- The 43-year-old singer performed his 2002 solo hit Cry Me A River at the Moody Center in Austin, Texas, on Saturday evening.
- At the end of the song he saw a fan in need, just after Taylor Swift stopped her show in Paris to help a fan too
- The singer gestured to the security guards toward the end of the song, but when it ended, he paused the show and asked for the house lights to be turned on.
Justin Timberlake brought his The Forget Tomorrow World Tour to the Moody Center in Austin, Texas, on Saturday evening, where he abruptly stopped the show due to a fan in need.
The 43-year-old singer performed his 2002 solo hit Cry Me A River on Saturday night, but at the end of the song he noticed a fan in distress, just after Taylor Swift stopped her show in Paris to help a fan. Good.
The singer gestured to the security guards toward the end of the song, but when it ended, he paused the show and asked for the house lights to be turned on.
‘Sorry everyone, one second, one second. We need some help here about five rows down,” Timberlake said from the stage via video of TikTok’s lion latch.
He waited a few moments and said, “Oh, are you okay?” before giving you a thumbs up and saying, “Oh, no problem.”
Justin Timberlake STOPS his concert in Austin, Texas to ensure a fan in need receives medical attention
The singer gestured to the security guards toward the end of the song, but when it ended, he paused the show and asked if the house lights could be turned on.
“Okay, I’m good,” Timberlake added as he started clapping and the crowd started applauding as well.
Another fan who was at the show said it was “the lady in front of me” who needed help during the show.
‘She’s fine. Luckily there were people next to us taking care of her while we got Justin’s attention,” TikTok user @shellbell4190 replied.
It has not been revealed what happened to the woman that caused her to require medical attention.
Saturday’s show at the Moody Center was the second of two shows at the University of Texas at Austin location.
The tour kicked off on April 29 at the Rogers Center in Vancouver, with his next show in a few days at the Dickies Arena in Fort Worth, Texas.
He will travel across America until early June, with the first leg of his US tour ending on July 29 at the Rupp Arena in Lexington, Kentucky.
He will have a few weeks’ break before hitting the road again at the end of July, with the European leg starting on July 29 in Krakow, Poland.
Shows in Germany, Belgium, England, Netherlands, Denmark, Sweden and France take the tour into its second leg before another break in September.
“Okay, I’m good,” Timberlake added as he started clapping and the crowd started applauding as well.
Another fan who was at the show said it was “the lady in front of me” who needed help during the show
What happened to the woman that caused her to require medical attention has not been released
His second North American leg kicks off on October 4 in Montreal, which also takes him to Brooklyn, Washington DC, Chicago, Atlanta and more.
The tour ends in Kansas City on December 20, just before the holiday season begins.
The tour is in support of his sixth solo album Everything I Thought It Was, which was released in March.
It was his first solo album in six years, following his 2018 album Man of the Woods.