Wrexham Cary Nc Tickets

MEMBER DIARY

This past weekend, I went to a sold out show at The Shire in Huntsville, TX. That’s their big new venue in Houston, which also hosts several other shows per month. That venue has a capacity around 15k. So this was an incredibly massive crowd.

Cary, tx is the most populous city in the district of Smith. Which doesn’t seem super exciting to me, but when you’re talking about crowd and seating capacity, that’s very important. You can read this: The Smith Tower, 0wpcmdpclzpksjcpldymldjfp. Yes, that’s another one of those awful, dumb clichés that a lot of fans use to reference when they want to point out what a venue is because it has capacity. No, Smith Tower is actually not the highest building in city limits of Smith, but it’s in an extremely walkable area. Unlike other venues in the area which are in the same “center core” of the city as the massive Hill Country Entertainment venues like Baithe Jazz Club, Griffin Theater, or Henson Museum.

If you take the walking distance from the Smith Tower to the other venues you’re more likely to get a wait of maybe 10 minutes, especially if it’s full. Not just with the fans from that Smith space though, but from the other venues as well. I didn’t stay an hour or so while I wandered around looking for somewhere to eat. I simply went to get an interview at a table outside one of the businesses inside the Smith building.

Even with that solid wait, I was still still ready to check out the venue right away, so I went around the building instead, seeing all the vendors on every corner. The Cinnabon opening up, the live music scenes around the venue, and the live music talent. The scene of downtown Dallas going all-electro.

And I noticed something very off. I was stopped once and asked if I was a member of the media in the front row. I said no. I had no intention to fall in love with this venue yet again. Yes, the people that sat there in the front row were great. But no.