logo
JP Saxe Says Tour May Be Canceled ‘If I Don't Sell 20,000 Tickets in Two Days,' Addresses Challenges in the Live Market

JP Saxe Says Tour May Be Canceled ‘If I Don't Sell 20,000 Tickets in Two Days,' Addresses Challenges in the Live Market

Yahoo2 days ago
JP Saxe has done what many artists in his position tend to avoid: in a post captioned 'fuck being cool about this,' he's coming clean with fans about the fact that if more tickets aren't sold before the launch of his tour in September, he'll have to cancel the entire trek.
'I'm extremely embarrassed to tell you this, but I'm going to tell you anyway,' he said in a TikTok posted on Monday, giving a refreshing sense of realism and lack of self-pity about the situation. 'If I don't sell 20 or so thousand tickets to my tour in the next 48 hours, it's going to be canceled.' Tours often sell strongly at on sale, then hit a lull in the months or weeks leading up to the actual shows, when hemhawing fans purchase last-minute tickets.
The singer, who was nominated for song of the year at the Grammys in 2021 and has become a go-to songwriter outside of his solo career, told fans that if they were thinking of buying a ticket to his show closer to its launch on Sept. 9, there likely would not be a show to attend.
'If we're just not in the place yet to sell out these 2,000, 3,000-cap venues, that's fine,' he continued. 'It's always been my goal to connect deeply not widely and I stand by that. But just in case you were waiting until the week of or night of to buy a ticket, that approach just isn't going to work because there won't be a show to buy a ticket to.'
It's a revealing and respectable position to take as a working touring artist, as many musicians who come up short on sales have largely opted to quietly cancel their tours or entirely downscale them, often avoiding the reason being that ticket sales may have played a crucial part in those decisions.
Over the past year or so, the Black Keys and the Fugees opted for a quiet cancellation, with Ticketmaster serving as the only source of truth that the tours had been called off. (Ms. Lauryn Hill did acknowledge the next day that it was due to low ticket sales; the Black Keys addressed it much later.)
Just last week, rapper Ken Carson appeared to have quietly canceled his tour that was set to launch yesterday, as venues notified fans and Ticketmaster listed almost all the shows as canceled. In June, Jonas Brothers downsized six of their stadium shows and rebooked them for the same dates in smaller venues without giving much of an explanation.
Saxe is one of the few mainstream artists who has been upfront about low ticket sales being a true threat to a tour's vitality. His 'Make Yourself at Home' tour, named after his June album, is still slated to begin on Sept. 9 at Edmonton's Midway Music Hall, with planned stops across Canada and the United States including Los Angeles, Nashville and Brooklyn. In subsequent TikToks, he said that there's a chance the tour could be saved following the response to his initial post.
Best of Variety
New Movies Out Now in Theaters: What to See This Week
What's Coming to Disney+ in August 2025
What's Coming to Netflix in August 2025
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Colorado Music Festival musician pursues heights of Colorado, Florida
Colorado Music Festival musician pursues heights of Colorado, Florida

CBS News

time8 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Colorado Music Festival musician pursues heights of Colorado, Florida

The Colorado Music Festival brings together exceptional musicians from 44 orchestras across the country and around the world. For four weeks, they live and play in Boulder, performing a packed calendar of four concerts each week. Under the baton of Music Director Peter Oundijian, the orchestra plays to a high standard and has become a world-class creative experience. "This is a great orchestra to play with," said Andrew Karr, Assistant Principal and 3rd horn. "It's made up of musicians from around the country, so it's high level. We're on a tight schedule, so we prepare at a really high level, which I enjoy." For Karr, playing in an orchestra is a childhood dream come true. He lives and plays with the Florida Orchestra in Tampa, Florida. In 2000, he auditioned to be a part of the Colorado Music Festival, and he's been coming to Colorado ever since. "When I first arrived in Colorado, I had zero experience with outdoor stuff," he told CBS News Colorado. Then, like most people who spend time in the state, he heard the call of the 14'ers. "I was really taken by the beauty and the challenge," he explained. "Particularly, I was taken by the concept of doing peaks that were on lists. I think there's something about that for a classical musician because we work so methodically in our profession. There was something about having something methodical I could do outside in the mountains that really sort of appealed to me." He's checked off a fair few 14'ers, but he was missing his list when he was back home. "So I started visiting the high point of each county in Florida," Karr said. He travelled across the state meeting landowners and mapping locations. He said he even needed to learn to kayak to reach islands that held that high point. "I decided that my last county in Florida would be the high point of Florida, which is Britton Hall, which is all of 340 feet about sea level," Karr recalled. Florida is finished now, but Karr keeps climbing in Colorado. "For me, the pursuit is as much as the successful completion," Karr said. From Beethoven to Bierstadt, Karr is pursuing new heights every single summer. LINK: Colorado Music Festival Colorado Music Festival runs from July 3 to August 3, 2025, at the Chautauqua Auditorium in Boulder, Colorado.

