March For Our Lives: Paul McCartney Attends, Ariana Grande, Charlie Puth Perform In Demonstrations Across U.S.

Paul McCartney
(Photo by Spencer Platt/Getty Images
– Paul McCartney
at March For Our Lives in New York City March 24

Paul McCartney, donning a “We Can End Gun Violence” shirt, joined thousands at the New York City “March For Our Lives” demonstration organized by school shooting survivors and anchored by a massive Washington D.C. event to be capped off by performances from Ariana Grande, Miley Cyrus and Common, among others.

 “One of my best friends was killed in gun violence right around here, so it’s important to me,” the Beatle told CNN at the march, obviously referring to John Lennon who was killed in New York City in 1980. 
The March For Our Lives demonstrations, aimed to put pressure on legislators to enact policy that would make guns harder to acquire, picked up steam after the Feb. 14 Parkland, Fla., shooting in which 17 people were killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. 
Before the event, Pollstar spoke to Maxwell Frost, one of the chief organizers behind the Orlando march, who was seeking artists to perform at the event and added that a possible stadium benefit concert was in the works after the march. 
The march had survivors from the Parkland shooting on board to speak and is set to be the largest demonstration in Florida. 
As many as 800 fellow March For Our Lives events are planned throughout the country. 
‘One Love Manchester’
Dave Hogan via AP
– ‘One Love Manchester’
Ariana Grande, centre in white, performs at the One Love Manchester tribute concert in Manchester, north western England.

Ariana Grande was performing when a suicide bomb went off outside her show at Manchester Arena in England May 22 which killed 22 people.

Just weeks later, she performed at the “One Love” benefit cocnert held at the same venue. 

Common, during his Oscars performance with Andra Day, commended the Parkland survivors, adding during the song “Stand Up For Something,” adding the line, “Tell the NRA they’re in God’s Way, and to the people of Parkland, we say ‘Ase.’” They performed together at the D.C. march with proceeds going to March For Our Lives, while Dianne Warren introduced a Compton’s children’s choir.
Charlie Puth performend two songs at the Los Angeles march, which is also to feature Amy Schumer, Olivia Wilde and others sharing the stage with students. 
Artists have flooded social media with commentary, with everyone from comedian Sarah Silverman tweeting to recent Pollstar cover artist and Pollstar Live! panelist K.Flay taking a stand and marching at the Atlanta march, where she said she would be donating all the merch sales from her show tonight, at the Variety Playhouse, to a charity called Everytown, which seeks to end gun violence.

Student protesters call for stricter gun laws, safer schools (Associated Press🙂 

WASHINGTON (AP) — Student survivors of the Florida school massacre anchored a massive rally against gun violence Saturday in Washington, D.C., while throngs of other young people took to the streets in sister marches across the U.S. The protests followed widespread student walkouts last week.

Here’s a look at what some of the demonstrators had to say:

TALIA RUMSKY, 16

SCHOOL: Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida

MARCHING IN: Washington, D.C.

WHY ATTEND? “Because we keep chanting, ‘Never again,’ ‘Enough is enough,’ ‘Never again.’ But it’s already happened again. It happened in Maryland. There was a shooting in Napa (California’s Napa County). So I’m really here to make sure we can make our voices heard; so people are empowered to make sure we vote in legislators so this doesn’t happen again; so we can avenge those who were stolen from us because someone thought it was OK to own weapons of mass destruction.”

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO SEE CHANGE AS A RESULT? “I definitely want people to vote in new legislators that will help us pass bills that will include banning high-capacity magazines, banning certain semi and automatic assault rifles — and not just focusing on school safety but focusing in on gun violence as a whole.”

WHAT DID YOU EXPERIENCE DURING THE FEB. 14 SHOOTING AT YOUR SCHOOL? “The fire alarm went off, and we all thought it was kind of weird because we had one that morning. But then we heard gunshots. … And then a cop car pulled up, and they told (students): ‘Run past Westglades, run past the highway, run past the creek.’ And we had to go, like, single file and everything, and it still really hadn’t hit me at that point. But then, when we were walking out towards Walmart, we saw an armored SWAT car, and that’s when it really hit me that this is something real, this is something (where) people are losing their lives at this very moment.

CECILIA MCCOY, 17

SCHOOL: Assumption High School in Louisville, Kentucky

MARCHING IN: Washington, D.C.

WHY ATTEND? “I’m here for the students, for gun control — honestly just for everyone. This is not just for students. Everywhere you go, there is a threat of guns.”

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO SEE CHANGE AS A RESULT? “Stricter gun laws and to get rid of assault rifles.”

HAVE YOU BEEN AT SCHOOL WHEN THERE WAS A SHOOTING OR OTHER TYPE OF GUN THREAT? “No, but in Kentucky there have been multiple school threats. In Marshall County, there was one. I wasn’t there, but I knew people that go there, so it did affect home.”

