Tate McRae, Gwen Stefani and Katy Perry are also set to take the stage for the benefit show, as will John Mayer and Dave Matthews performing together for the first time.
Gwen Stefani is reuniting with No Doubt to perform at the FireAid benefit concert to raise money for the victims of the Los Angeles wildfires. The benefit concert will occur on Thursday, Jan. 30 at the Intuit Dome and Kia Forum.
The FireAid benefit concert with Lady Gaga, Billie Eilish, Green Day and other major acts will take place Jan. 30 in LA. Here's what you need to know.
Live Nation, AEG, and the Azoff Company's FireAid benefit concert will also feature a Gwen Stefani/No Doubt reunion.
Gwen Stefani’s No Doubt is reuniting for the FireAid benefit concerts to raise money for those most affected by the Los Angeles wildfires. Taking place at both the Intuit Dome and Kia Forum on Jan. 30,
As Southern California begins to rebuild in the wake of the wildfires, Live Nation is assembling some of Hollywood's biggest talents in support.
Dave Matthews and John Mayer are to perform together for the first time at “FireAid,” a benefit event to help rebuild communities destroyed by the California wildfires.
The biggest names in pop, rock and country are coming together to raise funds for victims of the Palisades and Eaton wildfires and assist with the recovery.
The Shelli, Irving and Azoff families, in conjunction with Live Nation and AEG Presents, have officially announced the FireAid Benefit Concert, which will raise funds to rebuild the communities devastated by the Los Angeles wildfires and to support efforts to prevent future fire disasters throughout Southern California.
Relief efforts for the still-burning fires in California have now reached the “massive benefit concert by very famous people” stage of developments, as organizers for an upcoming event titled FireAid have now sent out their initial line-up for a benefit concert.
Amazon, Universal, Paramount and Max have cancelled premieres of "Unstoppable," "Wolf Man," "Better Man" and "The Pitt" amid fires.
Netflix CEO Ted Sarandos says that David Lynch had been working on a limited series for the streamer, but it went unrealized due to COVID.