Kesha at Glasgow Hydro and the White House TikTok Clash Trajectory
kesha is confirmed to be on a world tour stop at Glasgow’s Hydro on Wednesday, March 11, and the same week her music figureheads a separate dispute after a Feb. 10 White House TikTok used one of her songs. That pairing of a live tour date and a viral social-media incident points toward heightened public attention around both the Glasgow show and online engagement metrics.
Kesha at Glasgow Hydro on March 11: set details, support and audience rules
Kesha is in the middle of a world tour promoting her most recent record, Period, which the context says was released last year on her own independent label. The Glasgow stop at the Hydro on Wednesday, March 11 is listed with support from American singer-songwriter Sizzy Rocket and a setlist drawn from a recent show in Belgium. Ticketing notes in the context show prices starting from £47. 90, and venue restrictions are explicit: standing areas are over 14s only, seated areas are over 8s only, and everyone under 16 must be accompanied by an adult over 18.
White House Feb. 10 TikTok and Kesha’s public objections
On Feb. 10 the White House posted a TikTok labelled “Lethality” that paired military footage with Kesha’s track “Blow, ” and Kesha publicly objected, writing that the administration used one of her songs to “incite violence and threaten war. ” The context records that Kesha wrote she “absolutely” does not “approve of my music being used to promote violence of any kind, ” and that White House staff publicly pushed back: Deputy Assistant to the President and Deputy Communications Director Kaelan Dorr posted on X that “Kesha quotes are like Popeye’s spinach to this team, ” while Communications Director Steven Cheung wrote on X that those posts draw more attention and more view counts.
If the White House reaction continues around Kesha: divergent scenarios
If X continues… and White House staff maintain the public mocking tone that Kaelan Dorr and Steven Cheung used on X, the context suggests those posts could amplify view counts for the Feb. 10 TikTok. In that case the dispute could sustain a cycle of online engagement driven by the comments Cheung linked to—he wrote that public outrage “gives us more attention and more view counts”—even as Kesha’s Glasgow date on March 11 proceeds as scheduled.
Should Y occur… meaning should public attention pivot instead toward the other topics named in the same context—specifically the public court filings tied to Epstein and the mention of President Donald Trump roughly 38, 000 times in documents released in January—the TikTok dispute could recede from the headlines. The context notes those filings and the volume of mentions, and if that material dominates coverage, the clash over the Feb. 10 clip may become a shorter-lived social-media episode relative to broader legal and political developments.
The next confirmed milestone in the immediate timeline is Kesha’s Glasgow Hydro date on Wednesday, March 11. What the context does not resolve is whether the White House will remove or alter the Feb. 10 TikTok or whether staff comments on X will change tone; those specific decisions are not detailed in the material provided. Expect the March 11 show attendance and online view counts tied to the Feb. 10 video to provide the earliest measurable signals about which track—live-tour attention or viral controversy—carries forward.