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Tool Apparently Booed for Disappointing Set at Their Own Festival

The post Tool Apparently Booed for Disappointing Set at Their Own Festival appeared first on Consequence.
Tool’s first-ever destination festival took place over the weekend in the Dominican Republic, and it appears that the band was booed at the end of its second show of the fest for not living up to its promise of playing “two unique sets.”
The Tool in the Sand Festival in Punta Cana kicked off on Friday (March 7th), with the band slated to play two shows over two nights, headlining a lineup that also included Primus, Coheed and Cambria, Mastodon, and more.
It seems like the band’s performance on Friday night (March 7th) was well received, as they played a 10-song set that included tracks from all five of their studio albums, including favorites like “Schism,” “Stinkfist,” and “Vicarious.”
The disappointment apparently came at the end of the band’s second show on Saturday night (March 8th), which saw the band play nine songs, four of which they performed the night before (“Fear Inoculum,” “Jambi,” “Pneuma,” and “Rosetta Stoned”).
Video footage posted on Reddit (see below) seemingly shows fans booing the band, as well as screaming “f*ck you” and flipping the bird. Comments on Reddit and Facebook suggest that the fans were not only upset by the repeat songs but also a relatively short set.
One fan wrote on Reddit, “Friday night was extremely good but Saturday night was definitely a let down in length, variety and style. The whole reason I did this was to see two different sets and be able to walk back to the [hotel] room.”
Another person wrote on the band’s Facebook page, “So much for the ‘two unique sets’ we were promised,” with someone else adding, “And they quit 30 minutes early tonight. If you hated Tool fans, this is what you would do. It’s perplexing that they are this disconnected from reality. I think it’s more than f*cked up; I think it’s a breach of contract and they owe us a refund for tonight. Unacceptable. At least Primus kicked ass, and the other bands were great. Tool is my favorite band, and I’m just beside myself that they would do this after all that hype.”
Technically, the band did play two unique sets in that they weren’t exactly the same, but it seems like certain fans were expecting the performances to be wholly unique with no repeat songs, as Metallica are doing over two nights in each city on their current “M72 World Tour.”
Tool are set to play their first-ever South American shows this spring, as well as a couple gigs in Mexico, with tickets available here. Fans can also catch singer Maynard James Keenan when he heads out on the “Sessanta V2.0” tour with his bands A Perfect Circle and Puscifer, along with Primus. Tickets for that outing can be purchased here.
See apparent video of fans booing Tool on Saturday night below, followed by the setlists for each night.
Setlist Night 1 (Friday):
Stinkfist
Fear Inoculum
Rosetta Stoned
Pneuma
Jambi
Schism
The Grudge
Flood (with Justin Chancellor intro)
Invincible
Vicarious
Setlist Night 2 (Saturday):
Fear Inoculum
Ænema
Rosetta Stoned
Pneuma
Jambi
Descending
Chocolate Chip Trip
Intolerance
Swamp Song
Tool Apparently Booed for Disappointing Set at Their Own Festival
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Breaking News
How COVID changed America, in 12 charts

Five years after the start of the coronavirus pandemic, COVID is usually discussed in the past tense — as a thing that happened.
But no event as monumental as COVID simply goes away. The disease forced us to rearrange our society nearly overnight. Even though the days of lockdowns and mass death are behind us, disruption of that scale is bound to have a lasting, if not permanent, impact.
America is simply a different country today than it was before COVID arrived, though some of the aftereffects are difficult to measure. The pandemic undoubtedly altered U.S. politics, for example, but how much and in which directions is hard to quantify given all of the other factors at play.
More than a million deaths and counting
The most important and obvious result of COVID is all of the lives that it took — and continues to take. Since the start of the pandemic, more than 1.2 million people in the United States have died of COVID-related illnesses. During the first wave of infections, as many as 15,000 people were dying every week. A later, even deadlier wave, that started in late 2020 peaked at more than 25,000 weekly deaths. Though those days are thankfully behind us, COVID is still killing several hundred people every week.
Lasting health impacts
The virus’s health impact goes beyond mortality, of course. There have been more than 100 million confirmed cases of COVID in the U.S., though that figure likely dramatically underestimates the actual total. Most people recovered fully, but some didn’t. Millions reported dealing with lingering, in some cases debilitating, effects of long COVID.
In 2024, there were 4 million more Americans living with a disability than there were five years prior. Not all of that increase can be attributed to COVID directly, but there has been a significant increase in the number of people reporting a cognitive impairment over the past five years.
