Entertainment
Guns N’ Roses reveals dates for 2026 World Tour and more
Guns N’ Roses is gearing up for a huge return to the stage.
The band has officially unveiled the dates for their massive 2026 world tour, along with the surprise announcement of two new singles, their first releases since 2023.
The tour launches on March 28 in Monterrey, Mexico, and stretches across more than 60 shows.
From there, the rock legends will travel through South America and then head to Europe, with scheduled stops in countries including Ireland, Poland, Germany, Belgium, the Netherlands, and France.
The group will make its way back to North America in July for the final leg of the tour.
Fans will also get new music before the band hits the road.
Guns N’ Roses confirmed that Nothin’ and Atlas will drop on Dec. 2. The tracks follow their 2023 single The General and mark their first new music in nearly a year.
While the band has released scattered singles over the last decade, their last full-length album, Chinese Democracy, arrived back in 2008.
Their 2026 setlist is expected to blend “classic hits and deep cut fan favorites,” with the new songs added into the mix.
One standout moment of the tour will be a special performance at the Rose Bowl in Southern California, the band’s first time returning to the venue in more than 30 years, making it a major milestone for longtime fans.
The announcement closely follows the release of the band’s deluxe Live Era ’87–’93 box set, which features remastered audio and updated artwork in a limited-edition pressing.
For those hoping to secure tickets early, a pre-sale for North American dates begins on Dec. 3 at 10 a.m. local time, PEOPLE reports.
Fans must register online by Dec. 1 at 11:59 p.m. ET to participate. Members of the Nightrain Fan Club will have access to additional pre-sales internationally before the general on-sale.
More details and tickets are available on the band’s official site, gunsnroses.com.
With new music, a massive tour, and a historic hometown return, 2026 is shaping up to be a big year for Guns N’ Roses.
All Guns N’ Roses’ 2026 tour dates:
- Saturday, March 28 2026 – Monterrey, Mexico // Tecate Pa’l Norte*
- Wednesday, April 1 2026 – Porto Alegre, Brazil // Estádio Beira Rio
- Saturday, April 4 2026 – São Paulo, Brazil // Monsters Of Rock*
- Tuesday, April 7 2026 – São José do Rio Preto, Brazil – Alberto Bertelli Lucatto
- Friday, April 10 2026 – Rio de Janeiro, Brazil – Engenhao
- Sunday, April 12 2026 – Vitoria, Brazil // Estádio Estadual Kleber José de Andrade
- Wednesday, April 15 2026 – Salvador, Brazil // Arena Fonte Nova
- Saturday, April 18 2026 – Fortaleza, Brazil // Arena Castelão
- Tuesday, April 21 2026 – Sao Luiz, Brazil // Estádio Governador João Castelo “Castelão”
- Saturday, April 25 2026 – Belém do Para, Brazil // Estadio Olimpico do Para “Mangueirão”
- Tuesday, May 5, 2026 – Hollywood, FL // Hard Rock Hollywood
- Thursday, May 7, 2026 – Daytona Beach, FL // Welcome To Rockville Festival*
- Thursday, June 4 2026 – Gliwice, Poland // PreZero Arena Gliwice
- Saturday, June 6 2026 – Gliwice, Poland // PreZero Arena Gliwice
- Wednesday, June 10 2026 – Dublin, Ireland // 3Arena
- Friday, June 12 – Sunday, June 14 2026 – Donington, UK // Download Festival*
- Thursday, June 18 2026 – Amsterdam, Netherlands // Ziggo Dome
- Saturday, June 20 2026 – Amsterdam, Netherlands // Ziggo Dome
- Tuesday, June 23 2026 – Berlin, Germany // Uber Arena
- Thursday, June 25 2026 – Berlin, Germany // Uber Arena
- Sunday, June 28 2026 – Antwerp, Belgium // AFAS Dome
- Wednesday, July 1 2026 – Paris, France // Accor Arena
- Friday, July 3 2026 – Paris, France // Accor Arena
- Thursday, July 23 2026 – Raleigh, NC // Cater-Finley Stadium
- Sunday, July 26 2026 – Saratoga Springs, NY // Saratoga Performing Arts Center
