Ozzy Osbourne
He sells DNA in iced tea doses
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Rock musician Ozzy Osbourne has launched an unusual merch product: empty iced doses that contain traces of his DNA.
Band shirts were yesterday: Ozzy Osbourne (76), together with the beverage brand Liquid Death, launched a bizarre merch product. As can be read on which, it sells iced sockets with traces of its DNA. Osbourne drank the content itself, the fans get the empty can – sealed in a signed plastic tube. $ 450 (the equivalent of around 391 euros) had fans for one of the ten cans. Everyone has been out of stock since the start of sales on Tuesday.
Farewell show on July 5th
The Merchandise launched Osbourne a few weeks before Black Sabbath. On July 5, he will perform in Birmingham together with Tony Iommi, Geezer Butler and Bill. It has been the first joint line -up concert in over 20 years. According to his wife Sharon (72), Osbourne is very much looking forward to this. “He is so excited because he wants to be with the boys and all his friends again. It is exciting for everyone,” she said in an interview with the BBC.
However, Osbourne will not perform an entire set with its bandmates in the football stadium Villa Park. As he reported on his show “Ozzy Speaks” on Siriusxm, he would play “small pieces with them”. “I do what I can and what I feel comfortable with,” he added.
Ozzy Osbourne received the diagnosis of Parkinson’s
For him it is the first concert in six years. In 2019 Parkinson’s Parkinson’s was diagnosed, and he had to undergo several operations on the neck and spine because of a quad accident and a fall. For the farewell show, he started to train “hard”, as he revealed at Siriusxm. “It’s really like starting all over,” he said about his preparation.
He will also deliver a solo performance at the final Black Sabbath show. In addition, music sizes such as metallica, slayer and anthrax will appear. Metal bands such as Pantera, Lamb of God and Mastodon are also included.
Spotonnews
Source: Stern

I am an author and journalist who has worked in the entertainment industry for over a decade. I currently work as a news editor at a major news website, and my focus is on covering the latest trends in entertainment. I also write occasional pieces for other outlets, and have authored two books about the entertainment industry.