Like the song goes, see you in September.
The concert industry is looking toward the end of summer and into the fall for a return of the big shows, according to industry insiders.
“I think it’s a safe bet that outdoor concerts can return with some normality by early fall, and indoor concerts will follow that trend, probably by September and October,” said Jim Steen, a Manahawkin-based concert promotion veteran with Bowery Presents in New York and Pennsylvania.
“Everybody is being very optimistic for the fall,” said Stan Levinstone, owner of the Haddonfield-based SLP Concerts. “It seems people are looking at September.”
Image from: @bluegal (Composite)
Capping off a month that has already featured more than 40 mass shootings across the United States, the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear a National Rifle Association-backed challenge to a New York state gun control law triggering new calls for Democrats to urgently expand the court.
Slate staff writer Mark Joseph Stern, who covers courts and the law, pointed out in a series of tweets Monday that this case is likely to pave the way to the Supreme Court declaring a constitutional right to concealed public carry, overriding many state and local restrictions on the ability to bear concealed arms in public.
When it comes to Wikileaks, what matters is the content of the emails, nothing else. Hillary already admitted in the last debate they were legitimate. The media and the Democrat operatives are trying to distract with their conspiracy theories about Putin.
This next email is truly problematic.
The hacked emails show former Justice Department staffer and current Clinton spokesman Brian Fallon, updating Hillary Clinton’s aides about litigation regarding her emails.
In the email, Fallon wrote, “DOJ folks inform me there is a status hearing in this case this morning, so we could have a window into the judge’s thinking about this proposed production schedule as quickly as today.” This was to Clinton staffers on May 19, 2015.
Senate Holds Hearing On Biden s First Batch Of Judicial Nominees
All five of the president’s court picks were people of color and three were women a sharp contrast to Trump’s legacy.
The Senate Judiciary Committee on Wednesday held its first hearing for President Joe Biden’s judicial nominees, a mix of people who set the tone for how this president wants to leave his mark on the nation’s federal courts: by adding much more diversity.
The committee heard from five of Biden’s court picks. All of them were people of color, and three of them were women. Their professional backgrounds were just as diverse and include public defense, prosecution, civil litigation, municipal law and military service.
The case for expanding the Supreme Court just got a lot stronger Official White House Photo by D. Myles Cullen Justice Gorsuch breaks with other Supreme Court conservatives to recognize Native American sovereignty
Capping off a month that has already featured more than 40 mass shootings across the United States, the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday agreed to hear a National Rifle Association-backed challenge to a New York state gun control lawâtriggering new calls for Democrats to urgently expand the court.
Slate staff writer Mark Joseph Stern, who covers courts and the law, pointed out in a series of tweets Monday that this case is likely to pave the way to the Supreme Court declaring a constitutional right to concealed public carry, overriding many state and local restrictions on the ability to bear concealed arms in public.