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The way we work
When communal spaces abruptly became the sites of deadly virus transmission, America’s white collar workforce suddenly had to learn how to do their jobs remotely. A lot of them never came back to the office. According to the most recent available data, more than a third of U.S. workers now do some or all of their work from home.
Employers have been trying to coax their workers back into the office for years now, but with only limited success. Many at-home workers like their remote arrangement so much that they would be willing to take a pay cut or even quit to keep it.
Beyond the impact on individual companies, the rise of remote work has also dealt a massive blow to the commercial real estate industry. According to one estimate, office buildings across the country have lost a total of $250 billion in value because so much space is sitting vacant. Some cities have all but given up on some of those offices ever being filled again and begun the difficult process of trying to convert them into residential housing.
The way we learn
America’s schools also closed en masse in the early stages of the pandemic. Unlike remote work, which has had an unclear impact on worker productivity, distance learning proved to be a poor substitute for in-person instruction for most students. The disruptions of the pandemic caused widespread learning loss that still hasn’t been remedied five years later. Anger over what many feel were unnecessary or excessively long school closures has helped fuel a stark decline in satisfaction with the nation’s schools. The majority of states have seen public school enrollment drop from pre-pandemic levels.
School closures also served as an impromptu nationwide experiment in homeschooling. While many parents were eager to get their children back into the classroom, millions decided that educating their children in their own homes was the better choice for their families. Homeschooling has a long history in the U.S., but in recent years it has evolved from its religious roots to become more diverse — both in its structure and the types of families that practice it.
The way we vaccinate
Data from America’s schools is also one of the best ways of measuring another significant post-pandemic social trend: Increased skepticism of vaccines. Anti-vaccine sentiment is nothing new in America. But that view has become increasingly widespread over the past few years as unfounded fears about COVID-19 vaccines appear to have spilled over into more general distrust of all inoculations. As the recent measles outbreak in Texas has shown, this shift can have deadly consequences.
The way we watch
The film industry was dealt a particularly big blow by the coronavirus. Annual box office revenue fell by $9 billion after theaters throughout the country were forced to shutter. Productions also ground to a halt, meaning there were fewer releases to draw audiences back to the cinema once safety concerns faded away. The industry has made significant progress over the past few years, but its output and earnings are still well below where they were at the start of the pandemic.
With no choice but to seek entertainment at home, Americans turned to their TVs, and studios poured billions into streaming platforms to secure their share of the audience. Over the past five years, our relationship to television has fundamentally changed. Traditional cable has cratered while streaming services have boomed. Last year, audiences watched 23 million years’ worth of streaming content, according to Nielsen. This shift doesn’t just affect how we enjoy TV, it could have major repercussions on the industry’s long-term health.
The way we spend
Beyond any one industry, the pandemic has had a lasting effect on the U.S. economy as a whole, but not in the way most would have expected when the world ground to a halt five years ago. The economy took a nosedive at first, but rebounded quickly — thanks in part to trillions of dollars in stimulus from Congress. By early 2021, it had not only recovered pandemic losses, but was surging.
The past few years have seen steady economic growth, low unemployment, rising wages and record highs in the stock market. But those positive trends have been paired with stubbornly high inflation that has driven prices of key consumer goods up and up.
Nowhere has the post-pandemic price spike been more impactful than in housing. A surge in newly remote workers looking for more space and city dwellers relocating to less densely populated areas caused demand to skyrocket in a housing market that was already dealing with a chronic supply shortage. In just two years, the average sale price of a home in the U.S. increased by more than $150,000. Price pressure didn’t only impact homeowners. Renters have also seen their housing costs increase substantially. High interest rates have steadied things to a certain extent, but housing is still less affordable than it has been in decades.
Breaking News
Crews accounted for after tanker and ship collide

All 37 crew have been accounted for after a fuel tanker and a cargo ship burst into flames when they collided in the North Sea, an MP has said.
A major rescue operation was launched following the incident near the Humber Estuary shortly before 10:00 GMT on Monday.
Crew members were forced to abandon ship when explosions ripped through the US-registered tanker Stena Immaculate. The other vessel involved was the Solong, a Portuguese-flagged container ship.
Beverley and Holderness MP Graham Stuart said he understood only one person was in hospital following the collision, with the remaining 36 “all safe and accounted for”.
Some of the crew members were met by emergency services at Grimsby docks [Submitted]
Maritime firm Crowley, which manages the Stena Immaculate, said there were “multiple explosions onboard” when the vessel suffered a ruptured cargo tank.
Earlier, the RNLI said there were reports “that a number of people had abandoned the vessels following a collision and there were fires on both ships”.
