Chris Brown Announces 20th Anniversary Tour With Summer Walker & Bryson Tiller
R&B star Chris Brown is marking 20 years in the music industry with a major international tour featuring Summer Walker and Bryson Tiller.
Titled the Breezy Bowl XX Tour, the stadium tour kicks off in June in Amsterdam before heading across Europe and North America. The U.S. leg begins in late July and will wrap up in Las Vegas in September, where Brown is currently based.
Announcing the tour on Instagram, Brown expressed his excitement:
“TEAM BREEZY !!!!! TEAM BREEZY!!! TEAM BREEZY!!!!! BREEZY BOWL 20th anniversary TOUR!!!!!!!!!! CELEBRATING 20 years of CB.”
“So excited to be able to share this moment with the world and my amazing fans. I CAN’T WAIT TO SEE ALL Y’ALL BEAUTIFUL FACES. IMA TAKE Y’ALL THROUGH THESE ERAS BUT MOST IMPORTANTLY GIVE Y’ALL MY HEART AND SOUL.”
Chris Brown Files $500 Million Defamation Lawsuit
In addition to his tour announcement, Chris Brown has filed a $500 million defamation lawsuit against Warner Bros. and Ample Entertainment over allegations made in the documentary Chris Brown: A History of Violence.
The documentary, which premiered in October 2024, featured an anonymous woman who accused Brown of rape on Diddy’s boat in 2020. However, the allegations were previously dismissed in a $20 million lawsuit after evidence emerged that the claims were fabricated.
In the lawsuit filed on January 21, Brown accuses the companies of knowingly spreading false information for profit, despite having proof that the claims were baseless.
The lawsuit states:
“This case is about the media putting their own profits over the truth. They did so after being provided proof that their information was false, and their storytelling ‘Jane Doe’ had not only been discredited over and over but was in fact a perpetrator of intimate partner violence and aggressor herself.”
“Mr. Brown has never been found guilty of any sex-related crime […] but this documentary states in every available fashion that he is a serial rapist and sexual abuser.”
Chris Brown is demanding $500 million in damages, but Warner Bros. and Ample Entertainment have yet to respond.