KISS Coffeehouse – Farewell KISS

Paul Grimshaw | Weekly Surge

Erin Burge

Erin Burge

Because my favorite KISS song is “Beth,” the sticky sweet power ballad that played against type, becoming a not so rock ‘n’ roll hit in 1976, I’ll probably be shunned by many hardcore KISS fans. Even before “Beth” shot to No. 7 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart that year, becoming the band’s highest charting single, I had been witness, as a teenager, to KISS’ garish, gaudy and ghoulish world debut a few years earlier. My friends and I thought of the band as an oddity, a comedic group of twenty-somethings from New York City with a few catchy rock ‘n’ roll tunes, destined to sell a bunch of Halloween costumes, fade out, and not be heard from again. Boy, were we wrong. KISS went on to define theatrical rock ‘n’ roll and marketing savvy in ways that few bands, if any, before or since, have matched, including the KISS Coffeehouse right here in li’l ol’ Myrtle Beach.

By the time the tongue-wagging, blood spitting, fire-breathing KISS bassist Gene Simmons came to Broadway at the Beach, with Starchild Paul Stanley, to open the KISS Coffeehouse in the summer of 2006, I had gained a new respect for the juggernaut and marketing genius that was and is the KISS empire. Simmons, the primary business mastermind behind the realm, has led the band-turned-brand through murky waters, highs and lows, and back to highs again. Along the way the KISS Army, the so-named troops in the official fan club of the band, bolster profits as they pay for annual memberships (currently $45), snap up merchandise, attend conventions, and fill concert venues. Former U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice enlisted in the KISS Army in 2008. Yep.

Thousands in the KISS Army (officially or unofficially) have visited the one and only KISS Coffeehouse, located at Broadway at the Beach, in Myrtle Beach, but perhaps too few loyal troops graced its funky counters to make its registers rock year-round. Serving a damn good cup o’ Joe, locals and visitors enjoy snacks and real barista-made coffee drinks at this curiosity that is part KISS merchandise retail store, part museum, and part demon-possessed Starbucks. Several weeks ago fans, casual to rabid, were saddened, though maybe not complexly surprised, to hear that the KISS Coffeehouse would close its doors forever. Word spread that Broadway at the Beach, and the Grand Strand, would no longer enjoy its most obvious link to the world of KISS.

Original reports had the store closing at the end of this month, but Weekly Surge has learned that the Coffeehouse will stay open through Dec. 31, complete with a proper send-off, tentatively including: a Dec 28 party with a KISS tribute band, a meet-n-greet with an undetermined member of KISS, and fire sale deals on any remaining stock.

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Eric Carr Drum Raffle at the NJ KISS Expo this Saturday

New Jersey KISS Expo

ddrum asyAn authentic Eric Carr owned Floor Tom Drum will be the main prize of this year’s raffle. Raffle tickets are only $1 and you can buy as many as you like at the front ticket desk.

In mid 1991, LUDWIG sent a complete ebony with Silver Chrome finish drum set, as a gift to ERIC CARR of KISS to his home address:  630 First Ave, Apt 28E New York City, New York 10016. It has been in storage for over 20 years and is in perfect, beautiful condition. Even comes with the original shipping box with Eric’s name and address on the side!

The drum and other items from the raffle will be on display all day – a unique chance to win a unique item!

All info for the Expo is HERE at njkissexpo.com

Revisiting KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park, the greatest (and worst) glam rock adventure movie of all time

Eric Hynes | Slate

130925_CBOX_KissPhantomPark.jpg.CROP.promo-mediumlargeWith their new IMAX 3-D spectacular Metallica: Through the Never, the multiplatinum-selling speed-metal quartet from San Francisco have devised an ambitious way to showcase their music for a new generation of fans. Rather than capture a pre-existing concert, they put together a stage show explicitly for this movie, filling an arena with more props and pyrotechnics than Nigel Tufnel could dream of and rigging up 24 cameras to give moviegoers an uncanny sense of being there for the jackhammering of “Master of Puppets” and the baroque balladeering of “Nothing Else Matters.”

