SM Entertainment Artists Celebrate 30 Years With SMTown Live L.A.
Known as one of Korea's 'big three' K-Pop agencies, SM brought members from acts dating back to 2003 as a part of their well-known SMTown Live concert series. This year marked the agency's 30th anniversary. It's been 13 years since the last SMTown Live in California, which took place in Anaheim.
More from The Hollywood Reporter
Bono Weighs in on Trump-Bruce Springsteen Drama: "There's Only One Boss in America"
Sean "Diddy" Combs' Assistant of 8 Years Accuses Him of Multiple Sexual Assaults During Testimony
Sean "Diddy" Combs' Ex-Assistant Testifies He Sexually Assaulted Her and Used Violence to Get His Way
It was an all-day affair for fans who opted to purchase the red-carpet ticket, which gave them a chance to see their idols relatively close and kicked off before 1 p.m. Some performers stopped by the barricade of fans to snap selfies or say a quick hello. Several groups teased new music and exciting performances. TVXQ, Super Junior, SHINee's Key and Minho, EXO's Suho, Chanyeol and Kai, Red Velvet, NCT 127, NCT Dream, WayV, aespa, Riize, Hearts2Hearts and SMTR25 all performed; NCT Wish was slated to perform but was unable to attend due to visa issues.
Girl group aespa seemingly teased their future plans at SMTown Live. 'We're about to release music very, very soon, so please stay tuned for that,' Winter told The Hollywood Reporter. The group described their performance of the night in one word: fire. The crowd went wild for the four-piece group, performing hits such as 'Whiplash' and 'Next Level.'
'It's our first time in L.A. for SMTown, and it's not every year that we can come here as a whole SMTown family,' Riize's Anton said before the concert. The group recently released their first album, Odyssey, which they previewed for fans during the L.A. show. 'It's a really special opportunity,' Anton continued.
TVXQ, the eldest of the crop of performers, told THR that fans could expect to hear the duo's older songs, a promise they delivered on when they sang their 2008 K-Pop classic 'Mirotic.' The undeniably catchy track had the entire stadium singing along. 'We just want this performance to be a place where we can show a lot of synergy between the senior and the junior groups,' member Changmin told THR.
Other groups like girl group Red Velvet decided to play older fan favorites. The three members who performed during the show surprised the audience with their 2018 song 'Bad Boy.' The group told THR they included it as a special treat. It was Red Velvet's first performance in L.A. in years, so they said they knew fans were 'going to love it.'
On the other end of the spectrum was SM's latest endeavor, girl group Hearts2Hearts, who were fresh off a Saturday performance at Wango Tango. The eight-member outfit expressed how excited they were to be in L.A. for the first time. Stella, a vocalist, said the group was particularly looking forward to the show's final song, 'Hope from Kwangya,' where all of the night's performers come together to sing farewell.
To perform that final song, all artists flocked to the stage and later waved goodbye to fans all together. SM Entertainment's next SMTown Live is set for June 28 in London. Another in Japan is scheduled for August.
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
Most Anticipated Concert Tours of 2025: Beyoncé, Billie Eilish, Kendrick Lamar & SZA, Sabrina Carpenter and More
Hollywood's Most Notable Deaths of 2025
Hollywood's Highest-Profile Harris Endorsements: Taylor Swift, George Clooney, Bruce Springsteen and More
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
2 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
35 TikTok Products Reviewers Are Basically Feral Over
A limited edition (!!) Eos Marshmallow "Super Balm" lip treatment from the brand's "secret menu" so good that reviewers say it's better than Carmex for healing and better than Summer Fridays for quality. Lip care that also tastes like you're perpetually eating a s'more for less than $5?? My friends, life is good. A container of Cinnamon Toast Crunch Cinnadust so absurdly delicious that all food will just become a mere canvas for putting Cinnadust on. Reviewers use this on everything from coffee to toast to yogurt to fries to popcorn to sweet potatoes to ice cream to — you know what, I'll let you decide on your cinnajourney for yourself. A cult-favorite Creamy Coconut fragrance rollerball reviewers compare to the pricey Sol de Janeiro version. 