Latest news with #BlackIce

Courier-Mail
30-06-2025
- Entertainment
- Courier-Mail
AC/DC sets new Aussie box office record with Power Up shows
Don't miss out on the headlines from Music Tours. Followed categories will be added to My News. Buying tickets to the hottest concerts and sporting events in Australia is an anxiety-spiking online hell. Yet we keep lining up in those virtual queues, often for hours, to secure the prize, with AC/DC fans breaking Ticketek's record for a music tour's first day sale last week. Fans who made it out of the 'lounge' to the checkout snapped up 320,000 tickets to the band's Power Up concerts in November and December. That first day of sales last Thursday eclipsed the band's previous record of 240,000 tickets for the Black Ice tour in 2009, which was the previous biggest concert on-sale day in Ticketek's history. X SUBSCRIBER ONLY The huge demand to welcome AC/DC back to Australia's stadiums after a decade's absence was funnelled into the general sale as the egalitarian rockers are old school and don't do ticket pre-sales, preferring everyone gets an equal shot. Most stadium-sized tours – think box office slayers Ed Sheeran, P!nk and Taylor Swift – offer promoter, credit card and telco-affiliated pre-sales over multiple days before the general sale. Or the artists add extra shows that go on sale at a later date. As the AC/DC shows went on sale – at staggered times for each city's gig to spread the online traffic across the day – 'second and final' concerts were added to Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane and immediately available to purchase. AC/DC set a first day sales box office record last week. Picture: Christie Goodwin. There are still seats available on Ticketek to the upper bays from $203 and some premium tickets for more than $400 to see the hard rock heroes, three days after the box office launch. And unlike the recent flood of complaints about virtual queues of more than 200,000 for the Ashes tickets sale, the AC/DC fans mostly hit social media to confirm they had been successful – or share their position in the queue, the new social media trend for ticket sales. 'It was an absolute nightmare getting tickets during the Ashes pre-sale, but I had no issues with AC/DC today,' one fan posted. But it was an infuriating experience for a raft of hopeful ticket buyers who made it through only to be booted to the back of queue when they pressed the pay button. 'Selected tickets for AC/DC, hit pay, got punted back to the lounge behind 50,000 other people. ridiculous,' an irate fan wrote. Ed Sheeran holds the record for the most tickets sold on an Australian tour. Picture: Jake Nowakowski There was also a recurring problem for some exasperated fans who protested they got to the front of the queue to be rudely greeted with a 'restricted access' message and booted back to square one. 'Beyond frustrated, waiting for an hour to get to the front of the queue and be told my access is restricted & now 60k in the queue, I frequently purchase AFL tix with no issue, this service has to be looked into,' wrote a disappointed fan on X. Ticketek advised fans ahead of the AC/DC sale to disable VPNs or IP-masking tools as 'your unique IP helps us confirm you're a real person, not a bot.' Honorary Aussie P!nk is the highest selling female touring artist here. Picture: Tom Parrish Other tips include turning off any browser extensions and to access sales from a single browser on one device only to reduce the risk of triggering bot detection and being booted to the back of the queue. While Ed Sheeran, P!nk and Taylor Swift have moved more tickets on their tours of Australia over the past two years, rolled out over pre-sales and a general public sale, AC/DC was the biggest first-day seller for Ticketek. This past summer saw the highest live event sales in nearly a decade, with two million Australians buying tickets. The box office agency achieved another record last Thursday with over 370,000 tickets moved in a single day, setting a new all-time high for daily sales and surpassing the previous record set during The Ashes on-sale earlier this month. In addition to the AC/DC tickets, Ticketek traded almost 50,000 tickets to other events including NRL and AFL matches. Originally published as AC/DC's Power Up tour sets new concert box office record for first-day sales

News.com.au
29-06-2025
- Entertainment
- News.com.au
AC/DC's Power Up tour sets new concert box office record for first-day sales