But there’s also something else afoot here, something to earn the film’s grandly oblique title: a wordless, surrealistic adventure narrative that was conceived by the band along with director Nimród Antal. These fictional sequences are threaded through the song cycle but take place outside of the arena, with actor Dane DeHaan playing a roadie sent on a mysterious quest through an apocalyptic cityscape. The idea is to visualize what the mood and lyrics conjure, to take the audience on a cinematic journey through the band’s greatest hits, and to solidify and expand the Metallica brand.

It’s been a while since we’ve seen a certifiable rock ‘n’ roll funhouse adventure film. Music videos rendered them redundant in the 1980s, though bubblegum derivations likeMichael Jackson: Moonwalker and Spice World occasionally popped up in the intervening decades. But in the prime of the mid-1970s, the era of The Rocky Horror Picture Show and Saturday morning animated musical whodunits like Scooby-Doo, curios such as Alice Cooper: The Nightmare, and the venerable KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park turned rock gods into genre heroes. Fueled by synergistic pretentions and trans-media ambitions, yet saddled by inadequate production values and half-assed-at-best storytelling, these films were credibility killers that also had a kind of hubristic integrity—bridges too far that crash satisfyingly into the bay. Though it’s technically superior to any of its forebears, and serves as a sonically superlative (if also monotonous) concert film, Metallica’s batty fantastical elements have effectively awoken this gloriously inglorious genre from a prolonged hibernation.

Yet except for an opening sequence in which the hoodie-wearing DeHaan enters the arena and spies each member of the band before the show, the concert and adventure elements are kept separate. And except for a momentary fake stage disaster, in which lead singer James Hetfield utters the Keanu-worthy line “Whoa … what’s going on?” the band members are never obliged to act in the film. Judging from Lars Ulrich’s brief cameo in Get Him to the Greek, this would seem to be for the better. But what, pray tell, is the point of making a Metallica musical adventure film, one in which a gas-masked horseman of the apocalypse lynches street protesters from streetlamps, if you’re not going to dress up bassist Kirk Hammett as a zombie policeman, or have Hetfield shoot perforated laser beams out of his eyes?

Oh, right: because KISS Meets the Phantom of the Park was a work of such cautionary folly that only Michael Jackson was crazy enough to attempt anything like it. This made-for-TV camp landmark, in which the aforementioned perforated laser beam was employed, was the simultaneous apex and nadir of glam rock outfit KISS’s career. It was the second-highest-rated televised event of 1978 (behind only Roots) while also inexorably contributing to the fracturing of the band/brand. After the purportedly tedious shoot at California’s Magic Mountain amusement park, each member hustled together poorly received solo albums, drummer Peter Criss spiraled deeper into substance abuse and would soon be replaced, guitarist Ace Frehley’s disaffection would lead to his own exile, and the band’s spiraling discomfort with their own identity would lead to such desperate measures as a synth-heavy prog rock concept album, and the shunning of their trademark makeup masks.

Yet Phantom had a transparency of purpose that Metallica: Through the Never labors to obscure, not to mention a levity that Lars and co. are too busy bench-pressing their own mythology to entertain. I won’t make any claims for Phantom’s quality—it has “cheap, uninspired quickie” written all over every haphazardly framed shot—but 35 years later it remains as disarmingly loopy as it was on broadcast date Oct. 28, 1978, the Saturday before Halloween.

The movie starts with a title sequence in which the four members of KISS—Gene Simmons, Paul Stanley, Peter Criss, and Ace Frehley—materialize in an amusement park as towering, platform heel-wearing holograms to sing “Rock and Roll All Nite,” only to disappear from the telecast for 30 whole minutes (not counting commercials). In the interim, we meet Abner Devereaux (Anthony Zerbe), a vaguely European mad scientist type who toils beneath the park, and whose experiments in animatronics have secretly branched into human abduction and mind control. When he sees park financing redirected into KISS’s hotly anticipated engagement, Devereaux plots a hostile, vaguely explicated takeover involving an army of albino wolfmen in silver onesies and KISS’s evil android doppelgängers.

