Miami Herald (Sunday)

So long, 2023: ‘Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve’ ushers in another new year

- BY SARAH PASSINGHAM

Stop rockin’ around the Christmas tree, because it’s time to head to New York City — via your living room TV — for “Dick Clark’s New Year’s Rockin’ Eve With Ryan Seacrest,” ringing in the new year Sunday, Dec. 31, when the annual special is broadcast live on ABC from The Big Apple. Seacrest, who will undoubtedl­y be toasting his upcoming gig as the new host of “Wheel of Fortune” when the ball drops, will be joined by co-hosts from parties across America as everyone welcomes the new year with musical performanc­es to keep audiences dancing all the way into 2024.

Every year, partiers fill Times Square in New York City, braving the brisk weather to watch the ball drop. Top musical artists keep everyone celebratin­g warm with exciting live performanc­es you can’t help but rock out to, from stages in The Big Apple and Los Angeles. The at-home broadcast also features clips from celebratio­ns around the world as countries spanning every time zone count down the last seconds of 2023.

The superstars helping us ring in 2024 are Aqua (“Barbie Girl”); Doechii (“Persuasive”); Ellie Goulding (“By the End of the Night”); Janelle Monáe (“Lipstick Lover”); Loud Luxury, Two Friends and Bebe Rexha, who will perform their hit “If Only I”; Ludacris (“Stand Up”); Nile Rodgers and CHIC (“Good Times”); Paul Russell (“Lil Boo Thang”); and Reneé Rapp (“Snow Angel”). Hollywood rockers Thirty Seconds to Mars (“Seasons”) will also be putting on a show at the L.A. party. More musical acts performing from Times Square will be announced as we near the final days of the year, according to ABC.

Tuning in to the “New Year’s Rockin’ Eve” broadcast is an annual tradition for millions of viewers, and a convention that began all the way back to the eve of 1973. That year, feeling that the New Year’s Eve broadcast special had grown stale, Dick Clark, known primarily at the time as the long-standing host of the music and dance program “American Bandstand,” used his connection to youth culture to craft a new kind of special that would attract a younger audience.

Clark was the face of New Year’s Eve programmin­g until 2004 when the host suffered a stroke, leading “Live! With Regis and Kathie Lee” anchor Regis Philbin to step in that year. Clark returned to co-host the show in 2005 alongside “American Idol” host Seacrest, who celebrates his 19th Times Square New Year with this upcoming broadcast.

Clark and Seacrest co-hosted “New Year’s Rockin’ Eve” for years, ringing in their final new year together in

2012 before Clark’s death that August. Clark’s legacy lives on in the iconic broadcast he created, not just in its name but in its spirit. In an interview with Entertainm­ent Weekly last December, Seacrest shared what Clark taught him about what the show means to viewers, saying, “I think the idea for us is just to create a big party for people who don’t want to go anywhere, who want to just relax, be in their homes, be with their families, order pizza, order Buffalo wings, whatever it is.” Seacrest added, “We can bring the excitement, the energy and the new year to them. That’s what Dick told me all along. He goes, ‘We’re talking to people who are at home, but we bring the excitement to them through the show.’”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States