👀☀️ This is from TikTok-famous small business brand Kuumba Made, known for its luxury scents at ridiculously affordable prices, so you know they're on their game — reviewers especially love how ~beachy~ and long-lasting this sweet but elevated fragrance feels and how nicely it plays with other scents! Catrice "Instant Awake" Under Eye Brightener, which became the internet's holy grail — now in four shades! — for concealing and brightening dark circles under your eyes so fast that everyone's old concealers are doing double takes. This lightweight color-adapting formula is designed for truly ~invisible~ coverage that makes a drastic difference. A 2-in-1 nausea relief inhaler designed to work FAST on spontaneous nausea, motion sickness, morning sickness, and general queasiness (having a human body is hard). Dr. Melaxin "Peel Shot," a K-beauty staple for serious exfoliation that buffs out dead skin and leaves your complexion looking glowy and refreshed. If you're looking for an effective way to kick dead skin cells, blackheads, and sebum to the curb, this deeply penetrating rice water extract formula is just the ticket. A "spray and go" enzyme-based laundry stain remover that works its magic in one wash to help you instantly get rid of all that discolored dried sweat, oil stains, or deodorant residue on your favorite clothes, so you don't have to do any heavy scrubbing yourself. An SPF 50 Airy Sunstick Smoothing Bar, a K-beauty staple with a curved balm stick style that makes it super easy to apply, and a non-sticky, white cast-free formula that plays ABSURDLY well with makeup. If you're looking for a lightweight "soft matte" sunscreen to protect your skin, this is your new BFF. A set of biodegradable ultra-soft face towels inspired by the much pricier Clean Skin Club version — a lot of folks with sensitive skin and acne *swear* by these, particularly because it helps prevent exposing their skin to bacteria that may collect in ordinary reusable towels. A delightfully affordable instant foot peeling spray for anyone ready to go full YEEHAW!! on a pedicure, without the big salon price tag. This not only helps gently remove dead skin, but moisturizes dry and cracked heels, so you'll really get some refreshing bang for your buck. Lumify Eye Drops, a product so beloved by TikTok that despite being more $$ than other brands, it's the number one selling brand on Amazon right now. Reviewers swear by this for instant reduction in redness in their eyes, with visible differences within a minute of use. An app-controlled hybrid air purifier and nightstand with a HEPA filter for anyone playing Olympic levels of "making efficient use of space." This is an absolute game-changer for pet owners or allergy-prone humans, helping deodorize air and pick up pet dander (it even has a handy Pet Mode!). Reviewers love this for living areas and bedrooms alike. Olay Super Serum Body Wash that will make anyone with dry or dull skin REJOICE — this is packed with niacinamide, shea butter, and collagen peptides for 24-hour hydration that will make you feel as ~luminous~ as the sunshine. (Psst — this is the body wash version of their TikTok-famous, super effective facial Super Serum, so you KNOW they mean business.) A holy grail 5-in-1 Edgelift Curl Brush to define curls, waves, and coils, help prevent frizz, and create precise parts and sections. Reviewers of all curl and wave types are just short of shouting in the comments about how they never found a brush that worked as well as this one, and parents are especially grateful for how easily this untangles their kiddo's hair! A set of DEET-free handy mosquito-repelling bracelets for the ultimate in genius summer investments — these use essential oils, including citronella, to help stop those teensy vampires in their tracks. Tree Hut Vanilla Hand Wash infused with hyaluronic acid and ceramides to help hydrate and restore skin health so your hands can be super clean *and* super nourished. Now all you have to do is prepare to have the link to this handy whenever guests come over and are like, "WHERE DID YOU GET THIS DELECTABLE SOAP??" A set of Victoria's Secret–inspired seamless "invisible" underwear so soft and stretchy your butt will want to *sing* when you slide them on. This is a true holy grail underwear that doesn't show, doesn't ride up, and somehow manages to look cute all at the same time. A copy of Burn After Writing, a guided journal that tens of thousands of reviewers swear by — through a series of questions and thought experiments, it encourages people to take time away from their screens to explore their feelings, both new and old, so they can embrace meaningful ones and try to let others go. A double-sided cutting board *and* defrosting board with enough capabilities to make your lil' brain spin. One side of the board is made with food-grade stainless steel for cutting meat while the other is made with wheat straw for cutting fruits and veggies, helping save cutting board space and preventing cross-contamination. But reviewers also note that the stainless-steel side is *excellent* for defrosting meat