The annual iHeartRadio Jingle Ball Tour presented by Capital One has become one of the holiday season’s most highly anticipated events, and 2023’s will be no different.
Look inside to see what big names in music will be rocking stages across the nation in celebration of Christmas cheer this year.
Shortly after being announced as the 2024 Super Bowl headliner, Usher will be giving viewers a taste of what they can expect from the NFL set via a live showing as part of this year’s Jingle Ball lineup.
The outing will come just weeks after he wraps up the final leg of his top-selling ‘My Way‘ Vegas residency on December 2.
Other superstars hitting the Jingle Ball stages are Nicki Minaj, Sza, Olivia Rodrigo, Niall Horan, OneRepublic, Flo Rida, AJR, Sabrina Carpenter, Miguel, Jelly Roll, Big Time Rush, NCT DREAM, and more.
Kicking off in Tampa on November 26, the trek will make stops in major U.S. markets like Chicago, Detroit, Dallas, Los Angeles, and more before wrapping up in Atlanta on December 14.
Fans unable to make it to this year’s Jingle jaunt can catch the ABC special airing December 21 from 8-10 pm ET/PT. The special will be available on demand and on Hulu the following day.
Click here for ticket information.
cool.
Shout out to my Sagittarius”s keep y’all head up and , keep moving on from the haters and keep getting$$$$$$$ money💰 in 2024. Baby.
Go sit in the corner and listen to Crackney Hoeston’s holiday album as nobody else is going to
It’s ALL about Queen Mariah’s holiday music, babay! Yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaas!
Slant critic Sal Cinquemani found that “one can’t help but think that One Wish: The Holiday Album is nothing more than damage control […] Houston’s voice just isn’t what it used to be – she warbles her way through an otherwise understated version of the contemporary classic […] and sings ‘Tiny little tots with their eyes all aglow/Will find it hard to sleep tonight’ on Mel Tormé’s “The Christmas Song” like she wants to eat them.
In 2014, Los Angeles Times critic Randy Lewis included One Wish on his listing of the “12 of the worst holiday albums of the last 20 years.”
Come on Chloe