logo
Beyoncé Replaces Sphere With Allegiant Stadium in Cowboy Carter Tour Visuals After Cease-and-Desist

Beyoncé Replaces Sphere With Allegiant Stadium in Cowboy Carter Tour Visuals After Cease-and-Desist

Yahoo05-05-2025

After receiving a cease-and-desist from the owner of Las Vegas' Sphere, Beyoncé has replaced the venue with another Nevada landmark in her Cowboy Carter Tour visuals.
Days after Billboard confirmed that Sphere Entertainment Co. CEO James Dolan's attorneys had sent a letter to the superstar's Parkwood Entertainment demanding that Bey remove a reference to the Sphere in a video that plays during one of her show's interludes, fans at the tour's third night in Los Angeles Sunday (May 4) were the first to see that she had done just that. In lieu of a ginormous Bey bending down to pick up the iconic spherical concert space — as was depicted in the original visual dubbed 'Attack of the 400 Foot Cowboy' — she now reaches for Allegiant Stadium, seemingly edited overtop of where the Sphere was initially.
More from Billboard
Beyoncé Hit With Cease-and-Desist from Sphere Owner Over 'Cowboy Carter' Concert Footage
Ghost Earns First No. 1 Album on Billboard 200 With 'Skeletá'
Fans Choose Maroon 5 and LISA's 'Priceless' as This Week's Favorite New Music
The following morning, Parkwood posted the updated footage on Instagram, writing, 'What happens in Vegas starts with a BANG.'
'Bey really said 'you want petty? here's petty,'' one fan commented on the post.
Another person wrote with a cry-laugh emoji, 'Oh the shade.'
Sunday's show came two nights after the New York Post first reported that Dolan's company had sent Bey's team the cease-and-desist, alleging that 'the prominent appearance and manipulation of SEG's Sphere™ venue in the video [had been] unauthorized.' In addition to accusing the 35-time Grammy winner of showcasing the Sphere without permission, the letter also reportedly criticized the visual for supposedly misleading fans by creating 'significant speculation that Beyoncé will end her tour with a Sphere residency,' despite the fact that the Cowboy Carter trek is actually scheduled to end with two shows at Allegiant in July.
Billboard previously reached out to reps for Beyoncé and tour promoter Live Nation, but did not hear back.
Prior to the change, the Sphere had been just one of several global landmarks included in the visual. Featuring Bey modeling several glamorous looks and towering over various cities worldwide, the 'Texas Hold 'Em' singer also interacted with the Statue of Liberty in New York City, the Eiffel Tower in Paris and the Washington Monument in Washington, D.C., in the interlude.
Following two more nights at SoFi Stadium in L.A. this week, Bey is set to bring the tour supporting Billboard 200-topping album Cowboy Carter to Chicago and East Rutherford, N.J., before heading overseas for performances in London and Paris. In late June, she'll circle back to the states for shows in Texas, Maryland and Georgia before closing out with her Nevada performances.
See Bey's updated, Sphere-less tour visual below.
Best of Billboard
Chart Rewind: In 1989, New Kids on the Block Were 'Hangin' Tough' at No. 1
Janet Jackson's Biggest Billboard Hot 100 Hits
H.E.R. & Chris Brown 'Come Through' to No. 1 on Adult R&B Airplay Chart

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sabrina Carpenter hits back with cheeky alternative to provocative album cover
Sabrina Carpenter hits back with cheeky alternative to provocative album cover

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Sabrina Carpenter hits back with cheeky alternative to provocative album cover

Sabrina Carpenter is barking back at the backlash surrounding her suggestive album cover. The outspoken pop star is set to release her new album "Man's Best Friend" on Aug. 29, but the 26-year-old "Espresso" hitmaker took to social media Wednesday, June 25, to sarcastically slam critics of her provocative album cover. In her caption, Carpenter wrote that she "signed some copies of Man's Best Friend for you guys & here is a new alternate cover approved by God available now on my website" alongside a white heart emoji. The breakout singer's June 11 album announcement garnered criticism with its imagery showing Carpenter, dressed in a black dress and high heels, kneeling on the ground in a dog-like pose while an unidentified man stands off to the side and pulls her by the hair. Sabrina Carpenter sparks controversy with provocative 'Man's Best Friend' album cover In the new photos, Carpenter faces the camera and looks away in two separate shots – one close-up and another full-body photograph – as she stands and holds onto a man, with her hands on his arm and back. "Man's Best Friend," Carpenter's seventh studio effort, follows the release of her breakthrough 2024 album "Short n' Sweet," which catapulted her to superstardom after the former Disney star worked for years in the music industry. The album, which peaked at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart, spawned the hit singles "Espresso," "Please Please Please," "Taste" and "Bed Chem," as well as solidified the singer's playful pin-up girl image. Contributing: Edward Segarra This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Sabrina Carpenter unveils new 'Man's Best Friend' album cover

Crowned In Curls: Beyoncé's Best ‘Cowboy Carter' Hair Moments
Crowned In Curls: Beyoncé's Best ‘Cowboy Carter' Hair Moments

