw the line somewhere. (This shirt is an extra large it goes down below his knees as seen in the attached picture) . This shirt is the ultimate prize it seems, even after I re-explained to him that should I had won the 410$, I would have been able to buy him the sooo coveted Bob-fm t-shirt. I guess for my son you guys are like royalty. He feels like he won the lottery. It was great fun and made my son's day.
Nathalie
I love it!
Monday, March 30, 2009
The Humane Society Fur Ball -$155,000 Raised!!!

Jim Watson and CTV's Leanne Cusack

Tuesday, March 24, 2009
Fleetwood Mac hits the Capital




it was a great show last night, Fleetwood Mac brought decades of huge hits to Scotiabank Place. One of the finest shows I have ever seen! The band seemed genuinely happy to be here and they played well over 2 hours. Considering the fact that I've probably listened to Fleetwood Mac's 'Rumours' album over a thousand times, it was pretty cool seeing the band play so many of those songs. If I never go to a concert again, at least I got to see 'Go Your Own Way' played live.
Vinney White Friday Night Dog Party for the Humane Society!!!!

Vinney White is a guy who knows how to find the party. Especially...when he IS the party. Vinney's FRIDAY NIGHT HOUSE PARTY is Ottawa's favourite way to spend a Friday night, so we thought....why not take it on the road for a great cause!! And the best part of all, is that the address of the party - could be YOUR HOUSE! 939 BOB FM is a proud sponsor of the Ottawa Humane Society Fur Ball, which is this Saturday at the National Gallery. (its sold out) The night will be an official kick-off for the Humane Society's 'Breaking Ground' campaign: details will soon be released about a huge campaign to build a new shelter for Ottawa's lost, abandoned and abused animals. To raise money for this wonderful cause, ALL THIS WEEK, on the home page at www.939bobfm.com, you can email a bid to HOST Vinney and the Friday Night House Party , at YOUR house! You can choose the Friday night you want, you can save it for the summer, you can have the party in conjunction with a celebration, a birthday, an anniversary, a street party, a community group, a girl's night out, WHATEVER!!! ITS UP TO YOU!! Vinney will arrive on your doorstep with the Bob technical crew, and Gabriels Pizza will swing by with pizza and refreshments for all! Email bids will be accepted until Friday morning, then the auction turns 'live' with Vinney joining JR and I on 'the Morning After'. Be sure to tune in and call us with YOUR best bid, the winning bidder will be announced at 8:30 am this Friday morning on 'The Morning After'. At this point, the TOP BID IS $800!!! We know we can do better than that....its for the animals!!!
Balderdash Ball!!!! Lies! Its all Lies!!

This is a snapshot (taken last year) of a room that was about to explode with laughter, at the annual BALDERDASH BALL!!!
What is the 'Balderdash Ball', you ask? It is a FOOLS FABLE CONTEST!! Come and hear fables and yarns and spoofs, and just plain 'balderdashery' - presented in a fashion that BEGS FOR votes, as it IS a contest!! This is my first year participating in the Balderdash Ball, and I'm really looking forward to it! I haven't figured out what yarn I will spin yet. I can either make the whole story up or tell a story with an ounce of truth. Maybe I'll talk about the time I met Morgan Fairchild...yeah...thats right. Morgan Fairchild!
Get your tickets now for this hilarious evening, dinner, dance and silent auction, with all proceeds to Childrens Village and the Debra Dynes Family House. It all takes place on Saturday April 4th at the Ukrainian Banquet Hall, 1000 Byron Avenue. Tickets are just $60 each, available by calling 613-725-2040 ext 139, or 613-224-3824. I may bring Morgan Fairchild with me.
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Everyone's Irish today!!!!