faster, and the built-in garlic grinder on the wheat straw side is also a handy little time saver! A portable car vacuum that lets you explore the great outdoors or enjoy a particularly messy snack without worrying about it all piling up until you have to get an expensive deep car clean. With this easy peasy gadget, you can scoop it all up and leave your interiors looking brand spanking new. A pair of pretty pastel wireless over-the-ear headphones crafted to look like AirPods Max, so you can still enjoy the comfort and chic style of their iconic headphones without shelling out hundreds of dollars. These feature premium cushion padding, a built-in mic with the ability to take calls, 10 hours of playtime per charge, and surprisingly decent noise blocking for the price. A "holy grail" Coop Home Goods pillow designed for side, back, *and* stomach sleepers to get the best shut-eye of their lives. This medium-firm pillow has an entirely adjustable memory foam fill so you can mold it to the exact firmness, size, and shape you need. In other words: this is the One Pillow that will serve you well for a long, long time. A bottle of sulfate-free biotin shampoo that thousands of reviewers swear by for helping restore their hair and promote healthy hair growth over time. It also includes nourishing ingredients like rosemary oil, zinc, and coconut oil to help moisturize locks and give them a fuller, more volumized look. Ninja's *portable* Crispi Air Fryer system, perfect for people with high foodie standards and a chaotic schedule. This "all-in-one system" cooks your food in the same container you eat from, so you can pop your meal into the air fryer, cook it, and either pack it for later or eat it right out of the container. A "flossing toothbrush" with two layers of bristles — regular firm bristles and longer ones that are ten times thinner to clean deep in between your teeth and gums to mimic flossing. Reviewers love how deep the clean feels, and also how soft it is on sensitive teeth! An Uncrustables-inspired sandwich cutter that goes above and beyond the typical cookie cutter molds parents have been buying for years. This version is sharper and steadier, helping you get a clean cut and a more secure lock on the bread before you eat it fresh or put it in the freezer for meal prep batching. Expensive Uncrustables WHOMST? Monday Haircare Dry Shampoo with all the oil-absorbing, refreshing power of its competitors, *plus* added keratin for protection against frizz and breakage. The subtle gardenia scent is just extra extra credit after all that. A gaming/reading/laptop pillow to prop your hands up while you're playing video games, typing, or reading on your Kindle or iPad. This supports your arms for a more ~ergonomically-friendly~ experience whether you're in bed or on a couch, and even features a lil' side pocket for things like remote controls, glasses, and — of course — emergency snacky snacks. An airtight Deli ProKeeper so beloved that it's gone viral on FridgeTok (if you know, you KNOW). Not only does this free up space and clutter in the fridge, but it keeps deli meat and cheese so fresh that you'll actually get your darn money's worth by preventing waste. A two-slice slim toaster to fit virtually *anywhere* in your tiny kitchen, and to look gosh darn adorable doing it. Bonus — these long slots make it ideal for larger slices of bread, like your beloved sourdoughs. Death Wish Instant Coffee Packets so downright (dare I say, DANGEROUSLY) delicious that even the biggest coffee snobs you know might trade in their precious pour-overs. That is, if they can handle the 300mg of caffeine per cup 👀. A Yonanas fruit soft serve maker that magics any frozen fruit into an ice cream or sorbet texture so you can have a yummy frozen treat made to your *precise* favorite fruit combos. A lot of folks with dietary restrictions swear by this to get their ice cream kicks! A pack of dual-sided SneakErasers designed so that one side of them cleans scuffs, dirt stains, and grime, and the other side whitens them, restoring your sneakers and their soles to their former glory. Take THAT, passage of time. A jar of all-in-one decor paint, a chalk-style paint with a built-in primer designed to easily glide on furniture, upholstery, and any wood, metal, and glass surfaces. It's eco-friendly and dries with a chalky matte finish within 30 minutes of application, making it a boon for parents doing DIY projects. Reviewers use it on everything from old couches to front doors to dressers to fences. A magnetic microwave cover perfect for anyone whose Panera soup obsession has caused a few too many messes. This conveniently sticks to the top of your microwave so you always have it handy, and don't have to spend your Tuesday night peeling broccoli cheddar off the microwave walls.


