HAHAHAHA the kid is the best. why the hell did he turn to a 10 year old kid to answer the question haha, and his little voice is cracking and shit, and then he goes on to insult the kid, too good!
“because he’s in charge he could tell them not…he’s the boss…” “ya, ok, well you seem to know…”
100 bucks a night? That’s surely for bands who are getting several hundred at shows, right? No band would pay some dude 100 a night if they’re only getting 150. Really?
[...] Hard Court Sean Ingram, singer of Lawrence, Kansas’ Coalesce, was featured on a recent episode of “The People’s Court.” Ingram runs a merchandising company called Blue Collar Distro, which makes t-shirts, hoodies, etc. for a bunch of indie bands. And one of those bands stiffed him (according to the comments here, it was The Esoteric) on their $2,000 bill. Ingram sued the band’s manager since he had ordered the merch, but you’ll have to watch the case to see how Judge Milian ruled. [...]
I love it. “what kind of deal is this? $100 a night? How’s the band supposed to eat?”
No shit Sherlock.
I read somewhere that it’s the esoteric, but I could be wrong.
HAHAHAHA the kid is the best. why the hell did he turn to a 10 year old kid to answer the question haha, and his little voice is cracking and shit, and then he goes on to insult the kid, too good!
“because he’s in charge he could tell them not…he’s the boss…” “ya, ok, well you seem to know…”
Amazing haha
It’s The Esoteric.
i miss Judge Wapner.
i love sean’s reply. he’s a bad ass.
“What did you learn from this case?”
“I learned that I’m going to sue the band”.
Awesome.
100 bucks a night? That’s surely for bands who are getting several hundred at shows, right? No band would pay some dude 100 a night if they’re only getting 150. Really?
it IS the esoteric and that guy IS their manager. check both of their myspace pages.
[...] Hard Court Sean Ingram, singer of Lawrence, Kansas’ Coalesce, was featured on a recent episode of “The People’s Court.” Ingram runs a merchandising company called Blue Collar Distro, which makes t-shirts, hoodies, etc. for a bunch of indie bands. And one of those bands stiffed him (according to the comments here, it was The Esoteric) on their $2,000 bill. Ingram sued the band’s manager since he had ordered the merch, but you’ll have to watch the case to see how Judge Milian ruled. [...]
So, did it go in Seans favor or the manager?