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There is nothing more worrying than seeing an artist to stop his concert to address someone from the public, and not precisely to dedicate a song or congratulate him for his birthday.

Several Katy Perry fans who went to their show in Nevada, on Saturday, May 17, were taken out of wave for a few seconds to see that the singer interrupted her majestic presentation in the middle of a song to point to a somewhat ‘peculiar’ fan.

Apparently it was a fan, whom Katy referred as Kyle, who had constantly sending private messages to Orlando Bloom, Perry’s partner and father of his daughter Daisy.

When the music stopped completely in front of dozens of people, Katy bent down, looked into the fan’s eyes and said:

“I know why you are here. Listen, if you keep sending direct messages to my man … You’ve been doing it for months, since the residence began. You did not come to see me sing. If you continue sending messages to my man, I will ask to be taken out. Seriously, get your own life. I am his wife. He is mine.”

“He doesn’t love you, Kyle. I am his wife. I’m his, he’s mine … get away from a damn time.”

Was everything planned?

After what happened, it was learned that Perry’s words were not spontaneous: they were carefully scripted and were part of the introduction to the next song he would play, his 2024 I’M His, He’s Mine single.

Although the show in Nevada was an explosion of humor and energy, the world tour of Katy Perry – composed for 84 dates – has crossed several ups and downs. Despite the success in international markets, such as Australia, where he already exhausted entries for his concerts next month, the US stage has had difficulty filling stadiums, generating concern among his followers and critics.

The production of the tour has also been the target of teasing on social networks, with some users qualifying the assembly as “economic” or even “careless.” A viral tiktok ironized:

“Katy Perry said zero budget for the Lifetime tour!” Accompanied by a clip where he is seen facing his dancers during the song ET, wielding what looks like a toy light saber.

The comparisons were swift:

“It looks like a Temu de Gaga version”, One user wrote, while another alluded to the bankrupt “Wonka Experience” in Glasgow. There were also those who pointed out that Perry looked “boring” in some filtered videos of the show.

One of the most criticized aspects has been the use of images apparently generated by artificial intelligence as part of the visual fund. During the interpretation of the song Lifeses, smiling faces and happy scenes are projected, which far from representing the public in real time, seem to have been created by Ia. In social networks, several spectators described this aesthetic choice as “little worked” and “low budget.”

With New York Post information


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