Rolling Stone: “Kid Cudi, 21 Savage Top 2023 Hard Festival Lineup”

Kid Cudi, 21 Savage, and Skrillex — doing a back-to-back DJ set with Four Tet — lead the packed lineup for the 15th annual Hard Festival, which will return to Los Angeles for the first time in nearly 10 years this summer.

The lineup features a mix of artists from across the electronic and dance music spectrum, as well as an array of rappers and a few alternative artists as well. Other big names on the lineup include Ludacris, Fat Joe, Dillon Francis, Black Coffee, Oliver Tree, Boys Noize, Emo Nite, the Martinez Brothers, and a live performance from Belfast duo Bicep.

Read more at RollingStone.com.

Kx5 LA Coliseum Set Now On Apple Music

In December 2022, Kaskade (aka Ryan Raddon) and deadmau5 (aka Joel Zimmerman) came together under their Kx5 alias for a show at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum. It ended up being dance music’s biggest headlining event of the year, drawing nearly 50,000 fans–and it’s available to stream in Spatial Audio with Dolby Atmos on Apple Music. Listen to the full set here.

Watch the official recap video on YouTube.

Sports Illustrated: “Breaking It Down: The Busch Light Clash”

This past weekend, the Busch Light Clash at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum kicked off NASCAR’s momentous diamond anniversary in historic fashion with one of the most memorable exhibitions the sport has seen in its 75-year history.

Unlike last year’s inaugural event at the Coliseum, Sunday’s race did not stand out for a fresh concept. Rather, it turned heads and left a lasting impression for the improvements it showed and the unique experience it provided, which instilled critical trust in NASCAR’s newfound willingness to think outside of the box.

Read more at SI.com.

Variety: “Hard Summer Music Festival Returns to L.A. for First Time in a Decade”

For the first time in 10 years, Hard Summer Music Festival is coming home to Los Angeles.

The 15th installment of the dance-focused festival, scheduled for Aug. 5-6, will position Hard Summer’s to-be-announced acts across stages at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, Exposition Park and BMO Stadium. This is the first time that all three venues will be used simultaneously for a live event, increasing the sense of novelty that surrounds Hard Summer’s return to downtown L.A. while catering to diverse tastes within the dance space.

While the Coliseum will welcome booming sets from bass mavens, BMO Stadium will host marquee main stage artists at the Hard Stage, with live performances to take place at the Purple Stage. Meanwhile, at Exposition Park, house and techno figureheads can be found at the Pink Stage and multi-genre talents at the Harder Stage.

Read more on Variety.com.

NBC Sports: “SuperMotocross changes last two playoff dates; will end its 2023 season earlier”

The inaugural SuperMotocross World Championship Playoffs final dates have changed, creating a more compact schedule for the three-race finale.

Playoff Race 1 will still kick off Saturday, September 9 at zMax Dragway, but Round 2 at Chicagoland Speedway has been moved to September 16 and the series finale will now be run on September 23.

The move was made to accommodate the newly released Pac-12 Conference college football schedule to avoid conflict with USC Trojans’ home games which are played at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum.

The season finale was initially set for October 14, which created some concern among riders and teams because of the extended length of the season – extending from early January through mid-October. The new combined season features 17 Supercross races and 11 rounds in the Motocross series and three playoff races for a total of 31 events.

Read more on NBCSports.com.

Pollstar: “Kx5’s Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum Performance Named Largest Single-Day Event Headlined By An Electronic Artist”

When Kaskade and deadmau5 joined forces to create Kx5, dance music fans knew they were witnessing something monumental. On Dec. 10, the two brought Kx5 to the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum, the historic performance breaking records and becoming the largest single-day concert headlined by an electronic music artist in North America.

Last weekend witnessed 50,000 fans as Kaskade and deadmau5 took the stage to celebrate the venue’s 100th anniversary.

Read more on Pollstar.com.

BizBash’s Most Innovative Meetings 2022

ServiceTitan’s Customer Conference—Pantheon 2022

The event—which drew the likes of Magic Johnson and Brad Paisley—was held fully outdoors on the grounds of an iconic Los Angeles stadium.

ServiceTitan—an all-in-one software solution for home and commercial contractors—last hosted its in-person customer conference in 2019. So as COVID rates were once again climbing during the planning process for the 2022 event, the team knew they had a big decision to make: Cancel, go virtual, or host a fully outdoor conference, where the virus’ transmission rates would arguably be lower.

Ultimately, they opted for the third option, marking the first time the event had been held fully outdoors—and the first time the venue had ever hosted an outdoor conference.

The conference, known as Pantheon, ultimately drew more than 2,000 attendees to the famed Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum on April 20, 2022. Produced by CDE Productions, the gathering featured 30 breakout sessions, six keynotes, and even a concert from country star Brad Paisley.

Read more about ServiceTitan’s award-winning event on BizBash.

LA Times: “Commentary: An ode to this year’s East L.A. Classic, the best event I’ve ever covered”

A fan sat grinning in the first row at the Coliseum, Roosevelt High red and yellow paint across his cheeks, holding up a small sheet of cardstock with six words scrawled in pen.

“I DON’T KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT FOOTBALL!!” it read.

You really didn’t need to Friday night. You just needed to be there to soak in the grandest East L.A. Classic in its centuries-long history.

To see the stands light up with the twinkle of thousands of cellphone lights.

To hear the booming chants of “East L-A” or “Boy-le Heights” not cheering on just a team, but a group of young men representing the heart of a storied community.

To feel the bass of a Black Eyed Peas halftime performance merging with the triumphant trumpets of the school bands, thumping through your toes, rattling your ribcage and shivering your soul.

The teams, the bands, the Peas, the fans — they painted a beautiful tapestry together, elevating a timeless tradition of Chicano pride and cultural history to a never-before-seen scale in a 16-8 Garfield win over Roosevelt. It was the most incredible game I’ve covered in my young career, leaving me and plenty others awestruck.

“That was one of the greatest athletic events I’ve ever attended,” said CIF executive director Ron Nocetti, who has seen quite a few in his day.

Even an hour before the varsity game kicked off, any sight of a red-and-gold or red-white-and-blue helmet was met with raucous cheers and corresponding boos. The stands bounced to Bad Bunny’s “Tití Me Preguntó” and Nio García’s “Te Boté,” a Garfield DJ urging the visiting-side crowd to get louder than Roosevelt’s.

Sure, those were sights typical of the Classic when played at East Los Angeles College. But the Coliseum brought a different atmosphere.

By Wednesday, 27,000 tickets had been sold, proceeds Coliseum president George Pla said would go in full toward the Roosevelt and Garfield athletic budgets — estimating about $250,000 for each school.

“I think here, since it’s bigger and it’s at a stadium where a lot of legends played, I think it’s going to bring out more people from the community,” Roosevelt senior Jared Andrade said.

He was correct. By halftime, first levels on both sides were nearly full, a crowd Pla estimated was more than 30,000.

That’s when the Coliseum went dark and the strobes went off, the Black Eyed Peas booming from the peristyle. Over the iconic torch at the Coliseum, an assembly of floating drones flashed colored lights that sketched the faces of each member of the group high into the Los Angeles sky as they performed.

Read more at LATimes.com.