Buying tickets to the hottest concerts and sporting events in Australia is an anxiety-spiking online hell. Yet we keep lining up in those virtual queues, often for hours, to secure the prize, with AC/DC fans breaking Ticketek's record for a music tour's first day sale last week. Fans who made it out of the 'lounge' to the checkout snapped up 320,000 tickets to the band's Power Up concerts in November and December. That first day of sales last Thursday eclipsed the band's previous record of 240,000 tickets for the Black Ice tour in 2009, which was the previous biggest concert on-sale day in Ticketek's history. The huge demand to welcome AC/DC back to Australia's stadiums after a decade's absence was funnelled into the general sale as the egalitarian rockers are old school and don't do ticket pre-sales, preferring everyone gets an equal shot. Most stadium-sized tours – think box office slayers Ed Sheeran, P!nk and Taylor Swift – offer promoter, credit card and telco-affiliated pre-sales over multiple days before the general sale. Or the artists add extra shows that go on sale at a later date. As the AC/DC shows went on sale – at staggered times for each city's gig to spread the online traffic across the day – 'second and final' concerts were added to Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane and immediately available to purchase. There are still seats available on Ticketek to the upper bays from $203 and some premium tickets for more than $400 to see the hard rock heroes, three days after the box office launch. And unlike the recent flood of complaints about virtual queues of more than 200,000 for the Ashes tickets sale, the AC/DC fans mostly hit social media to confirm they had been successful – or share their position in the queue, the new social media trend for ticket sales. 'It was an absolute nightmare getting tickets during the Ashes pre-sale, but I had no issues with AC/DC today,' one fan posted. But it was an infuriating experience for a raft of hopeful ticket buyers who made it through only to be booted to the back of queue when they pressed the pay button. 'Selected tickets for AC/DC, hit pay, got punted back to the lounge behind 50,000 other people. ridiculous,' an irate fan wrote. There was also a recurring problem for some exasperated fans who protested they got to the front of the queue to be rudely greeted with a 'restricted access' message and booted back to square one. 'Beyond frustrated, waiting for an hour to get to the front of the queue and be told my access is restricted & now 60k in the queue, I frequently purchase AFL tix with no issue, this service has to be looked into,' wrote a disappointed fan on X. Ticketek advised fans ahead of the AC/DC sale to disable VPNs or IP-masking tools as 'your unique IP helps us confirm you're a real person, not a bot.' Other tips include turning off any browser extensions and to access sales from a single browser on one device only to reduce the risk of triggering bot detection and being booted to the back of the queue. While Ed Sheeran, P!nk and Taylor Swift have moved more tickets on their tours of Australia over the past two years, rolled out over pre-sales and a general public sale, AC/DC was the biggest first-day seller for Ticketek. This past summer saw the highest live event sales in nearly a decade, with two million Australians buying tickets. The box office agency achieved another record last Thursday with over 370,000 tickets moved in a single day, setting a new all-time high for daily sales and surpassing the previous record set during The Ashes on-sale earlier this month. In addition to the AC/DC tickets, Ticketek traded almost 50,000 tickets to other events including NRL and AFL matches.
Yahoo
10-06-2025
- Business
- Yahoo
Blue Star Acquires Another High-Potential Gold Target Area: Avalliq Property with Abundant High-Grade Gold Prospects
Vancouver, British Columbia--(Newsfile Corp. - June 10, 2025) - Blue Star Gold Corp. (TSXV: BAU) (OTCQB: BAUFF) (FSE: 5WP0) ("Blue Star" or the "Company"), a leading explorer in Canada's North, is excited to announce the expansion of the Roma Project through the staking of a significant new property, the Avalliq property, located in the West Kitikmeot Region of Nunavut. This property is particularly compelling due to its quality gold prospects and strategic location, being less than two kilometres east of the proposed Grays Bay Road, which could significantly enhance future access and infrastructure development for the property (Figure 2). Highlights MOV prospect is very similar to the Roma Main target with historical trenching outlining a 2-metre-wide vein over 100 metres of strike; vein width samples average 8.4 grams per tonne gold (g/t Au) Silver Bullet prospect - visible gold; grab samples to 186.1 g/t Au; historical drill intercept 1.0 metre @ 13.4 g/t Au Black Ice prospect - channel samples up to 11.4 g/t Au (11,370 ppb) Cygnet Northern prospect - +10 g/t Au grab samples at surface The last known work in the area occurred more than 20 years ago (2005), when the average gold price was ~USD$450/oz. versus the current gold price of +USD$3,300/oz. Near drill-ready targets identified for follow-up exploration program "The expansion of our Roma Project with the staking of the Avalliq property adds a new, highly prospective and target-rich area to our exploration pipeline," said Grant Ewing, CEO of Blue Star, "The high-grade gold grabs at surface, historically trenched high-grade MOV target, and numerous untested geophysical anomalies, suggest