Flip or Flip star Tarek El Moussa and Selling Sunset‘s Heather Rae Young have jetted off to Mexico for a romantic Cabo getaway. The blonde beauty, 33, and her fiance, 39, were seen soaking up the sunshine at a luxe hotel on December 18.
30.11.2020 - 22:54 / nme.com
post-lockdown restrictions included a ban on selling alcohol, something the Music Venue Trust (MVT) warned would prevent grassroots music venues being able to put on economically viable events being as 65% of their income comes from wet sales.Those guidelines stated that alcohol could only be served as part of a “substantial” meal, but the MVT argued that 92% of grassroots music venues do not have the necessary facilities to fulfil that criteria.Today (November 30), the government announced that
.Flip or Flip star Tarek El Moussa and Selling Sunset‘s Heather Rae Young have jetted off to Mexico for a romantic Cabo getaway. The blonde beauty, 33, and her fiance, 39, were seen soaking up the sunshine at a luxe hotel on December 18.
Tarek El Moussa and Heather Rae Young hang out by the pool in a cabana while enjoying the sunny weather on Friday (December 18) in Cabo San Lucas, Mexico.
pic.twitter.com/282Pxu74ki— Boris Revollo (@RevolloBoris) December 12, 2020The new trial from Primavera is one of a handful of new techniques touted to enable the return of traditional live music.This week, it was revealed that legendary London venue The 100 Club will pilot a new ventilation system next month that aims to wipe out 99.99 per cent of dangerous airborne pathogens, such as the coronavirus, within buildings.Developed by a British team of engineers, scientists, medical experts and
Michael Cassidy), an attractive actor who offers to spend the month breaking fast with Mo, and must navigate his newfound feelings as he honors the holy holiday of Ramadan.«I grew up learning what love was — how to accept it, how to push it away, who deserved it — from watching Julia Roberts (Hello, ) movies and Disney musicals,» director Mike Mosallam tells ET.
As negotiations continue in Congress for a year-end Covid-19 relief deal, those connected to the live entertainment industry made an appeal to a Senate subcommittee on Tuesday for the urgent need of a lifeline.
The death of country music legend Charley Pride is being questioned by several of the genre’s stars, who are wondering whether his performance at the County Music Association’s indoor awards show a month before he acquired Covid-19 may be connected.
Janet W. Lee After news broke Saturday that legendary country musician Charley Pride died of complications from COVID-19, musicians and industry professionals took to social media to honor his career and mourn his death.Maren Morris commented on the fact that Pride had recently performed at the Country Music Association Awards on Nov.
coronavirus pandemic, concert trade publication Pollstar puts the total lost revenue for the live events industry in 2020 at more than $30 billion.Pollstar on Friday said the live events industry should have hit a record-setting $12.2 billion this year, but instead it incurred $9.7 billion in losses.In March hundreds of artists announced that their current or upcoming tours would need to be postponed or canceled because of the pandemic.
coronavirus pandemic.One Industry One Voice (OIOV), the coalition of UK events associations and businesses, has shared a list of all the organisations on offer to help to those experiencing stress and mental health issues ahead of the festive season.“As other industries now begin to return to work, restrictions upon capacities and social distancing [mean] a large number of live events are no longer viable, and the people who organise and deliver them remain out of work,” OIOV said in a
there were positive signs for next year’s summer events already. “Importantly, we remain confident that fans will return to live events when it is safe to do so,” he wrote in a memo to staff.
Monday’s announcement that Dylan had sold the rights to his six-decade trove of tunes to Universal Music in a deal that is believed to be the biggest ever of its kind: Sources told Bloomberg it was more than $200 million, while the New York Times reported that it could be more than $300 million.This news came just a few days after Nicks sold 80 percent of her stake in her publishing rights — for both her Fleetwood Mac and solo work — to music publisher Primary Wave for $100 million, according to
Teyana Taylor has seemingly called it quits after dropping news of her early retirement from the music biz in an Instagram post!
Jamie Lang This week, Variety published a digital Guadalajara Film Festival Spotlight, diving into one of Mexico’s most important market and festival events, rescheduled and reorganized after it was forced to cancel in March.FICG 35.2, as it was playfully dubbed, hosted the first-ever Un Festival Mexicano, offering a platform to other events which were canceled or forced online throughout the year.
Music company Communion has teamed up with the website LIVENow to launch a new weekly streamed show that will feature live performances from and interviews with two artists, all recorded at Lafayette.That, of course, is the new London venue launched earlier this year by Mumford & Sons member and Communion co-founder Ben Lovett, which – like most grassroots venues – is currently closed due to lockdown restrictions.Mazin Tappuni, who will host the weekly ‘Communion Presents’ stream, says:
Earlier this year The FADER launched a range of merch aimed at raising funds for some of the many small venues in New York adversely affected by the COVID-19 crisis. Partnering with This T-Shirt, a relief platform founded by Dylan Hattem and Cassandra Aaron of DS Projects, Select Cannabis, and the National Independent Venue Association (NIVA) we launched the Save Our Stages Collection.