Martyn Boyers, chief executive of the Port of Grimsby East, said he had been told there was “a massive fireball”, adding: “It’s too far out for us to see – about 10 miles – but we have seen the vessels bringing them in.
“They must have sent a mayday out – luckily there was a crew transfer vessel out there already.
“Since then there has been a flotilla of ambulances to pick up anyone they can find.”
The condition of the casualty taken to hospital is not known.
Latest updates on the tanker collision
A Coastguard rescue helicopter was called out, alongside lifeboats from Skegness, Bridlington, Mablethorpe and Cleethorpes, a coastguard fixed wing aircraft, and nearby vessels with fire-fighting capability.
According to MarineTraffic, the Stena Immaculate had travelled from the Greek port of Agioi Theodoroi and was anchored by the Humber Estuary.
The Solong had been sailing from the Scottish port of Grangemouth to Rotterdam, in the Netherlands.
In a statement, a spokesperson for the Marine Accident Investigation Branch said it had deployed a team to Grimsby.
They said: “The Marine Accident Investigation Branch has deployed a team to Grimsby following the collision of the Portuguese registered container ship Solong and the US registered oil tanker Stena Immaculate which collided in the North Sea this morning.
“Our team of inspectors and support staff are gathering evidence and undertaking a preliminary assessment of the accident to determine our next steps.”
Meanwhile, the coastguard said it was assessing the “likely” counter-pollution response that might be required.
A spokesperson for environmental group Greenpeace UK said: “At this stage, it’s too early to assess the extent of any environmental damage.”
It added that its “thoughts are are with all those affected”.
Downing Street said details of the cause of the collision were “still becoming clear”.
The prime minister’s official spokesman said it was an “extremely concerning situation”.
He said: “We thank the emergency services for their rapid response. I understand the Department for Transport is working closely with the coastguard to help support the response to the incident.”
Listen to highlights from Hull and East Yorkshire on BBC Sounds, watch the latest episode of Look North or tell us about a story you think we should be covering here.
Breaking News
5 injured after small plane crashes into residential area in Pennsylvania

All five people on board a small plane that crashed into a residential area in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania, on Sunday survived and were taken to hospitals, authorities said.
Conditions for the five were unavailable, and officials have not provided details on their injuries. Manheim Township Fire Chief Scott Little said at a news conference no one on the ground was injured, but five vehicles were damaged.
The plane had just taken off from Lancaster Airport when it went down in the Brethren Village retirement community, he said.
The Federal Aviation Administration said in a statement that the plane, a Beechcraft Bonanza, crashed at 3 p.m.
The five were initially transported to Lancaster General Hospital, where two of them remained Sunday evening. Three were taken to Lehigh Valley Health Network’s burn center, a Lancaster General Hospital spokesperson said.
Emergency crews at the site of a plane crash in a residential area in Lancaster County, Pa., on Sunday.
First responders were on scene within three minutes and faced multiple fires, Little said. Online images of the crash showed the tail of a plane in a parking lot with the rest of the aircraft engulfed in flames.
“They had heavy fire on arrival from the aircraft,” he said.
Any remaining fire was extinguished and the scene was under control a little more than three hours after the crash, Little said.
Video from NBC affiliate WGAL of Lancaster showed the crashed plane in the parking area at Brethren Village, less than a mile from Lancaster Airport.
Manheim Police Chief Duane Fisher said the plane appeared to have skidded about 100 feet when it hit the ground but may have avoided structures.
Residents were initially told to shelter in place as a precaution, Fisher said at the news conference.
Brethren Village did not immediately respond to a request for more information Sunday.
The scene in the parking area at Brethren Village in Lancaster, Pa., on Sunday.
Flight tracker FlightAware shows the aircraft was scheduled to fly to Springfield-Beckley Municipal Airport in Springfield, Ohio.
Air traffic control radio traffic indicates someone in the plane reported an open door on the aircraft shortly after takeoff and requested permission to return to Lancaster Airport.
Air traffic control is heard clearing the plane to land before urging it to “pull up.”
Little said federal officials would look into the possibility of an open door on the aircraft as part of their investigation.
“A plane crash where everybody survives and nobody on the ground is hurt is a wonderful thing,” Fisher, the police chief, said. “To have this type of ending so far is a great day for us.”
FAA information showed the plane is registered to an entity in Manheim. The aircraft is a popular single-engine model introduced in 1947 and usually able to carry six.
The National Transportation Safety Board has opened an investigation into the crash and said it would work with the FAA.
This article was originally published on NBCNews.com
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