that we have added substantial discovery potential to our land position in the High Lake Belt. Furthermore, the proximity to the proposed road, less than two kilometres to the west, improves the accessibility of this property and positions us well for future development. We are looking forward to advancing this property to evaluate its full potential." Discussion of the Avalliq Property The newly staked Avalliq property encompasses four significant gold prospects, including MOV, Silver Bullet, Cygnet Northern and Black Ice as discussed below. Rock units on the property include mafic to intermediate and intermediate to felsic volcanic units intruded by synvolcanic gabbro on the west and turbidites on the east. Both units are truncated in the north by a large granitoid body. Known gold showings are hosted in a dacitic to felsic volcanic rock package in a general northeast trend and in shallow dipping quartz veins hosted in diorite-granodiorite intrusive units. The latter style of mineralisation is very similar to Blue Star's Roma Main target. Blue Stars Avalliq property covers 1,111.9 hectares of prospective ground. (Figure 1). Historical Work The Avalliq property encompasses the northern portion of the historical BHP Cygnet Claims and the Echo Bay Mining Grumpy Claims. In 1984 Echo Bay discovered an auriferous quartz vein (the MOV vein, Plate 1) which led to detailed mapping, and a geochemical and geophysical work program, culminating in a trench-based resource estimation and a recommendation to drill that was never implemented (AR083662). BHP Minerals Canada carried out reconnaissance traverses in the area in 1986, 1987, and 1989. This initial work was documented by BHP in 1991 (AR083662) and consisted initially of reconnaissance traverses followed by grid establishment for mapping, mag-VLF and prospecting. Plate 1: Field Photographs of Silver Bullet (left) and MOV Prospect (right); Hammer is 40 cm in Length. To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit: Work by BHP in 1993 and 1994 (AR083412) successfully identified two additional auriferous zones - Silver Bullet and Black Ice which are ~750 metres apart and lie along a northeast-trending shear structure that has been traced for ~3 kilometres. The MOV vein lies along a sub-parallel structure ~2.5 kilometres northeast of Silver Bullet (Figure 1). The Silver Bullet zone is characterized by shear-hosted quartz vein in dacite/intermediate volcanics, traced over an 80-metre strike (Plate 1). Visible gold was noted in the vein which ranges from 0.5 - 1.5 metres in width. Chip samples returned grades from 1.43 g/t to 123 g/t Au over widths of 0.15 - 1.0 metre. One drill hole was completed into the Silver Bullet vein in 1995, resulting in 13.4 g/t Au over 1.04 metres. This result was never followed up with a subsequent program. The Black Ice zone consists of several parallel to subparallel shear-hosted quartz veins with a strike length of 180 metres. Channel sampling completed by BHP returned grades ranging from 79 ppb to 11.4 g/t Au over widths of less than 0.5 metres. Four drill holes in 1995 tested the Black Ice structure with the best intercept of 13.7 g/t Au over 0.76 metres. The Cygnet Northern prospect is defined by BHP sampling from 1989-1991 (AR083662) which returned 52% of the samples >1 g/t Au and 10% of the samples >10 g/t Au in an apparent northeast trend; inferred to be the northern extension of the Cygnet trend to the southwest. Samples were collected as grabs and chip samples across altered dacite and quartz carbonate veins associated with arsenopyrite and galena. In 2004 Pure Gold Minerals reported on a Fugro 'Resolve' airborne electromagnetic survey, ground geophysical surveys (UTEM), sampling and detailed mapping of select prospects (AR084667, AR084864). In total 170 rock samples including 114 chip and channel samples were collected. Approximately 25% of the samples contained highly anomalous concentrations of gold from 1 g/t to a high of 186.1 g/t. The highest grades were returned from the Silver Bullet vein. Recent Work Blue Star's work consisted of data compilation in 2022 and 2023; ground truthing of known showings and magnetic survey interpretation on the Cygnet claims to the south in 2023; and prospecting the magnetics interpretation and a field visit to the MOV, Black Ice and Silver Bullet prospects in 2024; no field follow-up has yet been undertaken on the Cygnet Northern zone. The 2024 samples confirmed historical grades at the MOV, Silver Bullet, and Black Ice showings. Historical showings were as described by previous operators with some sample markers still in place at the MOV trench area, and at the Black Ice and Silver Bullet prospects. Next Steps Blue Star is committed to advancing this exciting target-rich property. Initial work programs would include SkyTEM airborne electromagnetics and magnetics surveys, detailed stratigraphic and alteration mapping, and sampling select areas to advance the prospects to drill-ready targets for subsequent