Kiss bassist Gene Simmons to sing US National Anthem at NFL game in London

NME

Kiss bassist Gene Simmons to sing US National Anthem at NFL game in London

Photo: Danny North/NME

Kiss bassist Gene Simmons will be singing the US National Anthem this weekend at London’s Wembley Stadium for the NFL International Series game between the Pittsburgh Steelers and Minnesota Vikings.

Simmons will sing ‘The Star Spangled Banner’ before the 6pm [BST] kick-off on Sunday September 29. He has previously sung the US National Anthem at last year’s Oakland Raiders’ home game against the San Diego Chargers, reports Antimusic.

Speaking about his impending performance at the American Football game, Simmons commented: “I’m excited to be touching down in London to sing our US National Anthem at the Vikings-Steelers game. I always love playing a role in these types of high-action, fast-paced games, not to mention returning to the UK and performing in front of some the best fans in the world!”

Gene Simmons recently rated Miley Cyrus‘s tongue-wagging display at the MTV VMAs last month, calling it “a girl’s version”. Cyrus stuck out her tongue provocatively on numerous occasions during her now infamous medley with Robin Thicke at the awards bash – a performance which also saw her point at Thicke’s crotch with a foam finger and “twerk” against the front of his trousers. Cyrus’s exploits became a hot topic online and drew criticism from a leading US parents’ group and the inventor of the foam finger, who claimed that the singer had “degraded” an “icon”.

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2013 New Jersey KISS Expo Schedule

New Jersey KISS Expo

Saturday, September 28, 2013

Raritan Center
97 Sunfield Avenue
Edison NJ 08837

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Schedule of events:
9:00 am – Box office opens
10:00 am – Doors open for Platinum ticket holders
10:05 am – Tommy Thayer autograph session starts
11:00 am – Doors open for Gold ticket holders
12:00 pm – UD Replicas product presentation
12:30 pm – Ken Kelly, album artist
1:00 pm – Jim Cara, Gene axe bass building presentation
2:00 pm – Tommy Thayer question and answer session
3:00 pm – Lydia Criss
4:00 pm – MAIN EVENT – Nothin’ to Lose book panel
6:00 pm – Raffle ticket drawing for Eric Carr drum + more
7:00 pm – Tommy Thayer autograph session winds down

Tribute band KISS Nation will be be performing mini-sets throughout the day.

Tickets will be available at the door for only $10 each!

Visit njkissexpo.com for directions and all info.

GENE SIMMONS FAMILY JEWELS Joins AXS TV’s Thursday Lineup, 10/3

BWW TV

2B24C2C8-BF9E-14F5-9CF4A9DEC87AC849AXS TV has licensed all seven seasons, 168 episodes of the international hit reality series GENE SIMMONS FAMILY JEWELS which explores the life of tongue-wagging KISS front man Gene Simmons, his longtime girlfriend (and now wife) former Playboy Playmate of the Year, Shannon Tweed, their children Nick and Sophie and rescue dog, Snippy. GENE SIMMONS FAMILY JEWELS debuts on Thursday, October 3 with back-to-back episodes beginning at 8 p.m. ET | 5 p.m. PT. The network will then air a marathon on Saturday, October 5, including all 13 episodes of Season 1 from 3:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. ET | 12:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. PT. The show will regularly air every Thursday night with back-to-back episodes starting at 8 p.m. ET | 5 p.m. PT.

“GENE SIMMONS FAMILY JEWELS is a one-of-kind look into the home life of an American icon,” said AXS TV founding partner, Mark Cuban. “Gene Simmons continues to be at the forefront of American entertainment and this program extends our mission to bring music and pop culture back to television.”

GENE SIMMONS FAMILY JEWELS kicks off AXS TV‘s Thursday night comedy lineup which also includes performance series GOTHAM COMEDY LIVE at 10 p.m. ET | 7 p.m. PT.

GENE SIMMONS FAMILY JEWELS gives viewers an up close and personal look at the anything, but ordinary family life of this not-so-nuclear family, as Gene and Shannon transition from 28 years of “Happily Unmarried Bliss,” to finally tying the knot.

