NY concert venue where 2 died in stampede has license denied

The Bobster

Senior News Editor since 2004

NY concert venue where 2 died in stampede has license denied​



By
Associated Press


March 9, 2023 6:36am
Updated















The license of a Rochester, New York, concert venue was revoked Wednesday while authorities investigate the circumstances of a stampede after a rap concert that left two women dead and injured several other concertgoers.
“It is one step we can immediately take to ensure that the events of Sunday night are not repeated,” Police Chief David M. Smith said at a news conference.
He said he denied the Main Street Armory’s application to renew its one-year entertainment license after the venue’s owner did not attend a scheduled meeting with police and other city officials.
Rhondesia Belton, 33, of Buffalo and Brandy Miller, 35, of Rochester were fatally injured when audience members surged dangerously toward the exits following a Sunday evening performance by Memphis, Tennessee, rap stars GloRilla and Finesse2tymes.


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Police Chief David M. Smith signed an order denying the renewal of the Main Street Armory's Entertainment License.
Police Chief David M. Smith signed an order denying the renewal of the Main Street Armory’s Entertainment License. Rochester NY Police

The denies the Main Street Armory’s application to renew its one-year entertainment license.
The denies the Main Street Armory’s application to renew its one-year entertainment license. Rochester NY Police

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Police on Monday said the stampede may have been triggered by unfounded fears of gunfire.


But police found no immediate evidence of gunshots.


One woman remained hospitalized in critical condition Wednesday.

Debris is seen in the main entrance of Main Street Armory on March 6, 2023, in Rochester, New York.Debris is seen in the main entrance of Main Street Armory on March 6, 2023, in Rochester, New York.AP
Smith said the city planned to meet with the venue’s owner Wednesday to ask him to choose between voluntarily halting events or having the pending renewal of the entertainment license denied.


When the owner did not attend, the chief signed an order prohibiting the armory from hosting “any public entertainment, which includes concerts, amplified music, and athletic events or games, including volleyball or cheerleading.”


There was no response to an email requesting comment sent to the Main Street Armory.

The woman was fatally injured when audience members surged dangerously toward the exits following a Sunday evening performance by GloRilla and Finesse2tymes. The woman was fatally injured when audience members surged dangerously toward the exits following a Sunday evening performance by GloRilla and Finesse2tymes. The Washington Post via Getty Im
“Your contracted event security guards were unable to control the crowd as they were running, which in turn caused a human stampede,” according to the city’s letter to Scott Donaldson, which said he had violated a licensing requirement to maintain order at the site.


The city’s deputy corporation counsel, Patrick Beath, said criminal and regulatory investigations are under way.

Police tape remains on the ground outside of the Main Street Armory on March 6, 2023, in Rochester, New York. Police tape remains on the ground outside of the Main Street Armory on March 6, 2023, in Rochester, New York. AP
“In addition to the police investigation, the Rochester Fire Department and code enforcement teams are inspecting the building and reviewing photographic and video evidence of the concert to determine if there were any fire code or building code violations at the property,” Beath said at the news conference.




see also​





Rapper GloRilla ‘devastated’ after two killed in NY concert stampede​






The fortress-like armory was built from 1905 to 1907 and was initially used by the U.S. Army.


It hosted sporting events throughout the 20th century before being shut down for several years starting in the late 1990s, partly because it lacked a fire-suppression system at the time.


It began hosting concerts and other events in 2005 after undergoing extensive renovations.


Smith said its main arena is meant to have a capacity of about 5,000 people.


“The bottom line is, lives were lost, and we need to take steps to make sure that no lives are lost in the future if this was indeed something that was preventable,” he said.





Fatal crowd surges at large events have turned deadly before, including one at a 2021 concert by rapper Travis Scott in which 10 people died.
 
Fatal crowd surges at large events have turned deadly before, including one at a 2021 concert by rapper Travis Scott in which 10 people died.

Travis Scott was doing a demon summoning ritual for Islam's JINN.

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Ancient demon summoning ritual, in the Islamic religion, they are the JINN.

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Travis Scott’s ‘strange rituals,’ or why the Egyptians don’t want a Black artist performing in front of their pyramids​

The American rapper was set to present his new album, ‘Utopia,’ on July 28 at one of the Seven Wonders of the World. Until the event was called off​

Astroworld Festival
Singer Travis Scott performs at the Astroworld Festival in Houston, Texas, in 2021.ERIKA GOLDRING (WireImage,)
Daniel Soufi
Jul 28, 2023 - 10:32 EDT
The concert that Travis Scott had scheduled in front of the Giza pyramids for July 28 — one of the most anticipated of the year — was canceled due to the “strange rituals” that the rapper allegedly performs during his live performances and that go against “Egyptian and Arab customs and traditions.” This polemic has reignited the longstanding accusations of Satanism against Scott and brought attention to the Egyptian people’s discomfort at the frequent use of ancient Egyptian symbols by African-American artists.
Travis Scott is one of the most popular singers in the world. He has collaborated with several prominent artists such as Drake, Kanye West and Rosalía, and is the father of two children with model Kylie Jenner, the youngest of the Kardashian clan. The concert was supposed to be a chance for Scott to present his new album, Utopia, his first in five years, a launch around which Scott has generated great expectations: he just released K-POP, a first taste of the album, where he shares credits with Bad Bunny and The Weeknd. Prior to that, among other things, he painted a graffiti with the name of the album in Tarragona, Spain, which led some to speculate about a new collaboration with Rosalía.
The album is especially significant because it is also his first since the tragic incident that took place at the 2021 Astroworld Festival in Houston, Texas, where a crowd crush at the beginning of his performance resulted in the death of 10 people and left approximately 300 injured. Scott had a reputation for inciting mayhem during his presentations, and there were videos in which various attendees asked the rapper to stop the concert after several people had already died. Kylie Jenner, who was present at the event, explained that at the moment they were unaware of the seriousness of the situation. Despite this, more than 500 lawsuits were filed against Scott and the organizers of the festival. Last month, after months of police investigations, a Harris County grand jury decided not to indict Scott or the promoter.
Astroworld Festival