work programs. Historical sampling is documented within the references and appears to follow industry standards as accepted at the time of the work; no review of the historical sampling was completed by the Blue Star Qualified Person. Blue Star samples are grab samples, which are selective by definition, and were delivered under chain of custody to ALS Geochemistry in Yellowknife, NT for sample preparation which are then forwarded to ALS Canada Inc. in North Vancouver, BC for final analysis. Samples are prepared using code PREP-31 (crushing and pulverising) and analysed using codes Au-AA26 (50-gram fire assay with atomic absorption finish) and ME-MS61 (48 element four acid digestion with ICP-MS finish). Over limits for non-gold elements are ore grade four acid digestion with ICP-AES finish. The QAQC program for prospecting consists of regular insertion of certified reference materials (CRMs) resulting in a one in 20 sample insertion rate. Darren Lindsay, P. Geo. and Vice President Exploration for Blue Star, is a Qualified Person under National Instrument 43-101 ("NI 43-101") and has reviewed and approved the technical information contained in this news release. Figure 1: Known Target Areas on Avalliq Property; Surface Grabs and Mineralisation Trends. To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit: Figure 2: Location Map of Avalliq Property on Blue Star's Roma Project. To view an enhanced version of this graphic, please visit: References: Anonby, L., Jopson, W. and H. Muntanion 1991. Cygnet 1-3 Report on Geology, Geochemistry and Geophysics. BHP Minerals Canada Ltd. Assessment Report 083662. Anonby, L. 1994. Cygnet and Cygnet 2 Claims. Report on Geology, Mineralization and Geochemical Results. BHP Minerals Canada Ltd. Assessment Report 083412. Miller-Tait, J., Smith P.A. 2004. Airborne Geophysical Survey Report on the North James River Property. Pure Gold Minerals Inc. Assessment Report 084667. Goodall, G. 2005. Geological Mapping and Sampling Report and UTEM Geophysical Survey on the North James River Project. Pure Gold Minerals Inc. Assessment Report 084864. About Blue Star Gold Corp. Blue Star is a mineral exploration and development company focused in Nunavut, Canada. Blue Star's landholdings total 300 square kilometres of highly prospective and underexplored mineral properties in the High Lake Greenstone Belt. The Company owns the Ulu Gold Project, comprised of the Ulu Mining Lease and Hood River Property, and the Roma Project. A significant high-grade gold resource exists at the Flood Zone deposit (Ulu Mining Lease), and numerous high-potential exploration targets (gold and critical minerals) occur throughout the Company's extensive landholdings, providing Blue Star with excellent resource growth potential. The site of the future deep-water port at Grays Bay is 40 - 100 km to the north of the properties, and the proposed route corridor for the all-weather Grays Bay Road passes close by the Roma and Ulu Gold Projects. Blue Star is listed on the TSX Venture Exchange under the symbol: BAU, the U.S. OTCQB Venture Market under the symbol: BAUFF, and on the Frankfurt Exchange under the symbol: 5WP0. For information on the Company and its projects, please visit our website: For further information, please contact: Grant Ewing, P. Geo., CEOTelephone: +1 778-379-1433Email: info@ Neither the TSX Venture Exchange nor its Regulation Services Provider (as that term is defined in the Policies of the TSX-Venture Exchange) accepts responsibility for the adequacy or accuracy of this Release. CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD-LOOKING STATEMENTS AND INFORMATION This press release contains "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of applicable securities laws. Forward-looking statements can be identified by words such as: "anticipate," "intend," "plan," "goal," "seek," "believe," "project," "estimate," "expect," "strategy," "future," "likely," "may," "should," "will" and similar references to future periods. Examples of forward-looking statements include, among others, statements we make regarding prospective income and revenues, anticipated levels of capital expenditures for the fiscal year, expectations of the effect on our financial condition of claims, litigation, environmental costs, contingent liabilities, and governmental and regulatory investigations and proceedings, and estimates of mineral resources and reserves on our properties. Forward-looking statements are neither historical facts nor assurances of future performance. Instead, they are based only on our current beliefs, expectations, and assumptions regarding the future of our business, plans and strategies, projections, anticipated events and trends, the economy, and other future conditions. Because forward-looking statements relate to the future, they are subject to inherent uncertainties, risks, and changes in circumstances that are difficult to predict and many of which are outside of our control. Our actual results and financial condition may differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements. Therefore, you should not rely on any of these forward-looking statements. Important factors that could cause our actual results and financial condition to differ materially from those indicated in the forward-looking statements include, among others, the following: economic and financial conditions, including volatility in interest and exchange rates, commodity and equity prices and the value of financial assets, strategic actions, including acquisitions and dispositions and our success in integrating acquired businesses into our operations, developments and changes in laws and regulations, including increased regulation of the mining industry through legislative action and revised rules and standards applied by the regulatory bodies in Nunavut, changes in the price of fuel and other key materials and disruptions in supply chains for these materials, closures or slowdowns and changes in labour costs and labour difficulties, including stoppages affecting either our operations or our suppliers' abilities to deliver goods and services to us, as well as natural events such as severe weather, fires, floods and earthquakes or man-made or other disruptions of our equipment, and inaccuracies in estimates of mineral resources and/or reserves on our mineral properties. To view the source version of this press release, please visit Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

RNZ News
13-05-2025
- Automotive
- RNZ News
How to drive safely in icy, wintry conditions
Photo: 123RF With the country marking Road Safety Week, road users are advised to take extra care when driving on icy roads in wintry conditions. In July 2024, two tour buses travelling along State Highway 8 between Tekapo and Twizel in the South Island overturned in treacherous conditions within a few hundred metres of each other. Fifteen people were rushed to hospital , with two seriously injured. Locals blamed a winter phenomenon known as "black ice" for the crashes. And yet black ice is far from the only thing to be mindful of when driving in difficult conditions. What follows is a quick reminder of a few things to pay extra attention to when driving in winter months. Black ice lies on a road alongside the site of a bus crash in July 2024. Photo: Supplied / Grace Duggin According to the latest data compiled by ACC , total road accident-related compensation claims reached nearly $750 million in 2024, with more than 50 percent involving driving accidents. Meanwhile, latest data compiled by the New Zealand Transport Association shows 292 people died in 250 fatal crashes recorded nationwide in 2024. While the total death toll is a slight improvement on the figures recorded in 2023, police say there is always room to reduce the number of casualties on the road each year. Many accidents in winter are caused by poor visibility after ice forms on windscreens in low temperatures. Once ice has formed on your windscreen before you start driving, do not try to remove it with your window wipers. This not only risks damaging the rubber on the blades, but it can also worsen visibility, as scraping the ice may blur your view. Instead, use an ice scraper or a hard plastic card like a credit card to remove the ice before starting the engine. If the engine has already been running for a while and the internal temperature of the vehicle is close to normal, drivers are advised to turn on the windshield's defrost function and let warm air melt the ice before then using wipers to clear the view. It's worth noting that there are quicker but riskier methods that experts say should be avoided. It's recommended that drivers refrain from pouring hot water onto a windscreen to remove ice. If the water is too hot - making the windscreen's temperature difference with the outside air temperature too great - the glass can crack. In certain areas of New Zealand, sudden patches of dense fog can appear in colder months. Drivers are first advised to turn on their fog lights, which are designed to penetrate thick clouds that form in such conditions. Drivers of vehicles without fog lights should use their headlights on a low beam setting that is focused on the road immediately ahead. In foggy weather, the moisture in the air scatters headlights on a high beam setting, which can impair visibility rather than improve it. Additionally, drivers should slow down when driving in poor visibility, increasing their following distances and avoiding frequent lane changes. Black ice lies on a road alongside the site of a bus crash in July 2024. Photo: Supplied / Grace Duggin Black ice isn't black - it's a transparent layer of ice that typically forms on a road after light rain or fog at zero degrees. Because the transparent nature of the ice makes the road surface appear visible, drivers can mistakenly think road conditions are safer than they are. Vehicles traveling on such surfaces often lose tire traction when changing direction, causing drivers to