- Wednesday, July 29 2026 – Tinley Park, IL // Credit Union 1 Amphitheatre
- Saturday, August 1 2026 – Hershey, PA // Hersheypark Stadium
- Wednesday, August 5 2026 – Toronto, ON // Rogers Stadium
- Saturday, August 8 2026 – Shakopee, MN // Mystic Lake Amphitheater
- Wednesday, August 12 2026 – East Rutherford, NJ // MetLife Stadium
- Sunday, August 16 2026 – St. Louis, MO // Busch Stadium
- Wednesday, August 19 2026 – Kansas City, MO // Morton Amphitheater
- Saturday, August 22 2026 – Las Vegas, NV // Allegiant Stadium
- Wednesday, August 26 2026 – Edmonton, AB // Commonwealth Stadium
- Saturday, August 29 2026 – Vancouver, BC // BC Place
- Wednesday, September 2 2026 – San Diego, CA // Snapdragon Stadium
- Saturday, September 5 2026 – Pasadena, CA // Rose Bowl
- Wednesday, September 9 2026 – Arlington, TX // Globe Life Field
- Saturday, September 12 2026 – Ridgedale, MO // Thunder Ridge Nature Arena
- Wednesday, September 16 2026 – San Antonio, TX // Alamodome
- Saturday, September 19 2026 – Atlanta, GA // Truist Park
Entertainment
Did Charlie Puth audition for ‘Wicked’ film?
Charlie Puth did not audition for Wicked.
The popstar is shutting down the recent buzz claiming he auditioned for the blockbuster films.
The singer took to X on Saturday, November 29, and cleared the speculation in a joke-filled reply after a fan account shared a list of artists who were rumoured to have read for roles in the two-part movie.
“I never auditioned for Wicked I would be so bad lol,” wrote Puth, 33.
The list included some huge names such as Jennifer Lopez, Shawn Mendes, Renee Rapp, Katy Perry, Harry Styles, Amanda Seyfried, Nick Jonas, Joe Jonas, Dove Cameron, Lea Michele and Jessie J.
While Puth was never in the running, several of those stars have previously confirmed that they did audition for the films.
Amanda Seyfried has been open about how badly she wanted the role of Glinda. She explained her audition experience in 2022, saying she was juggling filming The Dropout while preparing for the musical tryout.
“Last summer while I was playing Elizabeth [The Dropout], on the weekends I was auditioning in person to play Glinda in the movie version of Wicked — because I wanted it that much,” she told Backstage.
She shared that she sacrificed her Sundays just to go for it.
Even before Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo were cast as Glinda and Elphaba, other big names were linked to the project.
Lady Gaga had been attached to the film as Elphaba during early development before director changes were made, according to OK! Magazine.
Actress Cristin Milioti also confirmed she tried for the role. She told her audition story on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, explaining how she was excited but nervous to sing in person again after COVID.
She recalled being asked to belt the hardest music and said, “I open my mouth and the sound that escaped me is something I will hear on my deathbed. It was disgusting. I sounded terrible.”
Despite many stars chasing those iconic roles, Charlie Puth wasn’t one of them—and he’s more than happy to set the record straight himself.
Entertainment
Marcello Hernandez’s ‘SNL’ impression of Sebastian Maniscalco gets reaction
American comedian and actor Sebastian Maniscalco reacted after Marcello Hernandez did an impression of him on Saturday Night Live.
Hernandez’s parody of the 52-year-old didn’t only get his stamp of approval but also drew a flattering reaction.
“He did a great job. I was very flattered that they did that,” the Bookie actor said, revealing that the SNL star had even asked him to join the sketch for a cameo but he couldn’t make it due to prior commitments.
“He actually called me on Thursday before the show, said, ‘Do you want to come in and do a cameo at the end of it?’ I couldn’t do it because I was performing in Palm Springs,” he explained.
