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Post by Admin on Jun 21, 2019 17:44:44 GMT
Heart-warming footage shows the moment a New York City subway car full of passengers spontaneously bursts into song together. The touching sing-along came after a passenger in walked into the middle of the train playing the Backstreet Boys hit song ‘I Want it That Way’ on his speaker. Others started to sing along and before long the entire carriage joined in. The footage shared on Twitter by Joel Wertheimer, a civil rights attorney, has since been viewed more than 1.5 million times, with thousands of people also sharing the post.
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Post by Admin on Jul 12, 2019 17:43:29 GMT
The Backstreet Boys kicked off their "DNA" world tour a few months ago in Europe, but now they're bringing their production to North America, starting Friday night in Washington, D.C. http://instagram.com/p/BzoM5xjDzKc As Backstreet's Howie Dorough explains, even if you saw the Boys in Vegas during their residency show, "Larger Than Life," this tour will be a whole new experience. http://instagram.com/p/BzvrAzwjlEn "We kicked [the tour] off in Europe early May and I'm glad we were able to do that, because we've really gotten it perfected for America," he told ABC Radio. "It's a great show. It's totally different than our Vegas residency...I think a lot of people were thinking, 'Oh, it must be Vegas, just taking it around the world,' but it's a totally brand-new show," he continued.
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Post by Admin on Jul 21, 2019 17:38:19 GMT
Backstreet Boys’ Howie D may be on the DNA World Tour with the guys, but he’s still slaying the solo game! The singer caught up with HollywoodLife for an EXCLUSIVE chat about his new record, Broadway dreams, & being a dad. Howie D, 45, is best known as a member of the Backstreet Boys, but his solo music is not to be missed. The talented singer now juggles being a member of one of the biggest boy bands in the world with a budding solo career and his long-time bandmates have been supportive from day one, the singer tells us in an EXCLUSIVE interview. “When we were over in Europe, the release of ‘No Hablo Español’ came out and Nick [Carter] had heard it maybe like a week before and he was like ‘Dude, this is great stuff! I’m really blown away.'” Brian [Littrell] was into it, everyone was into it. They’re all really supportive of me,” he tells HL. The singer’s new album, Which One Am I?, is a vibrant kids record that serves as the ultimate ode to his family. Howie shares two kids, James, 10, and Holden, 6, with his wife Leigh, and knew this was the right time to make a family oriented record. “You know, It’s something that was never in the cards I thought when I first started Backstreet Boys. Twelve years ago… if you were to ask me, I would have been like ‘are you crazy?’ but we all grow up and I got married, I have a beautiful family, I have two boys, and when my oldest one, who’s now ten but when he was five,” he says in the interview.
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Post by Admin on Jul 26, 2019 17:32:18 GMT
Backstreet Boys member Brian Littrell is violating the Milton city code by running an event venue out of a mansion he is renting, according to Channel 2 Action News. The city denied Littrell’s request for a special use permit to use the Freemanville Road property as an event space for technical reasons, but it appears he has continued to host events there. The station said it hasn’t been able to reach Littrell for comment. The Backstreet Boys were inescapable during the 90s. They released a new single “Don’t Go Breaking My Heart” last year. In a statement by the city, Milton officials said they spoke with Littrell on Monday and told him not to host events at the property, known as the Freemanville Estate.
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Post by Admin on Jul 30, 2019 23:06:38 GMT
A member of the seminal boy band Backstreet Boys has responded to accusations that he is not in line with Milton’s zoning laws, Channel 2 Action News reported Monday. This comes after a WSB-TV story Thursday reported how Brian Littrell had been using a Freemanville Road property as an unlicensed event space. “Any and all activities that have occurred at the Freemanville Estate have been private gatherings consisting of Littrell’s friends and family,” part of the statement read. The city previously indicated that Milton officials had spoken with Littrell last Monday, telling him not to host events at the property — known as the Freemanville Estate, which he rents. The property’s website has an availability calendar and a contact page that says “let’s start planning!” Another concern was what neighbors reported was a helipad. The neighbors worried that helicopters could scare nearby horses in rural Milton.
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