‘Fantastic Four: First Steps' review: Ugh, here we go again
‘Fantastic Four: First Steps' review: Ugh, here we go again

Yahoo

time24 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

‘Fantastic Four: First Steps' review: Ugh, here we go again

movie review FANTASTIC FOUR: FIRST STEPS Running time: 115 minutes. Rated PG-13 (action/violence and some language). In theaters July 25. Calling 'Fantastic Four: First Steps' the best 'Fantastic Four' movie is not exactly a quote I'd advise Disney to slap on the poster. Talk about grading on a curve. The last three pathetic attempts to put the story of Mister Fantastic, the Invisible Woman, the Human Torch and the Thing onscreen have made miserable viewers go, 'Global annihilation? Sounds nice.' Not to be deterred, the Marvel Cinematic Universe is dragging the raggedy group out of storage for their 37th movie. That figure is unfortunately not a typo. The result? 'First Steps' marks a slight improvement from the preceding trilogy of terror. But Marvel still can't nail what should be one of its premiere attractions. 'Fantastic Four'? Forgettable, 1 ½. The movie begins, appropriately, with a pep in its step. Dropping the heroes in the retro-futuristic NYC that appears to be a technologically advanced 1960s is the right call by director Matt Shakman and his army of screenwriters. There's 'Jetsons' visual panache that sets the film apart from the other, oy, 36. The team's New York lair could be the TWA Hotel at JFK. Also, gold star for racing through the exposition in a newsreel at the beginning — four years ago some astronauts got neat powers in space, yada yada — to avoid the usual origin story portentousness. However, trembling in fear, 'First Steps' can't resist the comic-book urge to contort the mood ASAP to grave, gloomy and un-fun for most of the runtime. The stakes may be stratospherically high, but our serotonin levels are low, low, low. For the supes, Marvel has recruited some super-serious actors. There's Pedro Pascal, who has probably been frowning so much because he's overworked, as stretchy Reed Richards; Vanessa Kirby, making Medea seem like the life of the party, as vanishing Sue Storm; Joseph Quinn, nervously tip-toeing around genuine comedy, as flaming Johnny Storm; and Ebon Moss-Bachrach with a Zen take on rocky Ben Grimm. They're all fine, if oddly joyless for people wearing powder-blue 'Star Trek' uniforms. I can't say I ever want to see them play these parts again. Good thing they've been cast in at least two more MCU films through 2027. The Four face a couple foes. There's the humongous Galactus, who is essentially Megatron from 'Transformers.' And his shiny cowabunga henchwoman, the Silver Surfer, played by Julia Garner. Whose dumb idea was it to cast Garner, one of the most expressive and electric actors working today, as a slab of metal that speaks in monotone? Fee-fi-ho-hum Galactus is going to gobble up the world. But he offers the Four another option: He'll slow his roll if Reed and Sue hand over their new baby. The doting parents aren't on board with that plan. So, in a scene that lasts — I kid you not — two minutes, they try and fail to teleport the Earth to another part of the universe. In the end, Galactus goes Godzilla and stomps around Manhattan crushing skyscrapers. The Thing, a dude made of rocks, is the closest the movie comes to a fleshed-out person. And only because he cooks pasta and flirts with Natasha Lyonne twice. I'll give 'First Steps' this: It doesn't tie itself in knots making tedious connections to the rest of the MCU. The story is relatively simple, if poorly paced, and the neat aesthetic imagines what an Apple Store would look like during the Kennedy administration. But that's just not enough to prevent Shakman from joining the sorry ranks of filmmakers who couldn't wrap their heads around what the tone of the Fantastic Four should be. Are they funny? Are they grounded? Are they deep? The film is so unbalanced, one wonders if the director and writers donned a blindfold and threw a dart. How dramatic and depressing can a character named Mister Fantastic possibly be? Just you wait. During the climactic battle scene, Galactus torturously stretches Mister Fantastic nearly beyond his limits as Pascal wails an excruciating cry worthy of 'One Life to Live.' I, on the other hand, let out a big laugh. Solve the daily Crossword

'World's Richest Actress' Identified as Beloved 80s Star — But There's a Catch
'World's Richest Actress' Identified as Beloved 80s Star — But There's a Catch

Yahoo

time26 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

'World's Richest Actress' Identified as Beloved 80s Star — But There's a Catch

'World's Richest Actress' Identified as Beloved 80s Star — But There's a Catch originally appeared on Parade. Jami Gertz made a name for herself in the 80s, appearing in a variety of popular films, including Sixteen Candles. In 1989, she married private equity investor Tony Ressler, who is now a billionaire. According to the Daily Mail, Gertz is known as the "world's richest actress," thanks to her husband's $14 billion net worth. Thought Gertz has earned plenty of her own money, her billionaire status is widely thanks to Ressler. "Everyone thinks I married a rich guy," she told The Hollywood Reporter in October 2018. "But I made more money — way more money — than Tony when I met him. I paid for our first house. I paid for our first vacation. I married him because I fell in love with him.' Gertz and Ressler, who share three sons and one daughter, are still happily married. Over the years, they've collaborated on a number of different projects, including the purchase of and NBA team — the Atlanta Hawks — for a whopping $850 million back in 2015, according to the Wall Street Journal. Despite making a great deal of money alongside her husband, Gertz appears to truly enjoy acting. From 2002 through 2006, she appeared in a recurring role on the television series Still Standing. She took on a few other projects before inking a deal to appear in 44 episodes of The Neighbors from 2012 through 2014. Gertz has all but left Hollywood for a life that involves more behind-the-scenes projects. Per her IMDb page, she hasn't acted in anything since I Want You Back in 2022. Prior to that, her last project was in 2017. These days, Gertz and her husband live a relatively quiet life, splitting their time between Los Angeles and Atlanta, according to Fortune. 🎬 SIGN UP for Parade's Daily newsletter to get the latest pop culture news & celebrity interviews delivered right to your inbox 🎬 'World's Richest Actress' Identified as Beloved 80s Star — But There's a Catch first appeared on Parade on Aug 1, 2025 This story was originally reported by Parade on Aug 1, 2025, where it first appeared.

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