17
Featured Events
1996David Bowie, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Jefferson Airplane, Little Willie John, Pink Floyd, The Shirelles, and The Velvet Undergroundare inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
1993Aretha Franklin, Michael Bolton, Tony Bennett, Bob Dylan, and Diana Rossperform at President Bill Clinton's inauguration ceremonies.
1992The movie Juice opens in theaters, starring Tupac Shakur, Queen Latifah and Cindy Herron of En Vogue.
1967London's Daily Mail newspaper carries an article about potholes in Blackburn, Lancashire, inspiring John Lennon to mention it in "A Day In The Life."
17
In Music History
2015Police are called to the Cromwell Hotel in Las Vegas in the wee hours of the morning, where a fight involving The Weeknd is raging. The R&B singer is arrested after allegedly punching a cop who tries to intervene.
2012Johnny Otis, the bandleader and talent scout who discovered Etta James, dies at age 90.
2008After stopping off at a local shop in London on her way home from visiting her husband, who remains in prison, Amy Winehouse blows off some steam and attacks a photographer, which leads to the singer being escorted away by the police.
2006Kristen Hall announces she is leaving Sugarland. According to a statement by fellow bandmates, Jennifer Nettles and Kristian Bush, Hall chose to quit so she could "stay home and write songs."
2000Garth Brooks is named the 1990s' Artist of the Decade at the American Music Awards, having sold more than 95 million albums, more than any other American recording artist.
1990The Fifth Annual Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremonies are held in New York City. Inductees include Hank Ballard, Bobby Darin, The Four Seasons, The Four Tops, The Kinks, The Platters, Simon & Garfunkel, and The Who.
1986Olivia Newton-John gives birth to her daughter, Chloe. The father is her husband Matt Lattanzi, who co-starred with Olivia in Xanadu.
1976Barry Manilow's "I Write The Songs" hits #1.
1974Singer Dino Martin (not to be confused with his more famous father, Dean) is arrested on suspicion of possession and sale of firearms. He is arraigned and released the next day on $5,000 bail.
1972Highway 51 South in Memphis, Tennessee, is renamed "Elvis PresleyBlvd."
1971Kid Rock is born Robert James Ritchie in Romeo, Michigan.
1971Halftime entertainment at Super Bowl V in Miami comes courtesy of the Southeast Missouri State Marching Band. Marvin Gaye does the national anthem.
Trump Fires Gene Simmons
2008
Gene Simmons is the third contestant fired by Donald Trump on Season 7 of The Celebrity Apprentice.
The billionaire real estate mogul calls Simmons a "great genius marketer," but says the KISSbassist's stubborn independent streak prevents him from taking advice. Simmons led his team in that week's Kodak Challenge by creating a slogan that focused on the brand's quality, but rival team Hydra won with a campaign about affordability.
Simmons, whose business prowess transformed KISS into one of the leading brands in music, sneers at the Kodak execs who snubbed his campaign. "They are not qualified to know anything. I have guitar picks older than they are," he says. But he holds no ill will towards The Donald.
During the 2016 presidential race between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, Simmons doesn't outwardly endorse the Republican candidate, but praises him for shaking up the status quo. "He doesn't want your money. This guy funds his own campaign, and he is going to say things that tens of millions of people actually say quietly because politically it's 'incorrect,'" he tells People magazine.
He continues in an Associated Press interview, "If I were him, I'd pull back on some of the stuff, but, hey, that's his decision. Hillary Clinton is much more experienced, been around the world. But at the end of the day, who cares what I think? You should go into the voting booth and vote your conscience."
Simmons isn't so magnanimous after the election, however, when Trump's win incites an outcry among liberal celebrities, whom he tells to "shut their pie holes."
Simmons, whose business prowess transformed KISS into one of the leading brands in music, sneers at the Kodak execs who snubbed his campaign. "They are not qualified to know anything. I have guitar picks older than they are," he says. But he holds no ill will towards The Donald.
During the 2016 presidential race between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton, Simmons doesn't outwardly endorse the Republican candidate, but praises him for shaking up the status quo. "He doesn't want your money. This guy funds his own campaign, and he is going to say things that tens of millions of people actually say quietly because politically it's 'incorrect,'" he tells People magazine.
He continues in an Associated Press interview, "If I were him, I'd pull back on some of the stuff, but, hey, that's his decision. Hillary Clinton is much more experienced, been around the world. But at the end of the day, who cares what I think? You should go into the voting booth and vote your conscience."
Simmons isn't so magnanimous after the election, however, when Trump's win incites an outcry among liberal celebrities, whom he tells to "shut their pie holes."
No comments:
Post a Comment