In Ireland, nine men were captured, tried, and convicted of treason against Her Majesty, the Queen during what has been referred to as the "Young Irish Disorders", in 1848 or thereabouts. The nine, who were sentenced to death, were Pat Donahue, Charles Duffy, Michael Ireland, Morris Lyene, Thomas McGee, Terrence McMannus, Thomas Meagher, John Mitchell and Richard O'Gorman.
The judge asked if there was anything any of them wished to say before being sentenced. Meagher, whose response summed up the attitude of them all, replied, "My Lord, this is our first offense, but not our last. If you will be easy with us this once, we promise on our word as gentlemen, to do better next time, sure we won't be fools to get caught."
The judge, outraged rather than amused at Meagher's remarks, indignantly decreed that the defendants should be hanged until dead, and drawn and quartered. Passionate protests, however, influenced Queen Victoria to commute the sentence to banishment for life and transportation to far, wild Australia.
In 1874, an astounded Queen Victoria received word that the Sir Charles Duffy who had been elected Prime Minister of Australia was the very same Charles Duffy who had been transported there some twenty-five years earlier. curious about the fate of the other eight young Irishmen convicted with Duffy, the Queen demanded that the records of those transported and banished from England during the incidents of 1848 be researched and revealed. This is what they found:
Thomas Meagher Governor of Montana
Terrence McMannus Brigadier General, U.S. Army
Patrick Donahue Brigadier General, U.S. Army
Morris Lyene Attorney General of Australia
Richard O'Gorman Governor of Newfoundland
Michael Ireland Attorney General of Australia
Thomas McGee Member of Parliament
Minister of Agriculture
President of Council, Dominion of Canada
John Mitchell Writer and prominent New York politician
His son became Mayor of New York City
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Bayshore's BOB IN A BOX
Monday, March 09, 2009
Hilary is In the House!


We all Saw U2 At Barrymores!

U2 has just announced the dates for their new tour, its being billed as the '360 degree tour'.
It starts in Europe in June, and it will come to North America this fall. Unfortunately, no Ottawa dates (its a stadium tour only, and we only have 1/2 a stadium in Ottawa right now).
The band plays Toronto on Sept 16th. Tickets go on sale to the general public on March 30th, but you can get in on a pre-sale if you become a member at www.U2.com. That will cost you $50.00 U.S., but you will get a CD sent to you in the mail, as well as other bonuses.
Thursday, February 26, 2009
Mo and Mike

Tuesday, February 24, 2009
Do I Look Fat in This?