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Massive KISS tribute album to benefit cancer care released on iTunes

Jeffrey Winslow | Examiner

d81a00b93de18d678935b2b4b1f0f7eaAfter having run a very successful PledgeMusic.com campaign that reached 241% of its stated goal and raised just under $23,000 for the Vaudreuil-Soulanges Palliative Care Residence in Hudson, Quebec (www.mspvs.org/en), rock reporter and photographer Mitch Lafon is making the A World With Heroes KISS tribute album (40th anniversary celebration) Deluxe Editionbenefitting cancer care available on iTunes around the world September 24, 2013.

The album features performances by some of rock’s elite, including Rex Brown (Kill Devil Hill/Pantera), Ron Keel (Keel), Mark Tornillo (Accept), Ron ‘Bumblefoot’ Thal (Guns ‘N Roses), Brighton Rock, Russ Dwarf (Killer Dwarfs), Doug Aldrich (Whitesnake/Burning Rain), Phil Lewis (L.A. Guns), Terry Ilous and Mark Kendall (Great White), Bill Leverty (Firehouse), Troy Luccketta (Tesla), Eric Brittingham and Jeff Labar (Cinderella), John Regan & Tod Howarth (Frehley’s Comet), Rick Hughes (Sword), Bonfire, Derry Grehan and Johnnie Dee (Honeymoon Suite), and many more.

Profits from the iTunes’ sales of the album will continue to benefit the Vaudreuil-Soulanges Palliative Care Residence.

The Deluxe Edition iTunes release will include a re-imagined track listing, as well as eleven bonus tracks not included on the CD version.

The eleven new tracks are:

1) “No, I’m Not Afraid” (Previously Unreleased Peter Criss Band Demo from 1991) performed by Peter Criss and Phil Naro

2) “Wait For A Minute To Rock N’ Roll” (Previously Unreleased Peter Criss Band Demo from 1991) performed by Peter Criss and Phil Naro

3) “Back On The Streets” (2013 Mix – written by Vinnie Vincent) performed by Richie Scarlet, John Regan, Tod Howarth, Arthur Stead & Steve Werner.

4) “Only You” (2013 Recording) performed by DORO

5) “God Gave Rock N Roll To You II” performed by Russ Dwarf

6) “I’m An Animal” (2013 Mix) performed by Richie Scarlet, John Regan, Tod Howarth, Arthur Stead & Steve Werner.

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NJ KISS Expo – What kind of merchandise will be available?

New Jersey KISS Expo

People have been asking – “what kind of KISS merchandise will be at the NJ KISS Expo?” The short answer is – EVERYTHING! The old and the new, the mundane and the extravagant, the cheap and the expensive, the expected and the unexpected… There is no better place to start your quest to complete your KISS collection!

Most importantly, you are being connected to the largest network of KISS dealers in the world….and the largest KISS dealers will be there – KISSonline.com, KISSmuseum.com, KISSarmywarehouse.com, Gene Simmons Axe guitars, John Rubin, Ross Koondel, and many, many more. There is nowhere in the Universe you will ever see such volume and variety of KISS Collectibles in one place! Below are photos the dealers have sent us of just a small offering of the items they will be bringing. The photo of the truck is just a single collection bought recently by one of the dealers – it will all be there for sale this Saturday!

Info and directions to the 2013 New Jersey KISS Expo are at njkissexpo.com

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INTERVIEW: KISS Talk About Their Rise From the Streets of New York to the Stages of the World

Ben Smith | VH1

When road manager J.R. Smalling introduced KISS as “The hottest band in the land” on their breakthrough double live album Alive!, it wasn’t just hyperbole. There was no one else in the world at that moment delivering a more exciting live concert experience full of great songs, electric performances and groundbreaking theatricality. And while that 1975 album was the band’s watershed release they had already built up a large and fanatical live following from non-stop touring since the release of their self-titled debut album in 1974.