“But I thought this kid did a fantastic job,” the comic added, per a preview clip of his upcoming appearance on The Drew Barrymore Show on December 2.
Known for his physical comedy style and exaggerated speech, Maniscalco noted that he hasn’t made his debut at the NBC comedy special yet but the impersonation was “absolutely all in love.”
He even joked if Barrymore could help him out as a member of the Five-Timers Club, notably the actress has hosted six times.
“I’m here today to kind of petition — and maybe you could help me,” The Irishman actor said. “You’re taking all the spots!”
The viral SNL sketch was aired during the November 15 episode hosted by Glen Powell.
Entertainment
Avatar: Fire and Ash” director James Cameron on generative AI: “That’s horrifying to me
Much of what we see from the Earth-like moon of Pandora, the fantastical setting for the “Avatar” franchise, comes from a soundstage in Los Angeles, where scenes from the second and third movies were filmed. “We had to build an ocean,” director James Cameron said. “We could make a two-meter swell. We could make a wave crash up on a shoreline if we built the shoreline.”
Sigourney Weaver, Zoe Saldaña and other actors shot their underwater scenes in the nearly 250,000-gallon tank. Digital artists then took those shots, called performance captures, as a template to render the final versions of the characters we see on screen.
“So, performance capture, we use a whole bunch of cameras to capture the body performance of the actor,” Cameron explained. “And we use a single camera (or now we use actually two) to video their face. They’re in a close-up 100% of the time. But there’s a beautiful thing about being in a close-up 100% of the time. It’s very much like theater rehearsal.”
Mark Fellman | © 2025 20th Century Studios
“Avatar: Fire and Ash” is the third film in the series. It tells the story of the indigenous Na’vis’ fight to defend their paradise from colonizing humans.
Cameron created these stories and this world. He’s always been a dreamer, even as a kid in rural Canada. “I lived in a world of my imagination – it was comic books, it was science fiction. I read a lot. There were movies, TV shows,” he said. “I mean, I had a pretty fertile imagination.”
20th Century Studios
Cameron moved to Los Angeles with his parents as a teen. He briefly attended community college, where studies included marine biology, before dropping out and picking up odd jobs, including truck driving.
So, how did he go from blue collar to Hollywood? “Watching ‘Star Wars,'” he said. “I used to put my headphones on and listen to fast electronic music and imagine space battles, hyperkinetic space battles with all kinds of maneuvers and energy weapons, and people going through debris fields and all that. If the things I’m seeing in my mind can be the same things that are in a movie that’s the number one movie in movie history, then I’ve got a salable imagination.”
He returned to school, although not in an official capacity. “I started to study visual effects, and the way I did it was, I didn’t have the money to go to USC or anything like that. So what I used to do is, I’d go down to USC, I’d go bury myself on a Saturday, when I wasn’t driving a truck, in the stacks. And I’d read everything I could find on optical printing and front-screen projection and, you know, sodium process traveling mattes. All self-taught. I’d Xerox all these scholarly papers, put them all in binders. And I had this shelf full of black binders that had essentially a graduate course in visual effects and cinematography.”
He found jobs in visual effects departments and production design, rising through the ranks quickly due to his technical knowledge.
Then, in the early 1980s, Cameron, inspired by a literal dream about a robot exoskeleton, co-wrote and directed “The Terminator.” The movie put him on the map, and proved he could turn his imagination into reality.
But CGI wasn’t available at the time; the effects were done largely through puppeteering. “We just figured out how to do it all practically,” Cameron said.
He showed us around his private museum in Los Angeles, full of movie props from his films, including “Aliens,” where puppeteers brought Sigourney Weaver’s powerlifter – and the Alien Queen – to life. Of the Alien Queen, Cameron said, “Her head had, I think, seven or eight different axes of movement that were controlled by cables that went basically out her butt. And we had to hide all that stuff, so there was a lotta steam and smoke and backlight and things like that.”
