logo
#

Latest news with #Golden1Center

Mike Brown Is Ready To Coach The New York Knicks
Mike Brown Is Ready To Coach The New York Knicks

Forbes

time04-07-2025

  • Sport
  • Forbes

Mike Brown Is Ready To Coach The New York Knicks

SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 14: Head coach Mike Brown of the Sacramento Kings looks on duringa ... More action against the Portland Trail Blazers at Golden 1 Center on April 14, 2024 in Sacramento, California. (Photo by) Mike Brown is expected to be named the 32nd coach in New York Knicks history after an exhaustive coaching search that lingered for weeks. The process was criticized throughout the sports world for the approach the franchise took to the process along with the choice of firing Tom Thibodeau. Debates raged on about the worthiness of firing the head coach after leading the team to an Eastern Conference Finals run, and the fans murmured over who would eventually take his place. In comes Brown, a decorated coach that brings a lot of intriguing experiences and characteristics to the position. He currently has a .599 winning percentage, which is the 10th best all-time for those with over 500 games coached. Every coach has strengths and weaknesses. Very few in NBA history are truly infallible as the job is not to be one of perfection. Regardless, it's good to get a deeper read on what some of those positive aspects are before he starts his tenure in New York officially. Preparation Brown is notable for the depths he will go to in order to prepare himself for a job. He is meticulous about how he goes about his work, and he is incredibly dedicated to his craft. The hours he puts in to the job can only be bested by…Tom Thibodeau. Here is an excerpt from a Sports Illustrated piece written about Brown when he first got the Los Angeles Lakers job in 2011: It may now be easier to understand how Brown was able to swoon James Dolan in his second interview, which may ultimately be the reason why he secured the job. It's a great trait to have that will endear him to fans that can get behind a coach that brings his hard hat and lunch pail to work every day. Accountability The Sacramento Kings were in a wasteland in 2022 when they went out looking for a new coach. They hadn't made the playoffs since 2006 and had been one of the laughingstocks of the league throughout this time. On the other hand, Brown had just come off of three championships with the Warriors as the lead assistant. A jump to the wrong team could have been the death knell to Brown's hopes of sustained success as a head coach. He made that jump, and both sides were rewarded immediately. There are tons of reasons for why it worked, but Brown's effort to shift the culture of the franchise was paramount. The stench was apparent in Sacramento and it took a concerted effort from him to get everybody behind winning: Pressure One of the first headlines that popped up after the Knicks hired Mike Brown was regarding his ability to handle pressure. In 2017 he was forced to coach the Golden State Warriors because Steve Kerr was having health issues due to a back injury. So Brown was thrown into the fire and led the helm in 13 of the 17 games they played in the playoffs. They won every single game that he coached. Brown put the experience in its simplest terms during an interview the year after: Coaching the Los Angeles Lakers the year after they won the NBA Finals while replacing one of the best coaches of all-time? Sounds like a bit of pressure. Adaptability The person that led the Cleveland Cavaliers over 10 years ago is not the same man that will be entering New York. His reputation has evolved over time as he was branded a defensive wizard for years, but the perception of Brown changed after his first year with the Kings. Sacramento broke records with an offense that led the entire league with a 118.6 rating. The team won 48 games and were a win away from reaching the Western Conference Semifinals. Even so, Brown made changes in order to reach different heights. Not everything worked, but it was his willingness that shows his evolution as a person: Brown has the same opportunity to push the Knicks into the greatness category. Let's see if he is able to pull it off.

Stevie Nicks adds California stop in Sacramento for solo 2025 tour
Stevie Nicks adds California stop in Sacramento for solo 2025 tour

CBS News

time16-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • CBS News

Stevie Nicks adds California stop in Sacramento for solo 2025 tour

Legendary rock star Stevie Nicks is adding several dates to her 2025 solo tour schedule, and the only California date at the moment will be in Sacramento. The singer announced eight new dates for her Live In Concert tour on Monday. Nicks was set to embark on a string of dates with Billy Joel, but that tour was canceled after Joel announced he had been diagnosed with normal pressure hydrocephalus. Nicks and Joel were scheduled to perform at Levi's Stadium in Santa Clara on Oct. 4. Now, that Oct. 4 date has been filled with a Nicks solo tour stop at the Golden 1 Center in Sacramento. Nicks last visited Sacramento in 2023 for another solo gig, also at the Golden 1 Center. Tickets for Sacramento and other new Nicks tour dates will go on presale June 18, with general on sale starting June 20.

