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Chrissie Hynde on June 2 published a blunt social media letter criticizing audience members who film or photograph live shows, saying the behaviour is a “weird compulsion” and comparing it to “monkeys wanking.” The Pretenders frontwoman recounted discussing the issue with Emmylou Harris and described being obstructed at Harris’s Royal Albert Hall concert by a fan’s bright phone screen.
Hynde also cited a front-row patron filming Sarah Snook’s one-woman play and recounted a “nightmare” at a Van Gogh retrospective where visitors held phones up in front of paintings.
She praised artists such as Bob Dylan who enforce phone-free policies — noting pouches and bag checks — and contrasted those acts with pop performers who encourage filming for social media.
Hynde, 74, said she’s recorded a new Pretenders album and hopes to resume touring next year, while reiterating that phone use ruins the experience for both performers and other audience members.
The comments have been widely picked up by music and culture outlets and revive an ongoing debate among artists, venues and fans about phone policies at live events.
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Social Summary
Fans and performers are at odds: many attendees value short, high-quality clips as personal mementos, while artists and fellow audience members push for phone-free communal experiences. Practical responses in circulation include enforced bans, time-limited recording (e.g., final song), and offering official post-show recordings.







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