CHARLIE SHEBS, 16

SCHOOL: Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida

MARCHING IN: Washington, D.C.

WHY ATTEND? “I’m here because previous generations couldn’t do what we’re doing right now. And we want to make this time the last time. So if that means marching all over the world, then I want to be a part of it.

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO SEE CHANGE AS A RESULT? “I want to see safer schools. I don’t want to hear that kids don’t feel safe at schools. … I want to see change in gun laws, and I want to see control. We’re giving it to people who, it’s just not safe. There’s no other way to put it, really.”

WHAT DID YOU EXPERIENCE DURING THE FEB. 14 SHOOTING AT YOUR SCHOOL? “I was in the freshman building on the third floor. And the fire alarm went off for the second time, and I was making my way to the staircase, and then everyone started screaming and running back. And I almost didn’t make it into the classroom, and I’m just — I’m glad I did. The shots just kept coming and coming. And I thought it was still a drill because they said we were going to have a drill, and then everyone started screaming along with the shots. And I was locked in the classroom on top of a printer for a good hour and a half. (When we were able to leave), I saw bodies everywhere, and there were just splatters on the wall. They actually told us to put our heads down and hands on the people’s shoulders in front of us, and it was very hard not to look around at the bullet holes in the wall. The only way to get out of the building was to step in blood and over bodies.”

BEN STEWART, 17

SCHOOL: Shiloh Hills Christian School in Kennesaw, Georgia

MARCHING IN: Atlanta

WHY ATTEND? “People have been dying since 1999 in Columbine, and nothing has changed. People are still dying. Columbine isn’t even on the top 10 list of mass shootings in America. Something needs to change.

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO SEE CHANGE AS A RESULT? “I’d like to see commonsense gun laws introduced. It would be preferable if there was a semi-automatic rifle ban. … If you look at … school shootings, the majority of them are with legally purchased weapons. So yeah, criminals will get weapons, but you could still do something. It’s better than doing nothing.”

ZOE BONNER, 16

SCHOOL: Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida

MARCHING IN: Washington, D.C.

WHY ATTEND? “I’m here today because it happened to our school, and it shouldn’t have happened. It shouldn’t have happened anywhere, and we feel like it’s time to make change and get gun reform.

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO SEE CHANGE AS A RESULT? “Banning military-style weapons and more protections for our schools.”

WHAT DID YOU EXPERIENCE DURING THE FEB. 14 SHOOTING AT YOUR SCHOOL? “At first nobody really knew what it was because the fire drill had went off. So most people were going out for the fire drill, and then people heard the code red, but some people heard it too late. So it was just a lot of confusion. And then after, it was just mostly shock hearing how many people died and how quickly it happened.”

CESAR ALVARADO, 18

SCHOOL: Mt. San Antonio College in Walnut, California

MARCHING IN: Los Angeles

WHY ATTEND? “I am marching for those whose voices have been silenced.”

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO SEE CHANGE AS A RESULT? “More gun control in areas that don’t have it and banning of assault rifles.”

HAVE YOU BEEN AT SCHOOL WHEN THERE WAS A SHOOTING OR OTHER TYPE OF GUN THREAT? “I have not, but I can sympathize for those who have, and it’s just sad to see people’s hearts have been broken (because of) gun violence.”

ADRIAN MAYAN, 13

SCHOOL: Sacred Heart Academy in Redlands, California

MARCHING IN: Los Angeles

WHY ATTEND? “I’m here to represent the people who died in the several shootings that happened recently, and I’m here to represent those who can’t be here and to make changes in the government.”

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO SEE CHANGE AS A RESULT? “I hope many government officials are able to open their eyes to change gun laws in this country.”

KAYLA RENERT, 15

SCHOOL: Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida

MARCHING IN: Washington, D.C.

WHY ATTEND? “I’m here because I look at the younger kids and I look at the future generations, and I just never want them to have to go through what we went through and to experience what we saw and what we heard. … I feel there really needs to be a change. And we keep saying, ‘Oh, this is going to be the last time,’ but there’s already been another time.”

WHAT DO YOU WANT TO SEE CHANGE AS A RESULT? “Better gun laws and legislators voted into office that will actually do something about it and not just tell us, ‘What you guys are doing is not going to do anything. It doesn’t matter to me. I’m not going for (re-election).’ We want people that actually care.”

WHAT DID YOU EXPERIENCE DURING THE FEB. 14 SHOOTING AT YOUR SCHOOL? “I remember getting a phone call from one of my best friends. She was in a closet. … And I just remember her crying hysterically to me, and at that moment, I was heartbroken. I got a picture of one of my good friends. She was shot in the leg. Just seeing it, I couldn’t believe what I was seeing. It didn’t feel real.”

Associated Press writers Andrew Harnik and Alex Brandon in Washington; Krysta Fauria in Los Angeles; and Ben Nadler in Atlanta contributed to this report.