East Coast Lobster & Mascarpone Risotto
Lightly Smoked Chateaubriand
Valrhona Chocolate TerrineVanilla Bean Crème Anglaise
Friday, February 20, 2009
Obama-Rama!!
Thursday, February 12, 2009
A Treat for Bruce Springsteen Fans
IN BRUCE'S WORDS:
I. Six Air Force Thunderbirds have just roared overhead at what felt like inches above our backstage area, giving myself and the entire E Street Band a brush cut. With 20 minutes to go, I'm sitting in my trailer trying to decide what boots to wear. I've got a nice pair of cowboy boots my feet look really good in, but I'm concerned about their stability. Two days ago we rehearsed in full rain on the field and the stage became as slick as an ice pond. It was almost impossible to stand on. It was so slick I crashed into Mike Colucci, our cameraman, coming off my knee slide, his camera the only thing that kept me from launching out onto the soggy turf. When Jerry the umpire in "Glory Days" did his bit, he came running out, couldn't stop himself and executed one of the most painfully perfect "man slips on a banana peel" falls I've ever seen. This sent Steve, myself and the entire band into one of the biggest stress-induced laughters of our lives that lasted all the way back to our trailers. (A few Advil and Jerry was okay.)
I better go with the combat boots I always carry. The round toes will give me better braking power than the pointy-toed cowboy boots when I hit the deck. I stuff my boots with two innersoles to make them as fitted as possible, zip them up snuggly around my ankles, stomp around in my trailer a bit and feel pretty grounded. Fifteen minutes…oh, by the way, I'm somewhat nervous. It's not the usual pre-show jitters, not "butterflies," it's not wardrobe malfunction anticipation anxiety, I'm talking about five minutes to beach landing, "Right Stuff" "Lord Don't Let Me Screw the Pooch in Front of 100 Million People" one of the biggest television audiences since dinosaurs first screwed on earth kind of semi-terror. It only lasts for a minute…I check my hair, spray it with something that turns it into concrete and I'm out the door.
I catch sight of Patti smiling. She's been my rock all week. I put my arm around her and away we go. They take us by golf cart to a holding tunnel right off the field. The problem is there are a thousand people there, tv cameras, media of all kinds and general chaos. Suddenly, hundreds of people rush by us in a column shouting, cheering…our fans! And tonight also our stage builders. These are "the volunteers". They've been here for two weeks on their own dime in a field day after day, putting together and pulling apart pieces of our stage over and over again, theoretically achieving military precision. Now it's for real. I hope they've got it down because as we're escorted onto the field, lights in the stadium fully up, the banshee wail of 70,000 screaming football fanatics rising in our ears, there's nothing there. Nothing…no sound, no lights, no instruments, no stage, nothing but brightly lit unwelcoming green turf. Suddenly an army of ants come from all sides of what seems like nowhere. Each rolling a piece of our lifeline, our earth onto the field. The cavalry has arrived. What takes us on a concert day 8 hours to do is done in five minutes. Unbelieveable. Everything in our world is there…we hope. We gather a few feet off the stage, form a circle of hands, I say a few words drowned out by the crowd and it's smiles all around. I've been in a lot of high stakes situations like this, though not exactly like this, with these people before. It's stressful, but our band is made for it…and it's about to begin…so happy warriors we bound up onto the stage.
II. The NFL stage manager gives me the three minute sign…two minutes…one…there's a guy jumping up and down on sections of the stage to get them to sit evenly on the grass field…30 seconds…they're still testing all the speakers and equipment…that's cutting it close! The lights in the stadium go down. The crowd erupts and Max's drumbeat opens "10th Avenue." I feel a white light silhouette Clarence and I for a moment. I hear Roy's piano. I give "C"'s hand a pat. I'm on the move tossing my guitar in a high arc for Kevin, my guitar tech, to catch and it's…"ladies and gentlemen, for the next 12 minutes we will be bringing the righteous and mighty power of the E Street Band into your beautiful home. So…step back from the guacamole dip. Put the chicken fingers down! And turn the TV ALL the way up!" Because, of course, there is just ONE thing I've got to know: "IS THERE ANYBODY ALIVE OUT THERE?!"
All I know is if you were standing next to me, you would be. I feel like I've just taken a syringe of adrenalin straight to the heart. Before we came out, I had two major concerns. One, something might go wrong beyond my control. That completely disappeared before we hit the stage. Tonight our fate is in the hands of many, so no sense for useless worry. Two, I was worried that I would find myself 'out' of myself and not in the moment. My old friend Peter Wolf once said 'the strangest thing you can do on stage is think about what you're doing." This is true. To observe oneself from afar while struggling to bring the moment to life is an unpleasant experience. I've had it more than once. It's an existential problem. Unfortunately, right in my wheel house. It doesn't mean it's going to be a bad show. It may be a great one. It just means it might take time, something we don't have much of tonight. When that happens, I do anything to break it. Tear up the set list, call an audible, make a mistake, anything to get "IN." That's what you get paid for, TO BE HERE NOW! The power, potential and volume of your present-ness is a basic rock and roll promise. It's the essential element that holds the attention of your audience, that gives force, shape and authority to the evening's events. And however you get there on any given night, that's the road you take. "IS THERE ANYBODY ALIVE IN HERE?!"…there better be.
I'm on top of the piano (good old boots). I'm down. One…two…three, knee drop in front of the microphone and I'm bending back almost flat on the stage. I close my eyes for a moment and when I open them, I see nothing but blue night sky. No band, no crowd, no stadium. I hear and feel all of it in the form of a great siren like din surrounding me but with my back nearly flat against the stage I see nothing but beautiful night sky with a halo of a thousand stadium suns at its edges. I take several deep breaths and a calm comes over me. I feel myself deeply and happily "IN."
Since the inception of our band it was our ambition to play for everyone. We've achieved a lot but we haven't achieved that. Our audience remains tribal…that is predominantly white. On occasion, the Inaugural Concert, during a political campaign, touring through Africa in '88, particularly in Cleveland with President Obama, I looked out and sang "Promised Land" to the audience I intended it for, young people, old people, black, white, brown, cutting across religious and class lines. That's who I'm singing to today. Today we play for everyone. I pull myself upright with the mike stand back into the world, this world, my world, the one with everybody in it and the stadium, the crowd, my band, my best friends, my wife come rushing into view and it's "teardrops on the city…"
III. During "Tenth Avenue" I tell the story of my band…and other things "when the change was made uptown"…. It goes rushing by, then the knee slide. Too much adrenalin, a late drop, too much speed, here I come Mike…BOOM! And I'm onto his camera, the lens implanted into my chest with one leg off the stage. I use his camera to push myself back up and…say it, say it, say it, say it…BLAM! BORN TO RUN…my story…Something bright and hot blows up behind me. I heard there were fireworks. I never saw any. Just the ones going off in my head. I'm out of breath. I try to slow it down. That ain't gonna happen. I already hear the crowd singing the last eight bars of "Born to Run" oh, oh, oh, oh…then it's straight into "Working on a Dream"…your story…and mine I hope. Steve is on my right, Patti on my left. I catch a smile and the wonderful choir, The Joyce Garrett Singers, that backed me in Washington during the Inaugural concert is behind us. I turn to see their faces and listen to the sound of their voices…"working on a dream". Done. Moments later, we're ripping straight into "Glory Days"…the end of the story. A last party steeped in merry fatalism and some laughs with my old pal, Steve. Jerry the Ump doesn't fall on his ass tonight. He just throws the yellow penalty flag for the precious 40 seconds we've gone overtime…home stretch. Everyone is out front now forming that great line. Out of the corner of my eye, I catch the horns raising their instruments high, my guitar is wheeling around my neck and on the seventh beat, I'm going to Disneyland. I'm already someplace a lot farther and more fun than that. I look around, we're alive, it's over, we link arms and take a bow as the stage comes apart beneath our feet. It's chaos again all the way back to the trailer. A toast…our families, friends, Jon, George, Brendan, Barbara, with Don Mischer, Ricky Kirshner, Glenn Weiss, Charles Coplin, and Dick Ebersol, the great team that put it altogether and the end of a good football game.
IV. The theory of relativity holds. On stage your exhilaration is in direct proportion to the void you're dancing over. A gig I always looked a little askance at and was a little wary of turned out to have surprising emotional power and resonance for me and my band. It was a high point, a marker of some sort and went up with the biggest shows of our work life. The NFL threw us an anniversary party the likes of which we'd never throw for ourselves (we're too fussy) with fireworks and everything! In the middle of their football game, they let us hammer out a little part of our story. I love playing long and hard but it was the 35 years in 12 minutes…that was the trick. You start here, you end there, that's it. That's the time you've got to give it everything you have…12 minutes…give or take a few seconds. The Super Bowl is going to help me sell a few new records, that's what I wanted because I want people to hear where we are today. It'll probably put a few extra fannies in the seats and that's fine. We live high around here and I like to do good business for my record company and concert promoters. But what it's really about is my band remains one of the mightiest in the land and I want you to know it, we want to show you…because we can.
By 3 am, I am back home, everyone in the house fast asleep and tucked in bed. I am sitting in the yard over an open fire, staring up again into that black night sky, my ears still ringing…"Oh yeah, it's alright."
February, 2009
Tuesday, February 10, 2009
Winterlude - Before It Melts
Sunday, February 08, 2009
David Lee Roth Rocks Our Computers!