CBS News
Cameron’s first use of CGI came with the science fiction movie “The Abyss,” It was also his first cinematic foray into another one of his fascinations: the deep sea. His second venture into an oceanic film? “Titanic.” It became the then-highest-grossing movie of all time. Cameron took home three Oscars himself.
But the film itself was never the priority for Cameron: He said he wrote the script in order to explore the wreck of the Titanic. “It was a little bit of a means to an end, you know?” he said. “I thought, ‘I can just go do this. All right, I need a story. Okay, ‘Romeo and Juliet.’ You know, young, doomed love on the Titanic.’ Boom! Like, instantaneous.”
He found a way to use Hollywood to invest in his passion for scientific exploration. “Yeah, exactly,” he said. “And then I had so much fun on my expedition that was to shoot Titanic for the movie, that I basically took an eight-year hiatus from Hollywood, an eight-year sabbatical. And I did subsequently six more expeditions for a total of seven, before I started ‘Avatar.'”
Cameron wrote the treatment for “Avatar” before “Titanic,” but it wasn’t until 2005 that he thought the current technology could support his vision. And even then, he wasn’t sure the business of Hollywood would go along. “For years, there was this sense that, ‘Oh, they’re doing something strange with computers and they’re replacing actors,’ when in fact, once you really drill down and you see what we’re doing, it’s a celebration of the actor-director moment,” he said.
“Now, go to the other end of the spectrum, and you’ve got generative AI, where they can make up a character,” he continued. “They can make up an actor. They can make up a performance from scratch with a text prompt. It’s like, no. That’s horrifying to me. That’s the opposite. That’s exactly what we’re not doing.”
Cameron’s “Avatar: Fire and Ash” opens next months.
So, how does he feel a few weeks from the premiere? “Nervous!” he laughed. “Are you kidding? Always. Always.”
Despite the uncertainty, Cameron is still undaunted, and enamored by the unknown. “I’m attracted, in case you haven’t noticed, by things I don’t know how to do,” he said. “Because you grow and you learn. If I’m still making movies when I got an oxygen tube up my nose and I’m 87 or whatever, should I be that lucky, I want to still be doing things I don’t know how to do.”
WEB EXCLUSIVE: Watch an extended interview with James Cameron (Video)
To watch a trailer for “Avatar: Fire and Ash,” click on the video player below:
For more info:
Story produced by John Goodwin. Editor: Carol Ross.
See also:
FROM THE ARCHIVES: James Cameron on deep-sea exploration (YouTube Video)
The Oscar-winning director of “Titanic” long had a fascination with life on the ocean floor. With cameras and deep-sea submersibles, James Cameron has brought the extreme environments of Earth’s oceans to movie screens in the documentaries “Ghosts of the Abyss” and “Aliens of the Deep.” In this Jan. 30, 2005 “Sunday Morning” story, Jerry Bowen talked with Cameron, along with marine biologist Djanna Figueroa, seismologist Maya Tolstoy, and astrobiologists Tori Hoehler and Kevin Hand, about how exploring our planet’s most hostile landscapes can help in planning future manned missions to Mars and beyond.
-
Sports7 days agoWATCH: Ronaldo scores spectacular bicycle kick
-
Entertainment7 days agoWelcome to Derry’ episode 5 delivers shocking twist
-
Politics7 days agoWashington and Kyiv Stress Any Peace Deal Must Fully Respect Ukraine’s Sovereignty
-
Business7 days agoKey economic data and trends that will shape Rachel Reeves’ Budget
-
Tech5 days agoWake Up—the Best Black Friday Mattress Sales Are Here
-
Fashion7 days agoCanada’s Lululemon unveils team Canada kit for Milano Cortina 2026
-
Tech5 days agoThe Alienware Aurora Gaming Desktop Punches Above Its Weight
-
Politics1 week ago53,000 Sikhs vote in Ottawa Khalistan Referendum amid Carney-Modi trade talks scrutiny


