Singer-songwriter Clayton Gardner had a scary experience with a fan during a performance this week.
02.07.2020 - 21:57 / perezhilton.com
Roughly 300 teens were exposed to the novel coronavirus after attending a not-so-secret and seriously irresponsible “pong fest” party in Lakeway, Texas late last month.
According to the Austin Public Health Department, several attendees were waiting on their COVID-19 testing results, but decided to attend the large gathering on June 20, anyway. And guess what, y’all? They later found out they were positive for the virus! Ugh…
Related: Vanilla Ice Proceeding With Texas Concert As COVID-19 Cases
Singer-songwriter Clayton Gardner had a scary experience with a fan during a performance this week.
Brent Lang Executive Editor of Film and MediaIf movie theaters are banking on Christopher Nolan’s “Tenet” to ride to their rescue, they may have to wait a lot longer for help.That’s the takeaway from a new note by Eric Handler, a leading exhibition industry analyst with MKM Partners, who predicts that there’s a “low likelihood” that “Tenet” will open on Aug.
Selena, has sent a cease and desist letter to Trump supporter Joe Michael Perez, who plans to host an upcoming rally at the Selena Memorial in Texas.“In cultivating the legacy of Selena, the Quintanilla's have never associated Selena with partisan politics,” reads a statement obtained by Billboard from Beverly Hills firm Singh, Singh & Trauben, LLP.
Vanilla Ice has finally thawed his stone-cold stance on hosting a concert amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Vanilla Ice just dropped out of his performance in Austin, Texas, stating that he wasn’t aware the COVID-19 situation was so out of control in the city. TMZ says that the rapper first scheduled the concert a long time ago, but considering the rise of the coronavirus in Texas, the rapper believes now is no longer the time for him to perform.
coronavirus cases and hospitalizations. Abbott, who had pushed Texas' aggressive reopening of the state economy in May, had previously said the government could not order individuals to wear masks.
Vanilla Ice is listening to the concerns of his fans. The 52-year-old performer took to Twitter on Thursday ahead of his scheduled Fourth of July performance in Austin, Texas, to reveal that he had decided to cancel following backlash.Writing that he was moving the show to «a better date,» the «Ice, Ice, Baby» rapper told fans in a video message, «Basically, I'm not going.
Rapper Vanilla Ice has indefinitely postponed his concert in Texas after receiving heavy criticism for planning the event in the middle of the coronavirus pandemic. He was set to perform at a 2,500-capacity concert in Austin on Friday despite a recent surge in COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations in the state.
surging cases of COVID-19 in the area.The rapper was set to perform live on July 3 at the Emerald Point Bar & Grill near Austin. The scheduled concert had local health officials in an uproar, given that the state hit a new record of confirmed cases of the coronavirus on Wednesday."I'm going to give you a little update about the concert in Austin," Ice said in an Instagram video on Thursday.
Vanilla Ice will no longer be celebrating Independence Day like it’s the ’90s.
Vanilla Ice knows we’re in the middle of a global pandemic, but collecting his coins seems a lot more important to him at the moment!
Rapper Vanilla Ice is set to perform at a 2,500-capacity concert in Texas on Friday despite a recent surge in coronavirus cases and hospitalizations in the state. The singer, known for his popular 1990 song, "Ice Ice Baby," is throwing the throwback Fourth of July weekend celebration in Austin, with its theme rooted in nostalgia during the global pandemic.
Vanilla Ice is set to play a 2,500 capacity show in Austin, Texas this weekend to celebrate 4th July.It comes despite a recent spike in coronavirus cases in the state, which has seen state Governor Greg Abbott scale down the reopening of bars and nightclubs.Yesterday (July 1), the Austin City Limits festival in the state, set for October, was cancelled due to the new spike in cases, but Ice has now announced a new show at the Emerald Point Bar & Grill tomorrow (July 3) in the city.“I can’t wait
Robert Matthew Van Winkle, best known by his stage name Vanilla Ice, is scheduled to perform at the Emerald Point Bar & Grill in Austin, Texas on Friday, according to a social media post from the venue.
via Instagram that he will be holding a July 4 throwback concert in Austin, Texas — one of the states currently seeing a rise in coronavirus cases.Vanilla Ice, whose real name is Robert Matthew Van Winkle, said that the concert will feature hit songs from the 90s.“The 90s were the best. We didn’t have coronavirus, or cell phones, or computers.