Entrance to the Astroworld Festival, which some conspiracy theories have compared to a figure painted by Hieronymus Bosch.Rick Kern (Getty Images)
Numerous conspiracy theories arose in the immediate aftermath of the Astroworld tragedy. Some, with no foundation at all, suggested that the incident had been the premeditated result of a “blood sacrifice” planned by the author of Sicko Mode. These theories quickly spread through social media, especially on TikTok, where certain videos reached tens of millions of views before being censored by the platform. The speculations were based on aspects such as the stage design, which a viral post on the Chinese social network interpreted as an inverted cross leading to a portal to hell. Others alluded to the entrance to Astroworld, which was shaped like Scott’s mouth and looked very similar to a figure that appears in the triptych of The Garden of Earthly Delights by the Dutch painter Hieronymus Bosch.

Strange rituals​

Last Tuesday, the Egyptian Musicians’ Union suspended the license for Travis Scott’s concert. In a statement that was reproduced by local media, the organization refused to “tamper with societal values and Egyptian and Arab customs and traditions.” In addition, the union claims to have found “images and documented information on the strange rituals” that Scott allegedly practices at his concerts. This decision caused divided opinions in Egypt, with public figures such as singer Ahmed Saad and businessman Naguib Sawiris expressing their disagreement. Two days later, on July 26, Live Nation confirmed the cancellation of the event, after days of insisting that the concert would go on as planned.
Days before this announcement, an Egyptian news outlet reported about a social media campaign that demanded the cancellation of the American rapper’s concert. There are many Egyptians who are upset or uncomfortable with the cultural appropriation of their symbols by African-American performers. Beyoncé and Rihanna, for example, dressed as Nefertiti for a Coachella presentation and a cover of Vogue Arabia, respectively. Michael Jackson’s video of Remember the Time is set in a court of Ancient Egypt. Kanye West wore a pendant of the Egyptian god Horus to the 2011 BET Awards, which was similar to one that appears in the video for his song Power. Singer Janelle Monáe attended the Golden Globes dressed as Nefertiti. Rapper Nas released an album titled I Am, whose cover shows his face fused with that of Tutankhamen. Nina Simone incorporated the Egyptian aesthetic into her style for her album Fodder on My Wings, which features the silhouette of Nefertiti.

Coachella


Singer Beyoncé dressed as Nefertiti at the 2018 Coachella Festival in Indio, California.Larry Busacca (Getty Images for Coachella)
Afro-descendant singers and artists began to use elements of Egyptian iconography to reclaim the relevance of African history and culture. By promoting the idea that African history and culture are fundamental elements in the construction of human civilization, the Afrocentrist movement seeks to strengthen the identity of Afro-descendant communities around the world, a position that arises in response to Eurocentrism and other forms of cultural domination that have relegated and minimized the contribution of African and Afro-descendant cultures in world history.
In the particular case of Ancient Egypt, Afrocentrism argues that this civilization had strong African roots and that the ancient Egyptians maintained cultural ties with other African societies. Some thinkers of this current even suggest that some of the great figures of Ancient Egypt were Black. However, most Egyptians identify with an Arab or Mediterranean heritage, due to the Arab cultural influence in the region and the prevalence of this language as an official language. That is why they tend to reject the idea of a possible African origin for the Ancient Egyptian civilization.
The National Museum of Antiquities in Leiden, the Netherlands, came under fire for organizing an exhibition titled Kemet, Egypt in hip-hop, jazz, soul & funk, which evidenced the influence of Ancient Egypt on the music of the African diaspora and included images of Black artists portraying Ancient Egyptian rulers. The Egyptian Antiquities Service criticized the exhibition for its Afrocentric approach, calling it cultural appropriation; as a result, the museum was banned from continuing its excavations at the Saqqara necropolis near Cairo. This is just one conflict in a list of other similar ones, such as the choice of Black actress Adele James to play Queen Cleopatra in a Netflix docudrama.
There are more cases in the history of music where the use of symbolic elements from other cultures has caused cultural tensions. In 1966, for example, John Lennon said in an interview that The Beatles were “bigger than Jesus.” This statement provoked a strong backlash, particularly in the United States and other countries with Christian majorities; as part of the protests, in some places Beatles records were burned in public and several radio stations boycotted their music for a certain amount of time. Lennon’s comments even led to the cancellation of some concerts. Travis Scott has never stated an opinion on this controversy.
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