Any pictures you see of me walking across the stage in the documentary, there she is. And she’s pissed! And I’m looking and I’m going, ‘What’s up Mom?’ And she goes, ‘Cremated, really? You want to be cremated?’ She had seen the little questionnaire you had to fill out. But when they part, it’s my mother,” Brooks explained. ”The guy goes ― I can hear him in my head ― ‘13 minutes to live, 13 minutes.’ The band’s done, the handshakes, and we’re all piling out and I’m noticing in front of the pile, everyone is either going left or right, which means somebody’s standing there, but I can’t see. Needless to say, she was none too pleased with a decision he made about what would happen after he died while filling out the mandatory insurance forms prior to the show. 7, 1997, for what would become the largest concert ever to be held at the New York City park, when his mom showed up. Brooks was about to take the stage in Central Park on Aug.