The event is free, but donations will be accepted at the door.
VIP admission is $45 and includes seating in the first five rows, a light appetizer buffet, bottled water and an event lanyard. Reserved general seating is $20.
The cost of VIP and reserve seating increases by $5 if purchased at the door.
Proceeds for the show presented by What a Girl Wants Events for You and sponsored by The Miami County Visitors and Convention Bureau will benefit The Pink Ribbon Girls.
What a Girl Wants raises money for scholarships and nonprofits. It hopes to raise $15,000 for Pink Ribbon Girls through the concert, according to Gretchen Eckstein, who is co-chairing the concert with What a Girl Wants founder Kelley Andary.
Eckstein also is a Pink Ribbon Girls volunteer.
She says that organization works to lessen the burden for women fighting cancer and their families.
"We just make it so that women can focus on their health and beating cancer and getting better," Eckstein said.
How to go:
What: Don't Stop Believin' Concert featuring The Menus and Seventh St.
When: Friday, Jan. 22. Doors open at 6 p.m. Show starts at 6:30 p.m.
Where: Hobart Arena, 255 Adams St. in Troy
Cost: The event is free, but donations will be accepted at the door. VIP admission is $45 and includes seating in the first five rows, a light appetizer buffet, bottled water and an event lanyard. Reserved general seating is $20.
More info: Don't Stop Believin'
Here are just three reasons you should go:
Pink Ribbon Girls is an awesome organization.
2014 photo of Abby Ramirez, then-honorary chair of Kettering Medical Center Foundation's Ribbon of Hope Luncheon, John Lodge and Chris Williams of Huber Heights Firefighters Local 2926 Breast Cancer Awareness Campaign. The campaign raised $100,000 in 31 days for the breast cancer patient support organization Pink Ribbon Girls. (Archive Photo by Amelia Robinson)
Believed to be the only organization of its kind in the nation, the Tipp City-headquartered nonprofit provides free housekeeping, transportation to treatment, peer support and healthy meals especially to women and men fighting breast cancer and their families.
Tim Goldrainer by himself is worth the price of admission.
Tim Goldrainer, the lead singer of The Cincinnati based band The Menus. (Source: The Menus' Facebook page.)
The energetic and flexible front man (he’s been known to do the splits) gets as much attention for his zany-as-heck wardrobe as he does voice. He has been known to don everything from a chicken suit to a fetching checkered mini skort to an ushanka hat that makes one think of Russia and the cold war.
The Musical force is strong with the Menus.
Tim has a way of grabbing the attention, but the boys can play.
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