Chicago Tribune
3 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
What to do in Chicago: Blackpink, Phish and the Renegade Craft Fair
Our picks for events in and around Chicago this weekend. Blackpink in your area … specifically Soldier Field. The K-pop phenomenon — Jennie, Rosé, Lisa and Jisoo — roll into town on the heels of the release of their latest single, 'Jump.' It's been out for about a week and has been streamed about 40 million times on Spotify. Get ready to considered heirs of the Grateful Dead more than 40 years after the band's Vermont founding, Phish has become its own thing. Jam with them this weekend during their three-night stand at the United Center. Can't make it, but still a die-hard fan? Watch their webcasts — but is it really the same?Dance on the beach to Claptone, Hayden James and more EDM at Volleywood. It's a 21+ party promising 'pure summer chaos in the heart of the city' along with a silent back at the Hideout this weekend with Chicago-based Brittney Carter and two Louisville artists, Horace Gaither and Otez. Groove to their personal blends of rap and mellow wraps up a seven-week run on July 19 with Teatro ZinZanni's ongoing latest production of 'Love, Chaos, and Dinner.' Perhaps best known from 'RuPaul's Drag Race,' BenDeLaCreme got her start in Chicago while a student at School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Expect circus arts, comedy, live music and comedian Louis Katz delivers his rapid-fire style of stand-up at Zanies this weekend. In an era when stand-up comedy can veer into confessional storytelling, Katz is a bit of a throwback. In his act, it's all about the you could go to a club show without going to a club? Go to West Fest: Empty Bottle programs its two stages. In addition to the usual summer festival fixings — food, music, craft vendors and kids activities — swing by for Pet Fest. Your pup can try out an obstacle course, paw painting and sniff around for other pet demos and for Renegade Craft Fair in Logan Square this weekend, its latest marketplace. More than 250 artists and artisans will offer their wares, from felted mushrooms and handcrafted leather footwear to tattoo art and maybe you prefer the thrill of the hunt. Head to Andersonville for its Vintage Market, featuring a lot of old stuff, from vintage kitsch to antique treasures. This is also a good option if you want to browse an outdoor market but the prospect of Renegade overwhelms. The Vintage Market features a manageable 30-some weekend doesn't really end on Sunday in the summertime, right? Stretch it into Tuesday or Wednesday with the Yeah Yeah Yeahs. Karen O and the rest of the gang will play the Chicago Theatre — and chances are, they'll play 'Maps,' their decades-old song that went viral last fall on social media.


The Verge
11 hours ago
- The Verge
How Knox Morris went from TikToker to rock star
Knox Morris stands onstage, stares out into the depths of the famed 9:30 Club in Washington, DC, and raises his arms to the heavens. The backing track to his song, a synth-heavy pop-punk number called 'Going, Going, Gone,' begins to play at an absolutely deafening volume. Morris grins through the first few staccato bars of the track, arms still up, then grabs the mic and starts to sing. In only 12 hours, Knox will perform this song for more than a thousand people, on the opening night of his first headlining tour — and yet somehow this is the first time he's heard his own album at concert volume. It's about noon on a spring Saturday, and he's currently sound-checking for the crew, his band, and exactly four other people. Morris is a lanky, pale, late-20s Ohio native who says 'dude' in basically every sentence, and right now his outfit — black joggers, Crocs, and a white hood-up hoodie that doesn't quite manage to cover up his mop of curly red hair — says 'up all night playing Fortnite' much more than 'up all night playing the hits.' But as Morris picks up the mic and begins prowling around the stage, he seems immediately and surprisingly comfortable up there. This is more than just a rehearsal for Morris, who goes simply by 'Knox' as an artist. Today is the first day of the tour in support of his first album, also called Going, Going, Gone. He made the album in a studio; perfected it by listening to tracks over and over in the pickup truck he bought himself when he got a record deal; and did all his tour rehearsals with earpieces in. Now he gets to hear how they sound at room-shaking levels. 'It's so much different hearing it coming out of the front,' he tells me a few minutes later, flopping into a chair after finishing his sound check. 