
Something in the Orange tells me you need Zach Bryan's The Quittin' Time Tour tickets
The five stops left are: Morrison, Colo., San Francisco, Calif., Huntington, W. Va., Notre Dame, Ind. and Ann Arbor, Mich. The tour will come to an end on Sept. 27 in Michigan.
Here's everything you need to know to buy tickets to Zach Bryan's The Quittin' Time Tour:
Buy Zach Bryan concert tickets
Zach Bryan is out on the road for The Quittin' Time Tour. There are five stops left, the tour will wrap in Ann Arbor, Mich. on Sept. 27 at Michigan Stadium. The cheapest available tickets are $152 at Notre Dame Stadium in Notre Dame, Ind. on Sept. 6.

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Yahoo
19 hours ago
- Yahoo
How did that first Notre Dame football loss in 2024 deliver a docuseries win?
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On that September Saturday at Notre Dame Stadium, Fornaro felt something that only a person in his position could after the loss to Northern Illinois went final. Charged with overseeing the first season of 'Here Come the Irish,' a docuseries that aired on Peacock last season, Fornaro wasn't going to let one loss keep him from making what he thought had the makings of something special. Break the doc? How about make it? 'It was like, all right, this could go one of two ways,'' Fornaro said Thursday from a darkened Notre Dame Stadium interview room. 'I will say, after the Northern Illinois game, you kind of knew it was real. You knew the show was real.' Real because for as low of a moment as that loss was for everyone associated with Notre Dame football – from the head coach on down – they treated it, and treated Fornaro and his crew, just as they had done the previous week after winning at Texas A&M. Access rarely was restricted. Fornaro and his crew were not asked not to shoot this team meeting or that player-coach interaction. Freeman and his staff, like Fornaro and his, went about business as usual. Even in soul-crushing defeat. The show must go on. It went on. 'As soon as that happened, I was like, 'All right, we're making a real show here. This is going to happen. This is going to be good,'' Fornaro said. The result was a seven-episode docuseries look at the 2024 Notre Dame football team from the highest of highs (pick one) to that lowest of lows (Northern Illinois). Everything that Fornaro, a native New Yorker and 2016 Marist College graduate, heard about Notre Dame and its storied football program, he lived last season. Every day from August camp, into the regular season and through a CFP postseason that stretched from late December to late January, Fornaro learned what makes Notre Dame football after a near-daily 93-minute drive from his home in Chicago's West Loop. It took Fornaro, a four-time national sports Emmy award winner during his four years at ESPN, four seconds when he arrived in April 2024 to understand that campus, that football program, that everything. It was dizzying. 'You always hear about Notre Dame and you hear about the lore and you hear about the prestige of what Notre Dame is and its history,' he said. 'Being with the team every day, being on the road, being in the team hotel, being on the team charters, you see all this stuff that makes this place special and you understand it. 'The feeling here is real. The fans here are real.' The docuseries, last season and again this season (it was announced Thursday that the first episode will drop December 8), also, real. Notre Dame football may have the final say, but Fornaro insists there wasn't much of a balancing act to the documentary that he wanted to make and the one Notre Dame wanted made. 'We told the exact story that we wanted to tell,' he said. 'There were no limitations, no restrictions from football or the (communication) staff. There's a good relationship there; there's trust there.' There also was a lot there. Fornaro admitted he over did it on the amount of footage shot last season just, well, because he could. He thought everything about Notre Dame and its football program was 'amazing' and wanted to squeeze everything in the show. Not everything made it without making it the War and Peace (ask your parents) of docs. It would have run for days, not hours. Fornaro and his crew made it a point last season and will make it again this fall to be at every team meeting, every practice, every recordable moment. 'We shoot 90% and 10% of it gets used,' he said. 'You have to show the team and the staff that you're committed to be there. That's the most important part for me.' 'Here Come the Irish' has been in production since long before the first official day of practice on July 31. Over the summer, Fornaro and his staff took home visits with several returning Irish to start building out backstories and possible storylines. What might those be? You know better than to ask any director to reveal his hand. Fornaro won't, though he stressed that flexibility is crucial. Last fall, former Irish All-American cornerback Benjamin Morrison was supposed to be a solid storyline. When his collegiate career came to a premature end in October after hip surgery, Morrison went from central character to a supporting actor. You can guess what storylines are in pen (for now) this season. Jeremiyah Love, the starting quarterback, any returning starter on defense would be good places to start. There will be a few pivotal plotlines come December that no one saw surfacing in August. 'We,' Fornaro said, 'don't know what exactly is going to happen.' That's film. That's football. Follow South Bend Tribune and NDInsider columnist Tom Noie on X (formerly Twitter): @tnoieNDI. Contact Noie at tnoie@ This article originally appeared on South Bend Tribune: What storyline roads might the 2025 Notre Dame football season travel?


