The volume from Brooks and his 102,000-member Tiger Stadium audience was so loud as he played"Callin' Baton Rouge" that the concert registered as an earthquake, a phenomenon Brooks likened to a"title bout.""They hit hard. It wasn't a concert. It wasn't a party. It was a title bout, a heavyweight title fight," he said in a video for Inside Studio G on Monday of the Saturday night Louisiana State University concert."It was awesome.
Here's a snapshot of what it looked like when he played Callin' Baton Rouge.https://t.co/uuqI74fBak pic.twitter.com/ThjfEJ4q0yMany fans also said that they received alerts from their Apple watches that the noise had hit 95 decimals, Farrah Yvette, an executive producer at WDSU News, said in a Twitter post.
"Just 10 minutes at this level can cause temporary hearing loss," a warning from a person's Apple watch read.— Farrah Yvette May 1, 2022 Saturday marks the second time in history when the noise level from the crowd in Tiger Stadium registered as an earthquake. On October 8, 1988, as LSU was competing against Auburn University with two minutes left in the football game, the crowd of 79,000 people grew so loud that the noise registered as an earthquake, according to WBRZ.
The Washington Examiner reached out to Patricia Persaud for a comment but did not receive a response back.