Fin Costello

Fin Costello

The new book Nothin’ To Lose: The Making of Kiss (1972 – 1975) chronicles the band’s embryonic days as rock n’roll fanatics from New York City’s outer boroughs with a relentless will to succeed. The book is an oral history and includes interviews with the band, their friends, and crew, as well as opening acts and other musicians who were there first hand to witness the group’s hard scrabble ascent to worldwide fame. Co-authors and for nearly 40 years the band’s leading lights, Paul Stanley and Gene Simmons sat down to talk about the band’s past and future.

VH1 TUNER: How did this book come about?

Paul Stanley: Ken Sharpe put the book together. He’s a long time fan. We’ve known him since he was literally about 8 years old. He’s an avid fan of the band and an avid fan of rock n’ roll. He’s been conducting and compiling interviews over the years and it seemed a natural thing for us to do at this point. We’ve always told the story from our point of view but it’s really interesting to hear what managers, promoters, roadies, all kinds of people who were there recall because quite honestly there’s things in the book that I don’t remember. I don’t know that they’re true but if they make me look good then they’re true (laughter).

 

 

VH1: What was it about those years that you wanted to focus on that you felt was special and was an untold side of the Kiss story?

Gene Simmons: When you’re at the front of a train all you’re seeing is what’s coming at you. We have a very unique advantage because we get that adrenaline rush but you don’t get a chance to figure out what it all means. What the side scenery is like. Do I have my mother’s hips? You know, all that stuff which everyone else in the train gets and then the very last person sees it all go by. So they’re all different perspectives of an interesting, astonishing train ride that we’ve had which is now approaching 40 years and boy, do we look good (laughter).

 

 

VH1: I was watching an old interview with you from your first time playing England and the interviewer asks what you care more about, the music or the spectacle and Gene you say “The audience.”

Gene Simmons: Well, sure. If you ever lose sight of the fact that your bosses are standing on their seats then you become delusional and think it’s all about you. At the end of the day we just work here and it’s our job like court jesters to make the kings all around us proud. We need to earn the crown that’s being bestowed upon us by those who have the power because, let’s call it for what it is, if our bosses, our fans don’t like what we’re doing or any band, that’s why the word “Next” is in the dictionary. So we’ve been around 40 years and proud by the way to have given a chance to lots of new bands on their first tour – AC/DC, Rush, Judas Priest, Iron Maiden, Bon Jovi, Motley Crue – you name a big band, we gave them their first start because we’re also fans but at the end of the day, we can’t crown anybody, we all bow to everybody’s bosses, the fans.

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L.A. KISS promise to put on an Arena League football show, name Bill McMillen coach

Vincent Bonsignore | Los Angeles Daily News

Screen Shot 2013-09-18 at 7.44.10 PMNo seriously, I told my wife Tuesday morning. I really do have to go to the House of Blues on Sunset for a press conference announcing the newest football coach for L.A.’s newest professional football team.

“And Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley from KISS figure into all this how, again?”

“They own the L.A. KISS the football team I was telling you about.” I told her.

The skepticism hanging in the air was stifling at this point.

“You know I have the Daily News app, right?” my wife reminded me. “If that story doesn’t show up on your site by tonight you’re in big trouble. I got my eye on you, buddy.”

Welcome to my world, where L.A.’s various entertainment boulevards sometimes cross at the most curious intersections.

And how sometimes explaining your work day and whereabouts to your wife sounds like a precursor to the “Jerry Springer Show.”

Tuesday being a prime example, as professional football was ushered back to Los Angeles by the two front men of one of the most iconic rock bands in music history.

Sounds about right.

I mean, of course Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley would buy an Arena Football League team, name them the KISS, situate them in Los Angeles and welcome new coach Bill McMillen to town at a press conference on Sunset Boulevard where a strange brew of sports reporters, TV personalities and scantily clad beautiful women would gather at a bar at the House of Blues.

All that was missing was Tim Tebow, the banished NFL quarterback who KISS has mounted a very public pursuit of.

Here is guessing the notoriously virtuous Tebow would have been a bit uneasy in the dimly lit settings Tuesday – kind of how he looks dropping back to throw a football, come to think of it.

As for me, I loved every second of it.

It was zany and campy and a bit off the grind, but that’s the allure of the whole thing.

