Jennifer Lopez received hate from the public for reportedly causing the cancelation of her This Is Me... Now Tour shows.
Attendees of the seven last shows of Lopez's 2024 North American Tour received a notification about their cancelation before the leg even started. The stops in question were in Cleveland, Nashville, Raleigh, Atlanta, Tampa, New Orleans and Houston.
Now, Lopez has been blamed for it due to her "ridiculously high" ticket prices.
Why Did Jennifer Lopez Cancel Her Shows?
Ticketmaster's website updated the This Is Me... Now Tour and showed the message, "Unfortunately, the Event Organizer has had to cancel your event. No action is required to obtain a refund."
According to EW, the cancelation was due to a "logistical issue through the promoter," thus, it would not be rescheduled.
However, rumors claimed the majority of the seats were unsold before Lopez decided to call off the dates.
On X, conspiracy theorists and haters slammed Lopez for canceling the shows when she set a whopping amount of ticket prices in the first place.
"charging upwards of $1500 thinking she's Beyoncé," one wrote, while another added, "Nobody's really checking for @JLo like that. Janet Jackson isn't even charging $1500 per ticket."
"Instead of having to deal with loads of unsold seats, Jennifer Lopez and Janet Jackson should do a tour together and play at places like Radio City Music Hall or the Chicago Theater. They can charge $100 and make money. I would go!!" a third suggested.
Another shared, "Jennifer Lopez has canceled several stops on her upcoming tour without explanation. Sources say it's because those venues don't support AutoTune."
Will There Be More Jennifer Lopez's This Is Me... Now Tour Dates?
New reports said Lopez would announce new tour dates soon, but whether it would be held at the same venues was not disclosed.
For now, fans can look forward to seeing Lopez in the following shows:
June 26 - Orlando, Florida, at Kia Center
June 28 - Miami, Florida, at Kaseya Center
July 2 - Austin, Texas, at Moody Center
July 3 - Edinburg, Texas, at Bert Ogden Arena
July 5 - San Antonio, Texas, at Frost Bank Center
July 6 - Dallas, Texas, at American Airlines Center
July 9 - Phoenix, Arizona, at Footprint Center
July 11 - Los Angeles, California, at Kia Forum
July 13 - Anaheim, California, at Honda Center
July 16 - San Francisco, California, at Chase Center
July 17 - Sacramento, California, at Golden 1 Center
July 19 - Palm Springs, California, at Acrisure Arena
July 20 - Las Vegas, Nevada, at T-Mobile Arena
July 22 - Denver, Colorado, at Ball Arena
July 24 - Tulsa, Oklahoma, at BOK Center
July 26 - Rosemont, Illinois, at Allstate Arena
July 27 - Indianapolis, Indiana, at Gainbridge Fieldhouse
July 30 - Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, at PPG Paints Arena
July 31 - Detroit, Michigan, at Little Caesars Arena
August 2 - Toronto, Ontario, at Scotiabank Arena
August 5 - Montreal, Québec, at Bell Centre
August 7 - Boston, Massachusetts, at TD Garden
August 9 - Belmont Park, New York, at UBS Arena
August 10 - Newark, New Jersey, at Prudential Center
August 13 - Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, at Wells Fargo Center
August 14 - Washington, DC, at Capital One Arena
August 16 - New York, New York, at Madison Square Garden
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