Justin Timberlake is calling for the removal of confederate monuments.
29.06.2020 - 02:37 / hollywoodlife.com
Kelsea Ballerini took to Twitter to call out Chase Rice for sharing a video from his packed concert in east Tennessee on June 27. The video, which Chase has since deleted from his Instagram Story, showed thousands of fans cheering loudly, without any sign of masks or social distancing in effect amidst the coronavirus pandemic.
Justin Timberlake is calling for the removal of confederate monuments.
Jem Aswad Senior Music EditorJustin Timberlake, a native of Tennessee, has called for the removal of Confederate monuments throughout the country. In an Instagram post on Monday, he wrote, “America was built by men who believed in and benefitted from racism.
Country stars continue to be at odds over Chase Rice’s recent Tennessee concert.
Chase Rice is determined to finish what he started — whether you like it or not!
) decided it was a good idea to What could go wrong? Oh right: the global pandemic we're currently in the midst of. Chase Rice just played a concert to an enormous crowd of unmasked fans here in Tennessee.
Chase Rice is responding to the controversy over his packed concert in Tennessee over the weekend.
Country singer Chase Rice is speaking out after receiving backlash for hosting a crowded concert amid the coronavirus pandemic. On Saturday night, Rice, 34, played a concert in Tennessee where thousands of concertgoers were packed into the venue, most of whom appear to not be wearing face masks, as is recommended to prevent the ongoing spread of coronavirus.
Chase Rice didn’t apologize in a video statement after receiving backlash for performing at a packed concert in Tennessee on Saturday, June 27, amid the coronavirus pandemic.The country singer, 34, addressed his followers via Instagram on Monday, June 29, after posting and then deleting a video of his concert, which showed the crowd at the venue without masks on amid social distancing concerns.“Everybody had a blast, but then once I posted the video a lot of people seeing that online had a big
Country singer Chase Rice has assured fans and critics alike he’ll be taking the health and safety of concertgoers a lot more seriously after coming under fire for footage he posted online from a Saturday night show.
Chase Rice has responded to criticism that his recent Nashville show appeared to ignore US social distancing guidelines.Despite a new spike in the USA’s coronavirus cases, Rice played a show for thousands of fans at the Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary in Tennessee on Saturday, June 27.
Chase Rice is speaking out after getting some heat for his recent packed concert in Tennessee. The country music star took to social media to share a video with fans on Monday, and explained how his future shows will try to take more precautions to limit the possible the spread of the coronavirus.«I just want to address my show Saturday night.
On Saturday night, 1,000 people packed into an outdoor amphitheatre to watch Chase Rice perform and there wasn’t a mask in sight.
Chase Rice is feeling the criticism from fellow country music stars after the unfortunate and arguably dangerous decision to play a concert Saturday night out in Petros, Tennessee!
cases of COVID-19. After he posted a video on his Instagram Story showing of hundreds of people singing along to his recent hit "Eyes On You," captioning it "We back" and adding a smiley face sunglasses emoji, fans, peers and other bold-faced Nashville names including Kelsea Ballerini, Bobby Bones, Maren Morris and Mickey Guyton publicly criticized Chase and the venue, the Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary in Petros, Tennessee, which is a former prison-turned-event center."Imagine being
Chase Rice caught backlash on social media after sharing a video of people flocking to his most recent concert with seemingly no regard for social distancing amid the COVID-19 pandemic.
Kelsea Ballerini is calling out country singer Chase Rice for holding a packed concert amid the Coronavirus pandemic that specifically calls for social distancing to slow the spread.
Chase Rice has defied a new coronavirus spike in the US to play a show for thousands of fans in Tennessee, with some appearing to ignore social distancing guidelines. Rice performed for fans on Saturday night (June 27) at the Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary, a former prison which has been converted into an event centre.Despite social distancing guidelines being in place, videos posted on Rice’s Instagram story showed fans packed tightly into the venue, without wearing face masks.