'It's just a new energy.' Over the last couple of years, Morris has lived out more or less the exact dream of millions of aspiring musicians. In a few hours, when the 9:30 Club fills up with his fans, many of them will have found him via a single TikTok he made on a whim three years ago. His music, which he describes to me at one point as 'what if you took singer-songwriter music and put an electric guitar solo in it,' has shades of early-aughts bands like The All-American Rejects and Fall Out Boy but with the lyrics of someone who has screamed Vanessa Carlton and James Blunt songs in their car. People liked it: Morris quickly signed with Atlantic Records, started touring with his favorite bands, gained a following, sold out small shows, sold out bigger shows, and put out an album that has both radio hits and fan favorites. His tour will take him all over the US, and to Europe later this year. One argument you often hear about the internet is that it is a democratizer — great work can come from anywhere, and YouTube and TikTok have demolished the gatekeepers of old. (At least YouTube and TikTok would like you to believe that.) But even in the dream that tech platforms are selling, it doesn't often go this well. I asked multiple people surrounding Morris how typical his story is in the modern music business, and every single one of them laughed at me. 'This never happens,' more than one said. They chalk Morris' story up to a mix of his preternatural talent, his work ethic, and the fact that he's managed to tackle the music industry in exactly the right order. He's a wannabe rock star, turned social media star, turned actual rock star. He probably couldn't have done it without TikTok. But he also couldn't have done it with TikTok alone. A few minutes before the sound check, I find Morris in the back of his tour bus, parked right outside of the venue. He's eating breakfast and hanging out with his girlfriend, Alicae, and his writing and producing partner, Cameron Becker. Alicae is on her phone, and Cameron is playing Lego Star Wars: The Skywalker Saga on the bus's Xbox. This bus will be home for the next month or so, but they've only been on it for a day, and they're still in awe of the thing. 'People wonder what it's like being a touring rock star,' Morris says, laughing as he points to the two — two! — TVs showing Becker's ongoing assault on a bunch of lumbering Lego AT-ATs. 'We have an Xbox!' Not that long ago, all of this seemed impossible to Morris. It wasn't even really something he dreamed about. He grew up near Dayton, Ohio, loving music but not necessarily hoping to make any. 'All my friends started listening to Drake and Lil Wayne,' he says, 'and I was listening to these singer-songwriters like Train and Ed Sheeran and The Script.' Sheeran in particular became a fixation. It might be a pasty redhead thing. Around the time he enrolled at Ohio University, he saw a video of Sheeran performing live — which Sheeran almost always does alone, with a loop pedal, building songs in real time, one instrument and layer at a time. 'He was playing these massive rooms,' Morris says. 'And he was playing G-C-E-D.' Those four chords are so ubiquitous in pop music that Sheeran himself once sat in a courtroom playing them on guitar to win a copyright lawsuit. And with just those four chords, 'he would have rooms in the palm of his hand,' Morris says. 'I was like, dude, I just feel like I can do that.' Morris started to teach himself the guitar (he now knows at least four chords) and began writing music. Morris never really tried to do the looping thing, though. 'I can't now,' he says when I ask about whether he'd considered going Full Sheeran. 'It'd just be, like, another redheaded guy looping.' (This is a theme, by the way: In 2019, Morris played Sheeran's 'The A Team' for an American Idol audition, and apparently judge Katy Perry's immediate reaction was to wonder why the world needed another Ed Sheeran. The question evidently stuck in his mind.) Morris eventually dropped out of college and moved to Nashville, hoping to make it not as an artist but as a songwriter. He got a manager and started hanging out and writing songs with friends, including John Harvie, a singer-songwriter who went viral on TikTok in 2020 covering and writing pop-punk songs of his own. Through Harvie, Morris met people like Lynn Oliver-Cline, who runs a music management and publishing company called River House Artists. 'He had just been hustling,' Oliver-Cline remembers, 'working different jobs and sleeping on different couches.' Morris showed her some of the stuff he was writing, and she offered him a gig as a full-time songwriter at their first meeting. 'Once I got signed as a songwriter,' Morris says, 'it was like, dream accomplished, baby!' His full-time job was to create songs with and for other artists, which often means making a simple version of the track — known as a demo — and shopping it to artists who might be interested. Morris needed to make some demos, so in early 2022, he called up Becker, then just a producer and writer he'd met a few times in Nashville circles, and said he had a few songs he'd love some help recording. Becker also happened to live in Ohio, which meant Morris could go home and see his family. So he spent a couple of weeks in Columbus staying at Becker's house — well, technically, Becker's parents' house. 'We were in his mom's literal basement,' Morris says, 'and we made seven songs.' The songs weren't finished or polished because they were only supposed to be demos to play for other artists. Morris took them back to Nashville and showed them to Oliver-Cline. 