By Tom Grater
08.05.2020 - 22:33 / billboard.com
Since live events across the country started getting canceled or postponed in early March, the biggest questions occupying the live music industry have been when shows can resume and what they will look like when they do.
Many government officials have stated that concerts, festivals and large gatherings will be among the last parts of pre-COVID-19 life that will return.But the virus has impacted communities at varying levels of severity, and now, Fort Smith, Arkansas has stepped forward to
.Love Island star Laura Anderson has been enjoying some socially-distanced bank holiday fun in the sun.
Eva Longoria celebrated her fourth year of wedded bliss with a socially distanced dance party on Thursday.
No mosh pits here.
Arkansas' TempleLive hosted a socially distanced concert from singer Travis McCready
It will be the first to welcome audiences to live events since the onset of the pandemic
Taylor Swift has released the live versions of her songs from her Lover album!
An Arkansas concert venue, which was scheduled to play host to an “intimate solo acoustic performance” by country-rock star Travis McCready on Friday, just postponed the controversial concert after it had its alcohol license pulled by state regulators who have said the venue was in defiance of the state’s ban on large gatherings amid the coronavirus pandemic.
At a press conference on Thursday (May 14), TempleLive announced it was rescheduling its socially-distanced Travis McCready concert scheduled for Friday night in Fort Smith, Arkansas. The show was set to be one of the first shows hosted after mass gatherings were banned throughout the county due to the spread of the novel coronavirus.
By Jem Aswad
A scheduled concert by Travis McCready -- which was not postponed or canceled amid the ongoing coronavirus pandemic and was set to take place Friday -- has seemingly met its match. Despite safety measures reportedly put into place for the show at TempleLive in Fort Smith, Ark., in which the venue space had plans for reducing its capacity from 1,100 down to 229 people, the Arkansas Department of Health (ADH) is stepping in to put a stop to the event altogether, Gov.
If Travis McCready's first socially-distanced concert doesn't happen on Friday, it will on Saturday. Despite Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson announcing a cease and desist letter would be sent to TempleLive in Fort Smith over its planned May 15 concert with McCready, the venue tells
By Jem Aswad
Bishop Gunn frontman Travis McCready is on the bill
Healthcare experts in the US have predicted that live concerts will not return until Autumn 2021