Selena Quintanilla is back in the top five on the Top Latin Albums after the vinyl reissue of ‘Ones’. It also returns to the Top 5 on the Top Latin Albums Chart and to the Billboard 200 Chart.
02.07.2020 - 21:39 / hollywoodlife.com
Vanilla Ice has cancelled his Fourth of July concert after drawing extensive criticism over his disregard for social distancing. The 52-year-old “Ice Ice Baby” rapper was originally slated to perform at the “Independence Day Throwback Beach Party” at the Emerald Point Bar & Grill in Austin.
However, Texas is one of the four states with the most reported coronavirus cases in the United States, and the event quickly attracted nationwide backlash. He took to Twitter on July 2 to announce the
.Selena Quintanilla is back in the top five on the Top Latin Albums after the vinyl reissue of ‘Ones’. It also returns to the Top 5 on the Top Latin Albums Chart and to the Billboard 200 Chart.
Jazz Tangcay Artisans Editor“I’m not here to challenge the accuracy of the costume,” says costume designer Julie Weiss, whose credits include, “12 Monkeys,” “Frida” and “American Beauty.”Weiss is talking about the countless uniforms she needed for “Greyhound,” the Aaron Schneider film starring Tom Hanks as Navy Commander Ernest Krause.
Here we go again…
Mark Ruffalo has picked an unusual way to celebrate Independence Day.
Vanilla Ice has finally thawed his stone-cold stance on hosting a concert amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Bruce Haring pmc-editorial-managerRapper and DIY Network home renovator Vanilla Ice has decided not to go forward with a planned July 4 concert in Austin, Texas.The show, planned for the Emerald Point Bar & Grill, is located on the shores of Lake Travis and touted its outdoor restaurant and extensive grounds as safety features.But Texas, as well as several other states, has seen a strong resurgence of coronavirus cases.
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.
Vanilla Ice cooled off plans for a concert in Texas after taking considerable heat for an event that sought to gather hundreds of fans in one of the nation’s coronavirus hot spots.The 1990s rapper with the hit single “Ice Ice Baby” had been scheduled to play a lakeside show just outside Austin on Friday (July 3), but on Thursday he announced it was being postponed.“Due to the increase in COVID-19 numbers in Austin we’re gonna move the concert to a better date,” Vanilla Ice tweeted.
1990s-themed 4th of July concert in Austin, Texas, because of the coronavirus pandemic.“Due to the increase in COVID-19 numbers in Austin we’re gonna move the concert to a better date,” he wrote in a caption for a video posted Thursday on Twitter.
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!