Sacramento to brighten K Street corridor with new marquee-style lights
Sacramento to brighten K Street corridor with new marquee-style lights

CBS News

time13-05-2025

  • Business
  • CBS News

Sacramento to brighten K Street corridor with new marquee-style lights

Sacramento's K Street corridor will soon dazzle with new lights. Scott Ford, the deputy director of the Downtown Sacramento Partnership, says soon they'll flip the switch on marquee-style lights that will be added to 38 light poles along K Street. A pilot light was installed last year in downtown, the partnership says, and enough funding has been secured over the years to make the lights a reality. The additional lighting is meant to embrace K Street's rich history with marquees and be energy-efficient by using LED lights. "They are programmable from a single control system so when the Kings are playing, you know this whole thing can go purple," Ford says. "Throughout the seasons, it can be programmed, changing dynamic LED light patterns that reflect the season." The lights are part of the K Street LED Marquee Lighting Project. Ford says the lights are meant to enhance the K Street social scene, which is already brimming with activity from restaurants to bars with the Golden 1 Center just steps away. He says it's also meant to boost pedestrian activity and help people feel safe walking down K Street. "I think that adding lighting, adding vibrancy to what is really a critical pedestrian corridor in the heart of our city, I think it's going to pay dividends in the long term for continuing to see more investment, more positive activity, and really sending the signal that K Street is the epicenter of social activity for this region," Ford said. The Downtown Sacramento Partnership also believes the lights will only add to an already evolving entertainment scene. "The idea of entertainment zones starting to come online in Sacramento, where brick-and-mortar businesses can sell to-go drinks to patrons when there are special events happening, that starts to really create a whole different feeling to this K Street corridor," Ford says Crews started installing the lights Monday morning. The lights are expected to be up and running by the end of the month.

‘The start of something really good': Channel 24 venue energizes Sacramento arts landscape
‘The start of something really good': Channel 24 venue energizes Sacramento arts landscape

San Francisco Chronicle​

time05-05-2025

  • Entertainment
  • San Francisco Chronicle​

‘The start of something really good': Channel 24 venue energizes Sacramento arts landscape

For decades, Sacramento concertgoers have packed into cars or boarded trains to see their favorite artists in San Francisco or Oakland. But a new addition to the city's Midtown district could signal a shift in the region's migrational patterns. Channel 24, a mid-size venue developed and operated by Berkeley-based Another Planet Entertainment, the powerhouse independent promoter behind San Francisco's annual Outside Lands music festival, opened last month with a clear mission: Keep Sacramento music fans local. More Information May-June lineup Denzel Curry: 8 p.m. May 7 Madness: 8 p.m. May 14 Hippocampus: 8 p.m. May 16 Hermanos Gutiérrez: 8 p.m. May 21 Jack White: 8 p.m. May 26-27 James Arthur: 8 p.m. May 29 Charley Crockett: 8 p.m. June 8 Social Distortion: 8 p.m. June 14 Pachiko: 8 p.m. June 17 Ryan Bingham and the Texas Gentlemen: 8 p.m. June 18 Channel 24: 1800 24th St, Sacramento. For a full schedule, go to 'We'll go to the Bay Area for shows, like San Francisco, but it's hard to get out there with a job and stuff,' Jeannette Ho, 51, standing in the Channel 24 lobby just before electronic group Tycho took the stage Friday, April 25, as part of the venue's opening celebrations. Ho's boyfriend, John Conley, 56, echoed that sentiment. 'It's harder now than when we were younger to drive to the Bay Area for shows, especially during the week,' he said. 'Having shows here in Sacramento is definitely nice. We're more willing to get out to a show during the week here in town and close to us.' For fans who have long faced a 90-mile trek for mid-level acts, Channel 24 fills a longstanding void. While smaller indie bands regularly play the 530-capacity nightclub Harlow's and megastars hit the more than 17,500-seat Golden 1 Center, the state's capital has lacked a home for artists who sit comfortably mid-lineup on a Coachella poster. 'Over the years, we have had lots of artists ask to play Sacramento. They were bigger than Ace of Spades, and they weren't big enough to play Sacramento Memorial Auditorium,' said Allen Scott, president of concerts and festivals at Another Planet Entertainment, describing the goldilocks conundrum of downtown's concert scene. The former is an all-ages venue that accommodates 1,000, while the latter is a nearly 4,000-capacity space that books more graduation ceremonies than concerts these days. The hole in the market often led the concert production and artist management company to skip the market and send talent to Reno. That calculus changed with the 2016 opening of Golden 1 Center, managed by the Sacramento Kings and the City of Sacramento, that hosts cultural juggernauts like Paul McCartney, Janet Jackson and Kendrick Lamar. 'Golden 1 Center, 10 years later, is still in its honeymoon period,' Scott said, describing how the burst of energy and attendance for a new venue usually dissipates after a year or so. 'That's really a testament to what's happening in Sacramento.' With Channel 24, Another Planet is betting on a city long seen in a perpetual state of striving — but one increasingly ready to stand on its own. For pop culture proof of its underdog status, just look to the plot of the recent comedy ' Sacramento,' which hinges upon the city being a random and detached destination for its Los Angeles characters to find themselves in. Local residents are accustomed to serving up reasons for it to be taken seriously: It's a culinary destination, a mecca for cyclists, close to a lot of (arguably superior) natural attractions like Napa Valley and Lake Tahoe. But offering up the city's art scene might not be the most obvious move if one were making the case for it as a sexy metropolis. The addition of Channel 24 might not completely turn that around, but it's certainly a step in the right direction. Sam Kesh, 46, who has produced indie shows in Sacramento as a DJ and booker for most of his adult life, said he has long ventured out to the opulent Fox Theater in Oakland, Berkeley's open-air Greek Theatre and the more intimate room at the Independent in San Francisco well before knowing they were all owned and operated by Another Planet. When he learned of the entertainment company's latest venture in his hometown it was definitely welcoming news. 'All of those venues … they're huge parts of my life,' he said. 'It's just cool that there's something connected to that and means that if there's tours playing those venues, now there's an opportunity to have them in Sacramento.' Serving up a premium sonic experience was, in fact, the dominant objective when building the 2,150-capacity space, which is Another Planet Entertainment's first 'from the ground-up' project. 'This was completely built from the dirt,' Scott noted. 'I think the results will speak for themselves.' The structure, which was erected in place of an old electrical supply warehouse on 24th and R streets, was designed by Sacramento's Ellis Architects and the Bay Area's CAW Architects. With one wall adorned with a towering mural of a roving horse, by Sacramento artist Cheyenne Randall, and a modern auburn facade, the building — whose namesake references the electrical 'channels' of its warehouse days and Sacramento's converging rivers — is an unexpected addition to the mostly residential southeast corner of Midtown Sacramento's grid. Frequent concert goer Nicole Grant Kriege, 46, is hopeful about Channel 24's influence on its surroundings. 'I think it could really grow into a little bit of a micro-hood,' she pondered while sitting in a booth at Round Corner bar, which was buzzing with activity just before Channel 24's Tycho concert. 'You have Round Corner, which is kind of this dive bar institution, you have Racks, a vintage store that's been around forever. I think there's the start of something really good here.' Spotted among the bar crowd, huddled around the pool tables, was Tycho frontman Dan Hansen. The Oakland-based musician, who lived in Sacramento in the early 2000s, was mingling with friends and family ahead of the show. Later onstage, Hansen expressed his appreciation for the city of trees. 'This is amazing and so meaningful to us,' he said warmly as he reminisced about making music in a garage-turned-studio just up the street from Channel 24. Those songs would become the influential 2011 album 'Dive,' which received the loudest cheers at the venue that night. 'It was important to have a local artist play,' said Scott. 'We always knew Tycho would be in that first week.' Although the throng of mostly 30- to 50-somethings was enthusiastic about the chillwave indie rockers that night, Channel 24's roster serves a broad audience, including younger fans with a proclivity for country music. The venue's opening night on April 24 featured Tucker Wetmore, attracting a sold-out crowd outfitted in cowboy boots and wide-brimmed hats. 'Two very popular genres in Sacramento are country music and hard rock music — they perform better in Sacramento than they do in the immediate Bay area,' explained Scott, adding that shows featuring bluegrass singer Sierra Ferrell and alt-country artist Sam Barber were both sold out. From gritty Americana crooner Charley Crockett, who last drifted through the capital city five years ago, to blues rocker Jack White, who has never stepped a booted foot into a Sacramento venue, there's a bit of a sea change coming for the land-locked town. 'I'm hoping it brings shows we wouldn't normally get in Sacramento,' said Conley.

