August 2011

09|01 Auditorio Telmex in Guadalajara, MX
09|03 Palacio Deportes in Mexico City, MX
09|05 Arena in Monterrey, Mexico, MX
11|16 Madison Square Garden, New York, USA
11|19 Mandalay Bay Center in Las Vegas, NV
11|21 Oracle Arena in Oakland, CA, USA
11|22 Staples Center in Los Angeles, CA USA
SOUTH AMERICA
09|23 Rock in Rio in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
09|25 Chácara do Jockey in São Paulo, Brazil
09|27 Estadio GEBA in Buenos Aires, Argentina
EUROPE
10|12 Motorpoint Arena in Sheffield, England
10|14 O2 Arena in London, England
10|15 O2 Arena in London, England
10|18 Echo Arena in Liverpool, England
10|19 International Arena in Cardiff, Wales
10|24 Odyssey Arena in Belfast, N. Ireland
10|26 NIA Arena in Birmingham, England
10|27 Metro Arena in Newcastle, England
10|29 AECC in Aberdeen, Scotland
10|31 MEN Arena in Manchester, England
11|01 SECC Hall 3 in Glasgow, Scotland
11|03 SECC Hall 3 in Glasgow, Scotland
11|04 SECC Hall 3 in Glasgow, Scotland
11|05 Trent FM Arena in Nottingham, England
11|07 O2 in Dublin, Ireland
11|08 O2 in Dublin, Ireland
NORTH AMERICA
11|15 XL Center in Hartford, CT, USA
11|16 Madison Square Garden in NYC, NY, USA
11|19 MandalayBayCtr in Las Vegas, NV, USA
11|21 Oracle Arena in Oakland, CA, USA
11|22 Staples Center in Los Angeles, CA, USA
(via caughtinsuspension)
Katy Perry remains atop the Billboard Hot 100 for a second week with “Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.),” her historic fifth No. 1 from her album “Teenage Dream,” while Lil Wayne leaps onto the survey at No. 3 with the latest single from his forthcoming album “Tha Carter IV.”
“Friday” registers a second week at the Hot 100’s apex despite dips in airplay and sales. The song slips 1-2 on Radio Songs with 140 million all-format audience impressions (down 6%), according to Nielsen BDS. It holds at No. 4 on Digital Songs with 154,000 downloads sold (down 1%), according to Nielsen SoundScan.
With the song’s ascension to No. 1 last week, Perry became the first woman, and second artist overall, following Michael Jackson (“Bad,” 1987-88), in the Hot 100’s 53-year history to send five songs from an album to the top spot.
(Source: Billboard)
