The Mercury News Weekend

‘Monkeys could have organized better’

- By Jason Green jason.green@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SANTA CLARA — If it was a good time they were after, many U2 fans didn’t find what they were looking for Wednesday night at the rock band’s only Bay Area stop on its Joshua Tree tour.

And Santa Clara residents living near Levi’s Stadium may feel the same way after the band played until around 11 p.m., an hour after the city-mandated 10 p.m. weekday curfew.

Complaints from concert-

goers flowed in on social media, a good number of them about concession­s stands that either had long lines or ran out of food and drink before U2 even finished playing its first song.

Levi’s Stadium officials were sympatheti­c to patrons but cited logistic realities for many of the grievances.

They said some of the complaints, like about overtaxed concession­s vendors, were a byproduct of a concert offering limited chances to leave one’s seat without missing the event.

“Unlike a football game, where people are buying food throughout the game, in concerts people get in their seats during the concert and don’t leave again,” said Bob Lange, vice president of communicat­ions for the San Francisco 49ers, which operates the venue. “There’s a rush for food and drink so they don’t miss the next act, and they’re all leaving their seats at the same time. That’s just the nature of a concert.”

He acknowledg­ed people had problems with other issues such as parking, which he attributed partly to people from out of the area who aren’t famil- iar with the local roads and traffic patterns.

“Of course you’re going to have people who were frustrated,” Lange said. “But overwhelmi­ngly this building was rocking last night and people were having a good time.”

Some fans at the concert took out their frustratio­n on social media.

“Worst ever,” Mick McLaughlin wrote on Twitter. “Hour wait for a hot dog! We are in Silicon Valley, right?”

Another Twitter user said she spent 45 minutes in line only to be told there was no more food.

Lines also were long to park and get in the stadium, which is managed by the San Francisco 49ers.

Floodlight­s were another source of aggravatio­n for some concertgoe­rs, who said they couldn’t see the stage.

Despite taking the stage later than scheduled, the band itself was not a target of many complaints.

“Incredible,” Sean Cunningham, a sports producer and reporter for KXTV in Sacramento, wrote on Twitter. “Getting my mind blown by U2.”

Danielle Simmons, however, couldn’t say the same.

“First real outing since having a baby and it has been the worst experience,” she wrote on Twitter. “Monkeys could have organized better.”

 ?? JOSIE LEPE/STAFF PHOTOS ?? Members of U2 acknowledg­e the crowd at Levi’s Stadium. Neighbors and some city politician­s complained about traffic congestion and noise from the concert, which went longer than the city’s 10 p.m. weekday curfew.
JOSIE LEPE/STAFF PHOTOS Members of U2 acknowledg­e the crowd at Levi’s Stadium. Neighbors and some city politician­s complained about traffic congestion and noise from the concert, which went longer than the city’s 10 p.m. weekday curfew.
 ??  ?? Fans are photograph­ed during U2 world tour of the Joshua Tree concert at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara,
Fans are photograph­ed during U2 world tour of the Joshua Tree concert at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara,

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