3 years after Sacramento's K Street shooting, what has city done to prevent future tragedies?
3 years after Sacramento's K Street shooting, what has city done to prevent future tragedies?

CBS News

time04-04-2025

  • CBS News

3 years after Sacramento's K Street shooting, what has city done to prevent future tragedies?

SACRAMENTO — Thursday marked three years since Sacramento's deadly K Street shooting . Six people were killed and twelve others were hurt. Dandrae Martin and Mtula Payton are accused of being among the rival gang members who squared off in the shooting. Martin's brother, Smiley, was also charged but died inside the jail . The trial has been postponed until after June as defense attorneys want it moved out of Sacramento County because of widespread media attention. Fresh flowers and candles marked the spot where the city's deadliest mass shooting occurred. "It's a horrible thing to happen to our community," said Leia Schenk, the founder of the anti-violence group Empact. "It's a horrible thing to happen to the downtown nightlife, which will never be the same." Schenk continues helping family members who lost loved ones in the shooting as they attend the criminal court hearings. "These families have to come in that courtroom month in and month out, and they have to relive it over and over," she said. Schenk believes more work needs to be done to prevent these types of tragedies. "I don't think anything has changed," she said. "We still have gun violence." In response to the mass shooting, the City of Sacramento created a new office of nighttime economy to work on improving security. "That was such an unfortunate event, but since that time, we've really had some really great events," said Tina Lee-Vogt, the director of the office. Lee-Vogt said that people shouldn't be concerned about visiting downtown. "Every weekend, we have tens of thousands of people who go to our different locations, have a great time and come home safely," she said. "And so our office has been really good at educating folks and being a really good resource, and being a liaison between the city in our businesses to operate safely." Since the mass shooting, there have been a number of other violent crimes along the K Street corridor, including a fatal stabbing outside the Golden 1 Center just before a Christian rock concert. Groups like Empact say the city needs to put more effort into stopping gangs and getting guns off the streets. "If you're not dealing with the root cause, then you get nowhere," Schenk said. There's also concern that police patrols and violence prevention programs could see cuts this year due to Sacramento's budget deficit.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store