San Diego Union-Tribune

POLLSTAR: LIVE EVENTS INDUSTRY LOST $30B IN ’20

- BY MESFIN FEKADU Fekadu writes for The Associated Press.

Due to the global coronaviru­s pandemic, concert trade publicatio­n Pollstar puts the total lost revenue for the live events industry in 2020 at more than $30 billion.

Pollstar on Friday released its year-end report, explaining that the live events industry should have hit a record-setting $12.2 billion this year, but instead it incurred $9.7 billion in losses.

The company added that the projected $30 billion figure in losses includes “unreported events, ancillary revenues, including sponsorshi­ps, ticketing, concession­s, merch, transporta­tion, restaurant­s, hotels, and other economic activity tied to the live events.”

Those losses accounted for more than $8 billion.

In March hundreds of artists announced that their current or upcoming tours would need to be postponed or canceled because of the pandemic.

While a small number of performers have played drive-in concerts and others have held digital concerts, the majority of artists have not played live in 2020.

With just a few months on the road, Elton John’s “Farewell Yellow Brick Road Tour” tops the year’s Top 100 Worldwide Tours list with $87.1 million grossed between Nov. 30 through March 7. John’s tour ranked No. 2 last year with $212 million grossed.

Celine Dion came in second this year with $71.2 million, followed by Trans-Siberian Orchestra ($58.2 million), U2 ($52.1 million) and Queen + Adam Lambert ($44.6 million). Post Malone, Eagles, Jonas Brothers, Dead & Company and Andrea Bocelli rounded out the Top 10.

“It’s been an extraordin­arily difficult year for the events industry, which has been disproport­ionately impacted by the coronaviru­s. As painful as it is to chronicle the adversity and loss our industry and many of our colleagues faced, we understand it is a critical undertakin­g toward facilitati­ng our recovery, which is thankfully on the horizon,” Ray Waddell, president of Oak View Group’s Media & Conference­s Division, which oversees Pollstar and VenuesNow, said in a statement Friday.

“With vaccines, better testing, new safety and sanitizati­on protocols, smart ticketing and other innovation­s, the live industry will be ramping up in the coming months, and we’re sure that at this time next year we’ll have a very different story to tell.”

 ?? JACQUES BOISSINOT AP ?? Singer Celine Dion during her first World Tour in 2019. Her tour this year was second on the list for highest-grossing tour before live events were shut down.
JACQUES BOISSINOT AP Singer Celine Dion during her first World Tour in 2019. Her tour this year was second on the list for highest-grossing tour before live events were shut down.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States