And while I might not rush out to see a KISS game, consider me intrigued enough by the Simmons and Stanley presentation Tuesday to be sure to check them out from time to time.

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30 Years Ago Today: Kiss Removes Their Makeup

Matthew Wilkening | 1037 The Loon

On Sept. 18, 1983, an unthinkable event in Kiss-story took place: the world’s most famous masked band removed their makeup and revealed their true faces.Granted, the news wasn’t as earth-shaking as it would have been if the group had come clean a few years earlier, say the mid-to-late ’70s, when they were undeniably the hottest band in the land. However, by this time, internal tensions and a series of questionable disco and pop-influenced albums had severely crippled their commercial standing.

Original members Peter Criss and Ace Frehley had also departed the group, and even the back-to-basics creative triumph of 1982′s ‘Creatures of the Night‘ failed to reignite their career. In his book ‘Kiss and Make-Up,’ Gene Simmons reveals how the band’s other remaining founding member, Paul Stanley, convinced him it was time for a big change while they were recording ‘Lick it Up,’ their 11th studio album:

“‘Let’s prove something to the fans,’ Paul said, ‘Let’s go and be a real band without makeup.’ I reluctantly agreed. I didn’t know if it was going to work, but I heard what Paul was saying — there was nowhere else for us to go. We did a photo session just to see what it would look like. We looked straight into the camera lens. We were defiant. I made one small concession to the fans — I stuck out my tongue, to try to keep something that connected us with the past.”(Nothing small about that concession, when you think about it!)

Speaking of the public unveiling on MTV — which you can see below — Simmons says, “We made the best of it, but I was scared stiff.” Turns out Stanley was indeed right, as the

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Remember When: Rockers Kiss hit the North East

Chronicle Live

kiss2-6058836They were the rock stars dressed like Marvel comic book heroes who took America by storm – and a band which also made waves here in the UK.

Formed in New York City, Kiss combined a modicum of musical talent with a prodigious work ethic to become one of the biggest rock acts of the 1970s – and beyond.

Their stock in trade, of course, would be their outrageous and outlandish stage-wear and black and white painted faces, plus a stunning stage show that featured blood-spitting, fire-breathing, guitars that fired rockets, and pyrotechnics.

Albums like Destroyer and Alive were massive sellers, especially in the US, while singles like Crazy Crazy Nights and God Gave Rock And Roll To You would bring them major hits in Britain.

But on this day in 1983, with their career somewhat on the wane, Kiss appeared for the first time without their make-up on that recent innovation, MTV.

A little over a month later, the foursome were on tour and in the region at a packed Newcastle City Hall.

Our reviewer was impressed, but first up, he dealt with the band’s new look.

“Even without their make-up – or should that be especially without – these guys could never win a beauty contest, but their music is something else.

“Their banks of speakers blasted out exactly what the crowd wanted – some of the sweatiest rock around – so loud that my ears were still numb the next day.”

Despite the new image, it was clear Kiss could still put on a trademark over-the-top show.

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Creator of geneaxe.com to give guitar building presentation at NJ KISS Expo

NJKISSexpo.com

kissexpo-1024x785

Jim Cara, the creator of the line of Gene Simmons personal stage Axe Guitars will be giving a guitar building presentation at the New Jersey KISS Expo coming up next Saturday, September 28. Jim will do an in-depth step-by-step demonstration taking you through the process of how the Gene’s axe bass guitars are designed, constructed and produced. He will have many, many examples of Gene’s axe guitars on display at his huge booth for everyone to see. Jim Cara is one of the top designers in his field and he is adding much to this already amazing KISS Expo!

Info on the Gene Simmons Axe guitars is at GSAxe.com
Info for the New Jersey KISS Expo is at NJKISSExpo.com

chrome axe clearstud

 

Tim Tebow Gets ‘KISS’ of Support From Rocker Gene Simmons

Shawn Akers | Charisma News

The media often has chastised Tim Tebow for boldly expressing his Christianity in public. Recently, Tebow surprisingly got a vote of support from a brash individual of another sort—KISS frontman Gene Simmons.

