Congress will investigate the Astroworld 2021 tragedy, The Washington Post reports. The investigation will examine the events surrounding the crowd surge that injured hundreds of fans and killed 10 during Travis Scott's headlining performance.
18.12.2021 - 02:23 / variety.com
Ethan Shanfeld Part-time employees who worked at Travis Scott’s deadly Astroworld Festival may not get paid unless they relinquish the right to sue promoters Live Nation and Scoremore.In an email obtained by Rolling Stone, a manager representing the promoters suggested to a group of workers that they would not receive their paychecks unless they signed an amended employment contract that released Live Nation and Scoremore from any liability.The part-time employees, who were paid $7.50 per hour
.Congress will investigate the Astroworld 2021 tragedy, The Washington Post reports. The investigation will examine the events surrounding the crowd surge that injured hundreds of fans and killed 10 during Travis Scott's headlining performance.
Harris County officials have formally revealed a shared cause of death among the 10 victims of Travis Scott’s Astroworld concert. According to the Harris County Institute of Forensic Sciences medical examiner’s report, each victim’s cause of death was listed as “compression asphyxia.”
Travis Scott following his first interview since the event.Ten people died as a result of the crowd crush that took place during Scott’s headline set at Astroworld on November 5 and earlier this week (December 9), Scott said he has a “responsibility to figure out what happened” in his first interview since the tragedy with Charlamagne Tha God.Scott said: “I’ve been on different types of emotions, an emotional rollercoaster, I mean,” he said.
Travis Scott was determined to have his side of the story heard.
Across social media, Travis Scott’s interview response has been less than positive—and now, an attorney for one of the Astroworld tragedy victims is speaking out against the rapper.
Travis Scott, whose Astroworld Festival in Houston last month resulted in the deaths of 10 audience members in a crowd crush, says he was unaware of the dangerous situation as he performed on stage, and that he relied on “the professionals” for concert safety.
Travis Scott is finally speaking out at length about the awful Astroworld Festival Tragedy that occurred just over a month ago in Houston.
Following the fatal crowd surge at Travis Scott’s 2021 Astroworld Festival, he has since publicly spoken out about his perspective during the tragic accident.
Since a "mass casualty event" at Astroworld 2021 left 10 people dead and hundreds injured, Travis Scott has remained out of the public eye, not commenting on the tragedy beyond a brief video statement. On Thursday, The Breakfast Club's Charlamagne tha God shared a 51-minute interview with Travis Scott on his YouTube channel covering the events of Astroworld and the aftermath.
Breaking his silence. A new Travis Scott interview marks his first following the Astroworld tragedy—and in it, the rapper is explaining if knew what really “happened” during the November concert that left 10 dead and dozens of others injured.
Travis Scott is speaking out following the Astroworld tragedy. In a nearly hour-long interview published on Thursday, the 30-year-old rapper denied knowing that people were in distress amid his set at the Houston music festival.
Travis Scott has broken his silence in an extensive interview about the Astroworld tragedy with Charlamagne Tha God.
ended in the deaths of 10 people — including the youngest victim, 9-year-old Ezra Blount — Scott claims he didn’t hear his Houston audience’s screams for help as the victims fell into peril. “I just didn’t hear that,” 30-year-old Scott said Thursday during a tête-à-tête with Charlamagne Tha God on “The Breakfast Club.”When Charlamagne, 43, asked him if he did everything he could, an emotional Scott struggled to find words, saying, “Everything I physically [could], sure, yes.
Travis Scott and Live Nation have begun formally responding to the stack of lawsuits that have been filed against them in relation to last month’s Astroworld tragedy. The promoter has denied the allegations made against it, while Scott is seeking to have himself removed from the litigation.Ten people died and hundreds more were injured when a crowd surge occurred during Scott’s headline set at the Houston festival he founded.
Travis Scott has filed requests to be dismissed from multiple lawsuits levelled against him in the wake of the Astroworld festival tragedy.The rapper has been named in most of the nearly 300 suits filed in Harris County after 10 people died and hundreds more were injured last month when crowds rushed to the stage toward the start of Scott’s headline set.Rolling Stone reports that a representative for Scott said the rapper “is not legally liable” for the tragedy.
Travis Scott doesn’t think he should be held responsible for any of the injuries or deaths that occurred during the Astroworld Festival tragedy last month.
With the number of lawsuits filed in relation to last month’s Astroworld tragedy now topping 275 – involving more than 1250 plaintiffs and with filings in district courts across the Houston area – a motion was filed last week to consolidate and coordinate the pre-trial proceedings in all of the many cases.Ten people died and hundreds more were injured when a crowd surge occurred during Travis Scott’s headline set at the Houston festival he founded.