Woodstock
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:16:00
they're strewn on the sides of
the roads from the helicopters and...

:16:04
...in all different angles, you know. They
look like jackstraws and stuff like that.

:16:07
There is this continual flow of people
just riding the stream.

:16:10
They're going along and it...
:16:13
Jerry, it was all frozen.
So let's enjoy. It was all I could get.

:16:16
Well, I mean, I mean,
from a practical point of view,

:16:18
what do you think,
how could they limit this crowd?

:16:22
They didn't want this many people
here, really, I don't think.

:16:25
So you find the control points at
the beginning of the highways...

:16:28
...and those with tickets are allowed
in and those without tickets are not.

:16:32
You have to have some control.
:16:36
You know, when you
have man-eating...

:16:38
...Barabunda ants coming over
a hill in South America...

:16:42
...they want to cut them off and stop
them from coming. They make a ditch...

:16:45
...they put oil in the ditch and
they make a flame.

:16:47
Now I'm not saying they should put up
flames to stop the people...

:16:51
...but there has to be some way of
stopping the influx of humanity.

:16:55
Uh, in numbers, tell me,
how many do you expect?

:16:57
Two hundred thousand.
:16:59
Two hundred thousand people
here over the three days?

:17:02
Where will you put them?
:17:03
We have contracted for land
surrounding the area...

:17:08
...setting up camp grounds, water
facilities, toilets, electric, food.

:17:12
What does it cost to put one
of these things together?

:17:13
A fortune.
:17:16
And I suppose the returns
will also be good.

:17:18
Yeah, we'll probably... I don't, I don't
know what the returns will come up to...

:17:23
...up to what it's cost or not, but...
:17:25
...the point is that it's happening.
A couple of million dollars.

:17:31
In other words, you have to make
two million dollars to break even?

:17:34
Well, if we're going to break even.
Huh, you know.

:17:38
The point is that it's
happened and it's working...

:17:41
...and it's enough for now.
:17:44
What is it that musicians have?
Are you a musician yourself?

:17:47
What is it the musicians have that they
can communicate so well to the kids?

:17:50
Music!
:17:51
I mean, they've always had music.
:17:53
Music has always been a
major form of communication.

:17:55
Only now the lyrics and the type
of music is a little bit...

:17:59
...more involved
in society than it was.


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