Simmons, who along with bandmate Paul Stanley is co-owner of the LA KISS—a new Arena Football League team—told Radio.com that Tebow has only been picked on because of his Christian beliefs and that it would be a different story if he were of another religion.

“He’s got religious passion, as well he should. We’re in America,” Simmons told Radio.com. “He’s proud to be a Christian. What’s wrong with that? And yet, with sports media and pop culture media, they make fun of his religion. Really? In America?

“If he was wearing a burqa [an outer garment worn by women in some Islamic countries to cover their bodies when in public], they wouldn’t dare saying anything. The guy’s got family WEB-Reuters-Tebow-Photog-Tim-Schaffervalues. I never saw the media picking on Michael Vick for torturing dogs. Or this other football player [Aaron Hernandez], who’s alleged to have killed, committed murder. That’s ‘cool.’ But a guy who’s religious and has got family values isn’t cool? He’s cool to me.”

The LA KISS will begin playing in the Arena Football League in 2014. Simmons and Stanley recently made a public offer to Tebow to come and play quarterback for them next year. The New England Patriots released Tebow, the former Heisman Trophy-winner and two-time national championship quarterback at the University of Florida, prior to the start of the NFL season.

Simmons says he hasn’t heard from Tebow following the offer but that he knows Tebow has been in Los Angeles and may be mulling over the possibility.

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KISS founders Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley: Peter Criss and Ace Frehley got what they deserved

Nicki Gostin | Fox News

kiss nothin to lose split 660 APLegendary KISS founders Gene Simmons and Paul Stanley have collaborated on the memoir ‘Nothin’ To Lose,’ an oral history of their rock band’s genesis. “It’s an overview of the band,” explained Stanley. “How it came about from its inception, almost from the time the sperm fertilized the egg really.” Indeed. FOX411 spoke to both Stanley and Simmons about the book, their football plans, and what went wrong with original KISS members Peter Criss and Ace Frehley.

FOX411: Ace Frehley and Peter Criss both have memoirs out that paint pretty harsh portraits of both of you. Was that upsetting?

Simmons: Ace took me to lunch before his book came out and he read me a chapter about how he almost drowned in a pool and I saved him by diving in and pulling him out. He asked if it was accurate. I said, ’95 percent of it was accurate, except it wasn’t you; it was Peter Criss who was drowning. You’ve been a f**king drug addict all of your life. Both Peter and Ace were at one point pure, innocent, believed all for one, one for all, and then they succumbed to the clichés of rock. So neither Ace nor Peter were fully conscious when any of those things happened. It’s up to you if you want to believe them. We wish them the best, but those books, to my estimation, they’re closer to fiction.

Stanley: The fact remains from what I’ve seen of those books, they clearly still see themselves as victims, and when you can’t take responsibility for your situation, you blame others. The proof is what they have done outside of the band and it amounts to a big zero. I would say nothing if they had not said something first. I certainly wish them well and you can’t help but believe that they’re incredibly envious of the success we’ve had without them, which was part of the problem in the first place. If somebody thinks they’re irreplaceable they’re either completely deluded, stupid, or intoxicated. In their case they abused their position in the band under the assumption that they were then only people who could do what they do, and here we are 40 years later playing arenas and venturing into areas most other bands would find impossible, like having an AFL football team, the first new football team in L.A. in decades, LAKISS, which will play in Anaheim.

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UD Replicas to unveil their new KISS jackets and clothing at NJ KISS Expo

NJKISSexpo.com

fullimagesUD Replicas, the leader in high-end movie replicas, has moved into the world of Rock and Roll with their new line of high-end KISS motorcycle jackets and clothing. The unveiling will take place at the 2013 New Jersey KISS Expo at the Raritan Center in Edison NJ next Saturday, September 28.

Samples will be available for viewing and inspection. You will also be able to pre-order the items directly at the KISS Expo. We are unbelievably lucky to have UD Replicas as part of our solid day of non-stop KISS mayhem this year. They promise to have an incredible display booth not to be missed!

Tickets to the KISS Expo are only $10 – buy them online today HERE!