Paul McCartney: Got Back Tour, New Book, SNL Triumph & Billionaire Status at 80
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Paul McCartney has certainly proven once again that retirement is not in his vocabulary. The big headline as of today is that Sir Paul is deep into his North American Got Back tour extension, igniting arenas from coast to coast with classic hits and some newer surprises. He’s scheduled for a landmark show on November 14 at Buffalo’s KeyBank Center, with thousands of fans expected to pack the venue according to official venue announcements, and he’s following that with two highly anticipated United Center concerts in Chicago on November 24 and 25. Social media channels exploded last week as fans shared photos and nostalgia from his Columbus stop on November 8 at Nationwide Arena, with TikTok and Instagram featuring multigenerational jam sessions and some heartfelt audience interactions.
A major news splash is the imminent release of McCartney’s new book Wings The Story of a Band on the Run on November 4. Penguin Books and Allen Lane are touting this as a revealing collaboration between McCartney and historian Ted Widmer, packed with reminiscences and fresh anecdotes from the band’s glory years. The book’s most-talked-about revelation this week, picked up by AOL and Us Weekly, is McCartney’s secret role in facilitating a reconciliation between John Lennon and Yoko Ono during the band’s turbulent years—a juicy tidbit sure to fuel Beatles aficionados’ dinner debates.
On TV, McCartney’s February performance at the Saturday Night Live 50th Anniversary Special is still buzzing online, with clips circulating across YouTube and Twitter. He delivered a medley of Golden Slumbers Carry That Weight and The End, closing the broadcast with effortless charisma that led Variety to call it “a masterclass in pop endurance.”
Business-wise, Forbes and The Business Standard continue to rank McCartney near the top of music’s billionaire list, crediting his unmatched music publishing ventures and canny investments. His net worth is now north of 1.2 billion dollars, solidifying his status as one of the industry’s ultimate moguls.
In interviews fresh off the wire at American Songwriter, McCartney reflected on his “most memorable show ever”—the historic Beatles performance at Shea Stadium in 1965. He described the hysteria, innovation, and sheer magnitude that, in his words, set the stage for all modern stadium gigs. That comment is currently lighting up Reddit and music forums, with fans sharing memories and archival footage.
No scandals, no retirements, and no slowing down. If anything, the buzz around his tour, literary projects, and business empire points to a man whose legendary biography is still being written, note by note, city by city, headline by headline.
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