'I just wanted to look like a good boy to my publisher,' Morris remembers, 'and be like, 'I have songs!'' He hadn't written them for anyone in particular, but he liked them, and thought maybe he and River House could shop them around. Morris and Oliver-Cline both remember what happened next in exactly the same way. Morris played the seven songs. Oliver-Cline laughed at him and told him he was nuts. 'Do you understand what you've done?' Oliver-Cline said to Morris. 'If you think I would let you give those songs to someone else, you are out of your mind.' Morris had never seriously thought about being an artist. He was just an Ed Sheeran knockoff, remember? But he also knew chances like this don't often come around again. And besides, Oliver-Cline was pretty clear about how this was all going to go. 'You are putting these sounds out.' The TikTok that made Morris a star is, in retrospect, not a particularly good TikTok. Morris wasn't a content creator — he only started his account after Oliver-Cline encouraged him to use the platform to test out his songs. 'They were like, 'Let's make an account, and just start posting one song; if nothing happens, you don't have to put out any other ones.'' By 2022, TikTok was already at the epicenter of the music industry. That was the year Lizzo's 'About Damn Time' rode a dance trend to a No. 1 spot on the Billboard charts, and everyone was singing the alphabet thanks to Gayle's 'abcdefu.' That year, Nina Webb, then the head of marketing at Atlantic Records, told NPR that TikTok was the only music platform 'that will individually move the dial the way it does.' Sure, you could still have a music career without a TikTok account — but why do things the hard way? That July, Morris went on vacation with his family to a lake in Tennessee. 'I have a huge extended family,' he says, 'so there's, like, 50 of us.' Morris started posting TikToks throughout the week, all roughly the same thing: him on the deck of the lake house or on the dock by the water, doing something or other over a snippet of a song he'd written called 'Sneakers.' He posted a bunch of them over the next few days. One of them changed everything. 'I posted a video at, like, 11 in the morning and went down to the lake all day,' Morris says. 'I came back upstairs, and the video was at, like, 900,000 views.' By the next day, as he was driving back to Nashville, it was at 2 million views. That day, he started getting recognized in public. Lots of people already knew all the words to 'Sneakers.' It gets wilder: A week or so later, Morris was in a bar in Nashville and spotted Jeffery Jordan, the lead singer of The Band Camino, across the room. The Band Camino is 'Nashville royalty,' Morris says, and had long been one of his favorite acts. While he was freaking out with his friends about the celeb in the room, Jordan came over and tapped him on the shoulder. 'Are you Knox?' he asked. The two ended up talking and drinking together for a while, and it turned out Jordan had found 'Sneakers' on TikTok and had acquired the Dropbox link to the rest of Morris' EP. He liked it, and asked Morris if he wanted to come play some shows with The Band Camino. 'I was like, 'Yeah, dude, for sure,'' Morris remembers. Then he looks at me pointedly. 'Keep in mind, I've never played a show in my life. But let's run it, dude.' Knox opened for The Band Camino on a run of concerts starting in September of 2022. And this, not a viral TikTok, was the real lucky break for Knox Morris. 'The most important thing we ever did, that ever happened to me, was playing those shows,' he says. 'The problem with TikTok is TikTok comes and it goes, and once you're not doing those views, you're gone. But at the exact same time I was on everyone's phone for 'Sneakers,' I was being put in front of 2,000 real people every night for a week straight.' He'd stay late after every show, shaking hands and meeting people until security kicked him out. 'Sneakers,' and that first EP, brought him millions of streams on Spotify and elsewhere. It also got him a record deal — at one point he had 16 offers, Oliver-Cline remembers, but he ended up signing with Atlantic Records. Soon after, a poppy meta-reference of a track called 'Not The 1975' became his first song to get real radio play, and the first to hit pop charts in the US. And that song, plus 15 new ones, became Going, Going, Gone. With the album came the tour. Knox Morris became simply Knox. This is all an impossibly charmed story, the kind of thing that happens to only a lucky few creators and artists. For every Knox Morris, there are countless others who never get the algorithmic breaks or the rock star meet-cutes. Even the ones who do make it are often unprepared for what 'making it' means: Lyor Cohen, the head of YouTube Music, once told me that many artists are 'exhausted' by the new methods of hitting it big, and lamented how many wannabe musicians have been reduced to simply being a social media star. Morris recognizes how lucky he's been. Looking back, he's grateful that his touring debut and his TikTok virality happened together — 'They'd see me onstage and then go home and I'd be the first thing on their TikTok feed' — and thinks the only response to all this good fortune is to work even harder. He hasn't been doing this long enough to have much sage veteran advice, but he is certain of one thing: a few thousand people in a room meant much more to his career than a few million people on the internet. 