Black America Web

time3 hours ago

  • Black America Web

Crowned In Curls: Beyoncé's Best ‘Cowboy Carter' Hair Moments

Source: Shutterstock / Shutterstock Beyoncé has been redefining country glam with her Cowboy Carter tour, and her hair has played a starring role in the show. From blonde waves to buss down middle parts, each of Bey's hairstyles have told a story that intertwines Southern roots, Black beauty, and the freedom to express it all. Beyoncé's tour hairstyles have always been a key part of her performance persona, almost as iconic as the choreography and vocals. From the honey-blonde, wind-blown waves of the Dangerously in Love era to the long, wet-look strands that defined Drunk in Love , the Cécred Hair Care founder's tresses has evolved right alongside her music. On the Formation tour, she gave us sculptural braids and Afrocentric styles that felt like visual declarations of Black power. During Renaissance , she shimmered in silver with high-glam, high-volume tresses that matched the album's Studio 54 energy. On each tour, Bey's hair not only complements the vibe but also helps define it. Beyoncé's Best 'Cowboy Carter' Tour Hair Moments This era of Beyoncé isn't just about rhinestones and fringe; it's about reclamation. Her hair, ever-changing yet always flawless, echoes the themes of the Cowboy Carter album itself: tradition flipped on its head, heritage honored with an edge, and confidence that unapologetically gallops across genres. Whether Bey is channeling a rodeo-ready cowgirl or giving us full-on disco diva, her hair moves like her music, timeless, transformative, and rooted in culture. As the tour continues to dazzle, we're taking a moment to celebrate the hair moments that have left us in awe. Scroll down for a visual roundup of Beyoncé's most iconic Cowboy Carter hairstyles that were worthy of its own standing ovation. Crowned In Curls: Beyoncé's Best 'Cowboy Carter' Hair Moments was originally published on Bey and her loose blonde curls are a match made in Heaven. They frame her gorgeous face perfectly, and they also catch and bounce to the beat right along with the star. There's nothing more appealing than Bey tossing a head full of lively curls back and forth, around and around, while on stage. This hairstyle is the queen's signature 'do and possibly our favorite. Bey is the mother of buss downs! The Grammy award-winning artist has since been rocking the popular hairstyle, and she wears it well. Now and then, she will wear it straight, but most of the time, she includes some version of curls in the mix. Bey nails this 70's hairstyle each time. We all know the Houston native loves a good hair + fan moment, and this hairstyle is ideal for that hair-blowing moment that Mrs. Carter always slays. The waves are Beyoncé's thing! The texture adds a little more life to her tresses, giving the singer an effortless glamorous vibe and contributing to the carefree elegance that she exudes on stage.

Fans Call To Cancel Beyoncé After She Wore An 'Insulting' Shirt On Stage: 'So Offensive'
Fans Call To Cancel Beyoncé After She Wore An 'Insulting' Shirt On Stage: 'So Offensive'

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Fans Call To Cancel Beyoncé After She Wore An 'Insulting' Shirt On Stage: 'So Offensive'

is facing intense backlash from her progressive fanbase after sporting a controversial T-shirt during the Paris stop of her "Cowboy Carter" tour. The 43-year-old music icon drew criticism for wearing a shirt emblazoned with the image of the Buffalo Soldiers, a historic group of African American soldiers who served in the U.S. military after the Civil War, but whose legacy is marred by their role in the Indian Wars. While many initially assumed Beyoncé's shirt was meant to highlight an overlooked piece of Black history, critics quickly pointed out the deeper and more troubling implications. In the late 1800s, the Buffalo Soldiers were deployed to fight against Native Americans during the westward expansion of the United States, siding with European colonizers in the brutal Indian Wars. What ignited even more outrage was the back of Beyoncé's shirt, which included a passage referring to Native Americans and others as enemies of "peace, order, and settlement." According to a screenshot shared by ONTD, the full excerpt read: 'Their antagonists were the enemies of peace, order and settlement: warring Indians, bandits, cattle thieves, murderous gunmen, bootleggers, trespassers, and Mexican revolutionaries.' Fans quickly took to the comments section to express their disappointment, with many accusing the superstar of promoting harmful historical narratives. "I understand history is complicated and contrarian, but to put that whole excerpt in the back??? What for? Uff huge oversight, I expect her to do right and take it down. We'll see," one user wrote. Another added, "Even with that context, I think it's a poor quote to use. It's not ok to insult the Indigenous people in order to celebrate the Buffalo Soldiers' accomplishments. They could have found something different." "So offensive," a third said. Some users criticized the overall lack of cultural sensitivity, pointing to past controversies as a pattern. "This is the same woman who used audio from a disaster where people died," one commenter noted. "She (or someone who works for her) obviously does their homework on topics that are important to her and completely disregards everything else." Others brought up her $20 million performance in Dubai earlier this year, a country where LGBTQ+ rights are severely restricted, saying the latest misstep follows a pattern of questionable choices. "Is it really surprising coming from the same woman who took 20 million from a country where it's literally illegal to be gay and then turned around and tried to make her tour a queer celebration?" one user asked. "She doesn't give a sh*t, she doesn't have to. Her stans are extreme and will excuse anything." The backlash over Beyoncé's Buffalo Soldiers T-shirt continued to intensify as fans flooded social media with criticism, accusing the pop icon of romanticizing a deeply painful chapter in history. "Not everything in Black history needs to be revered and turned into an aesthetic," one commenter wrote, referencing the militarized role Buffalo Soldiers played during the Indian Wars. Another post read, "The Buffalo Soldiers did awful things to indigenous people. The way she waves away their atrocities against indigenous people is gross. Beyoncé's romanticism of this is beyond the pale." Many fans expressed disappointment in what they saw as a lack of thoughtful oversight from the artist's team. "I love her, but I really wish that there was much more thought put into this before giving it the green light," one fan wrote. Another added, "That shirt... ma'am, someone in your team should've done a triple check. That's tone deaf as hell." For some, it wasn't about canceling Beyoncé; it was about holding her accountable. As one post put it plainly: "I love her music, but she's not beyond being rightfully criticized, especially for selling merch calling Native Americans enemies of peace. Like, how dare you?" At the time of writing, Beyoncé has not publicly addressed the backlash. Whether she or her team will respond remains to be seen. Still, the controversy has sparked a broader conversation about representation, historical context, and the influence of celebrity in shaping public memory.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store