Our resident musicologist, Allan Wigney, star of 'Wigipedia Wednesdays' (now a 'Facebook' group, search 'Its Not Wednesday Unless its Wigipedia Wednesday), sent along a great afternoon-waster. Also fun at parties too! Its a 'David Lee Roth' sound-board. Follow this link:
Monday, February 02, 2009
What Bruce Can do in Twelve Minutes!!!

Read what MTV.com has to say:
BRUCE SPRINGSTEEN LEADS HALFTIME PARTY AT SUPERBOWL!
By James Montgomery
MTV.com
James Harrison's 100-yard interception return for a touchdown may have got the crowd at Tampa, Florida's Raymond James Stadium buzzing, but Bruce Springsteen really put things over the top.
The Boss' much-hyped halftime show at Super Bowl XLIII more than lived up to the advance billing, with the ageless one (seriously, how does a 59-year-old man move like that?!?!) was part preacher, part gunslinger and all showman.
Backed by his airtight E Street Band, Springsteen strode onstage to thunderous cheers, tossed his guitar to a waiting tech, then launched into a fire-and-brimstone speech that had everyone in the stadium losing their collective minds.
"For the next 12 minutes, we're going to bring the righteous power of the E Street Band into your home!" Springsteen shouted before climbing atop a piano. "Is there anybody alive out there? Is there anybody alive out there?!?"
And hell yes, there was. Springsteen ripped into "10th Avenue Freezeout," bending backward over his microphone stand, pyro and giant video screens firing behind him. He slapped hands with fans in front of the stage and then slid across the stage — directly into a wayward cameraman — and cracked a smile.
That led right into his classic "Born to Run," which sent the crowd into even further hysterics, and then, backed by a full gospel choir (as he was at the "We Are One" concert last month), he performed a brief segment of "Working on a Dream," the title track of his just-released album.
Then, stretching his 12 minutes to the max, Bruce and the Band flew into "Glory Days," clearly reveling in the moment but aware of the time constraints.
"I think it's quittin' time, Steve," Springsteen laughed to guitarist Steve Van Zandt.
Steve argued a bit, but then a referee came out and jokingly flagged the band for delay-of-game penalty.
"Steve, what time is it?" Bruce asked.
"It's Boss time!" Van Zandt shouted.
And then, to huge applause, they wrapped up the set, and took a much-deserved bow. "I'm going to Disneyland!" Springsteen shouted before leaving the stage.
Of course, he looked like he'd rather suit up for the second half of the big game. Maybe next year ...