'The advice I have for any TikTok artist, dude, is get on the road and go play in front of real people, and honestly get your show chops up,' he says. 'I've seen so many TikTokers that have a massive song, bigger than any of mine, and they step on a stage and they have no idea what to do.' That said, he knows that in the modern music business you ignore TikTok at your own peril. 'I cannot stand when I hear artists who are like, 'Oh, I don't want to make TikToks,'' he says. 'It's like, oh, then you don't want to be an artist that bad. You just don't want anyone to listen to your music.' The key, both to making TikTok work for you and to keep it from driving you mad, is to treat it like a tool and to understand that the soundtrack matters most. 'The focus of your TikTok should always be the music,' Morris says. 'It doesn't matter how sick of a video you make, it doesn't matter how good it looks. If the song sucks, it doesn't matter.' At this point, Morris has a few hundred thousand followers, a few million streams, and enough juice to sell out shows for a thousand people at a time. He could stop here if he wanted. 'I could do these-size rooms for the next 10 years,' he says. But if he wants to get bigger, to start playing arenas like Ed Sheeran? He needs to go back to TikTok, and needs to play it differently. He has to build an audience of people who care about him as much as they care about his music. 'You almost have to build this character,' Morris says, 'and that's something I'm still figuring out how to do. I wouldn't say I'm struggling with it… but I'm learning. It doesn't come super naturally.' Morris doesn't spend a lot of time thinking about his TikTok presence. He does use the app a lot — 'My For You page is Kai Cenat, Marvel videos, basketball, and, like, dick jokes' — but relies on his girlfriend, Alicae, to figure out which trends and dance challenges he should be jumping on himself. As far as I can tell, there is but one kind of TikTok Morris just flat-out refuses to do: the ones where the performer stops the show to get a wide shot of the crowd, or do a trending dance in front of everybody mid-set. 'I think those are horrifying,' he says. 'When you're doing that, you're showing you're more of a TikToker than you are a musician. And I want the focus to be the music, you know?' It's just before midnight, and Morris' opening act, a band called The Wldlfe, is finishing their set. The band has been around for a while and is clearly hoping for a Knox-sized break soon. Jansen Hogan, the band's lead singer, tells the audience to go to a site called to find their songs, and throughout their set I see people pull out their phones and follow the band on Spotify. It's all a little transactional and cringe-inducing at times, but this appears to be what it takes to make it now. Maybe you're always only one follower and stream away. A few minutes later, Morris bounds back onto the stage. The room is now packed, and the crowd goes berserk for the lanky redhead in camo pants and a blue-and-white No. 22 jersey. For the next 90 or so minutes, he plays nearly all of his songs. He gets decent responses to songs from the new album, and room-sized singalongs for his TikTok hits. The crowd is older than I'd guessed, with a lot of elder millennials in Something Corporate and Warped Tour shirts. I met a number of fans who found Knox on TikTok, like I did. But I also met a few who discovered him at those first The Band Camino shows, and others who stumbled across 'Not The 1975' on the radio. A group of bros from Penn State partied in the balcony throughout the whole show, and excitedly pointed me to the one who heard Knox on a Spotify playlist and immediately shared him with everybody else. 'This is the biggest headline show I've ever played in my life,' Morris shouts to the audience early on, and reminds them that 'this is our first show, guys!' when something goes wrong with a track a few minutes later. A few things do go wrong, and at one point Morris apologizes to the crowd for relegating one of his most-loved songs to an acoustic part of the show. Later, this will become content for TikTok — clips of the audience singing his songs, clips of Morris playing songs fans requested by holding up signs, clips of Morris in the parking lot playing acoustic sets after the show. He'll even end up posting one of those crowdwork videos he hates so much (and it'll do numbers). Over the course of the next month on tour, Morris will post almost every day. He has to, and he knows it: if he wants to play arenas, to be the biggest star in the world, to go Full Ed Sheeran, he'll always have to be both artist and creator. But that's tomorrow's problem. For now, onstage, in front of a real audience of paying concert attendees, he just gets to be a rock star.