San Francisco Chronicle
2 days ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Zach Bryan and Kings of Leon at Golden Gate Park: What to know
Zach Bryan and Kings of Leon will headline the next installment of the Golden Gate Park Concerts series on Friday, Aug. 15, in what promises to be one of San Francisco's biggest live music events of the year. Organized by Another Planet Entertainment — the same team behind Outside Lands — this single-day show follows the wildly successful inaugural concert last year, which brought System of a Down and Deftones to a sold-out crowd of more than 50,000 fans. Who's playing at the Golden Gate Park Concert 2025? Zach Bryan, the Grammy-winning country artist who's just wrapped up his sold-out 'Quittin' Time' tour, is headlining. Bay Area fans may remember his stadium debut at the Oakland Coliseum earlier this year. Bryan is also teasing a brand-new album, 'With Heaven On Top', due in January, with a collaboration featuring Kings of Leon called 'Bowery.' Kings of Leon, meanwhile, are back in full force. Frontman Caleb Followill returned to the stage last week after a heel injury sidelined the band's European tour. The band is now touring in support of its 2024 album 'Can We Please Have Fun,' while throwing it back with hits like 'Sex on Fire' and 'Molly's Chamber.' Also joining the lineup are fan-favorite country rockers Turnpike Troubadours and rising star Noeline Hofmann. Concert schedule: When to arrive and what to expect Date: Friday, Aug. 15 Location: Polo Field, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco Gates open: 1:30 p.m. Music starts: 3 p.m. Ends: 10 p.m. Line-up time: No earlier than 12:30 p.m. How to get to the Golden Gate Park concert Don't drive. Seriously. Parking is limited, reserved for residents and strictly enforced. Instead, Muni will offer free rides on the 5-Fulton and N-Judah lines through its 'Your Ticket, Your Fare' program. There's also secure bike parking on-site. Shuttles include wheelchair-accessible options. Passes are limited. Entry gates and VIP access info VIP entrances North VIP (36th Ave & JFK Dr) South VIP (MLK Jr. Dr, just west of South Gate) ADA access 36th Ave & JFK Dr If using the shuttle, exit via the South Tunnel or South Polo Field. What you can (and can't) bring Allowed bags Clear plastic, vinyl or PVC bags Small non-clear purses (under 6x8x3 inches) Empty hydration packs under 2.5 liters (with no more than one pocket) Not allowed Chairs with legs, metal frames or pockets Tailgating, camping or overnight stays What to know about road closures in Golden Gate Park View this post on Instagram A post shared by Zach Bryan (@zachlanebryan) The Polo Field will be closed through Aug. 20, and several park roads — including Middle Drive and parts of John F. Kennedy Drive — will be closed to cars, cyclists and pedestrians, particularly on show day. The western meadows of Golden Gate Park will also be off-limits during the concert. Ticket prices and how to buy


San Francisco Chronicle
4 days ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
Zach Bryan reignites feud with Kansas City Chiefs fans before San Francisco show
Country music star Zach Bryan has vowed never to return to Kansas City, escalating a simmering feud with Chiefs fans just days before his scheduled performance with Kings of Leon at San Francisco's Golden Gate Park. The timing — and location — are notable. The 'Something in the Orange' singer will take the stage Friday, Aug. 15, in the Bay Area, home to the 49ers, who lost to the Chiefs in this year's Super Bowl. Making matters more interesting, Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce — a key part of that win — is also Taylor Swift's boyfriend, and Bryan has had past online dustups involving the pop superstar as well. Bryan, a Grammy-winning artist and vocal Philadelphia Eagles supporter, reignited tensions last week on X after taunting Chiefs fans still stung by the Eagles' dominant 40-22 win over Kansas City in Super Bowl LIX. 'Where are all the three peat people from last year:/,' he wrote on Friday, Aug. 8, referencing the Eagles' 40-22 victory over the Chiefs in Super Bowl LIX. The post prompted a wave of angry replies from Kansas City loyalists, with one user criticizing Bryan for targeting the very fanbase that 'sells out his shows.' But Bryan didn't hold back. 'Please understand I will never play in Kansas City,' he replied. In another post, he added, 'I'll be about to finish my show and then get a taunting call if I play at that stadium.' Bryan, 29, has played in Kansas City multiple times, most recently in August 2024 at the T-Mobile Center. But his social media dialog suggests those may have been his final performances in the city. When a fan asked him to remove a track recorded live at a previous show in Kansas City from his live album, he responded, 'Done brother.' But he seemed to have slightly softened his stance about the region in a follow-up post two days later, declaring, 'I miss you Bonner Springs.' Referencing the nearby town, about 20 miles away from Kansas City, he added: 'Coming to play next year.' The controversy builds on Bryan's history of provocative posts. In September 2024, he faced backlash for tweeting, 'Eagles > Chiefs' and 'Kanye > Taylor,' ending the message with 'Who's with me?' He later deleted the post and apologized, saying he had been intoxicated at the time. 'For the record guys I wasn't coming for Taylor the other night,' Bryan explained on Instagram. 'I was drunkenly comparing two records and it came out wrong… I love Taylor's music and pray you guys know I'm human and tweet stupid things often. Hope one day I can explain this to her.' In a follow-up, he added that he had been 'going through a hard time' and admitted to 'projecting a little.' 'To be completely honest, it just came off as rude and desensitized to Taylor,' Bryan wrote in an Instagram Story. 'I respect her so much as a musician… The last thing I want is people thinking I don't appreciate and love what she has done for music.'