lose control of the vehicle. Mark Revill-Johnson, chair of the nonprofit New Zealand Institute of Driver Educators, told Morning Report after the bus crashes in July 2024 that drivers could lose control of vehicles travelling at just 10 kilometres per hour, especially in foggy conditions. "You should always be able to stop in the amount of road you can see and be able to do that on the correct side of the road," he said. "So, if there's fog around, you can't 'out-drive' your view because you're not going to see stuff that matters." AA recommends drivers should maintain a following distance that is 10 times greater than usual when driving on icy or snowy roads. If you unintentionally hit a stretch of road with black ice, it's important to remain calm. In such situations, AA advises drivers to refrain from trying to change direction suddenly. Instead, continue travelling in the same direction, take your foot off the accelerator and avoid slamming on the brakes. Braking hard can throw the vehicle off balance and make it harder to regain control. For manual transmission vehicles, downshifting can help to reduce speed, if necessary, but any sudden movements that may destabilize the vehicle should be avoided. Compared to regular tyres, softer snow tyres offer better grip and improved driving safety in icy or snowy road conditions. However, NZTA says snow tyres are not needed in most parts of New Zealand . Snow tyres are only recommended for a very small number of people living in the southern regions of the South Island or those who frequently drive in alpine environments. NZTA says all-season tyres are a better choice for most people. Additionally, NZTA says that snow tyres should not be mixed with other types of tyres. Anyone driving in extreme wintry conditions on unpaved mountainous roads should consider wrapping snow chains around tyres to improve traction. Fans of skiing and other winter sports enthusiasts sometimes need chains in case of heavy snowfalls while ascending and descending mountains. NZTA enforces snow chain regulations on specific alpine roads, particularly in the South Island. For example, Arthur's Pass and Lindis Pass often have mandatory chain requirements when snow or ice is present. If you are driving in unfamiliar areas, NZTA recommends drivers to use its Journey Planner tool app , which offers real-time road condition updates and travel advisories to help them plan a safe trip.


Economic Times
05-05-2025
- Entertainment
- Economic Times
Chicago PD Season 12 Episode 20: What may happen in upcoming episode? Check out release date, time, what to expect and how to watch
Chicago PD Season 12 Episode 20 has been delayed due to a brief network hiatus affecting all One Chicago shows. The new air date is May 7, 2025, on NBC. The episode, titled Black Ice, will feature a major case involving sex trafficking and developments in key character relationships. Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads What to Expect from Episode 20 Tired of too many ads? Remove Ads How to Watch FAQs Chicago PD fans will have to wait a little longer for Season 12 Episode 20. The show has been delayed for a week. NBC has paused all One Chicago series, including Chicago Med and Fire. The new air date for the episode is May 7, 2025, at 10/ has delayed the airing of new episodes for all its One Chicago series. This includes Chicago PD, Chicago Med and Chicago Fire. The reason for the break has not been announced. This kind of delay has happened with other network shows recently. In many cases, the networks do not provide a specific past delays were caused by important broadcasts or interviews. For example, The Rookie was postponed for a presidential interview. But in this case, the reason for the delay is unknown. The break is only for one week, and regular scheduling will return after delayed episode is titled Black Ice. The official synopsis says Ruzek witnesses a tragic accident on an icy bridge. This event leads the Intelligence Unit into a case involving sex team will discover an abandoned warehouse connected to the trafficking operation. Adam and Burgess will enter the site to search for episode also continues the storyline between Cook and Torres. Their relationship has faced challenges this season. Torres placed Cook in danger, causing tension between them. Actor Toya Turner has said that the coming episodes will show efforts to rebuild trust. Viewers will see more emotional scenes between the two. Their dynamic may shift again in the final episodes of the are two main ways to watch Chicago PD Season 12 Episode 20 . Viewers can watch it live on NBC when it airs on May 7, subscribers can use their login credentials to access or the NBC app for a live stream. The episode will also be available to stream on Peacock the next day. Previous episodes are already available on the paused all One Chicago shows for one week without explanation. The new air date is May 7, can watch it live on NBC or stream it on Peacock the day after it airs.