The comedian talks about entertaining service members as part of the USO Holiday Tour, and what's coming up in 2026.
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. — When Gene Simmons of the iconic rock band KISS appeared Tuesday in Washington, D.C. to speak to lawmakers in favor of the American Music Fairness Act, he also spent time with Rep ...
Jeff Ross once schlepped to the Middle East. The comedian entertained sheikhs. Now back, he’s skewering his hometown state, or what’s left of it following the jailing of its gold-loving Sen. Menendez.
Kiss bassist and frontman Gene Simmons wants to feel more love from the radio — in his bank account. While the group's songs, such as "Rock and Roll All Night" and "I Was Made for Lovin' You," still ...
"You've got to change this now for our children and for our children's children," the KISS bassist told Congress on Tuesday, Dec. 9, per 'CBS News' Ilana Kaplan is a Staff Editor at PEOPLE. She has ...
Gene Simmons made quite the eyebrow-raising comment on live TV. The KISS frontman, 76, took a trip to Washington, D.C. this week to advocate for the American Music Fairness Act, which would ensure ...
The Count Basie Center for the Arts will host the first-ever “Roast of New Jersey” on Saturday, Feb. 28, bringing together comedians, television personalities, and sports figures for a night of jokes ...
Gene Simmons has apologized for suggesting that "bad decisions" played a role in Ace Frehley's death. Frehley, Kiss' founding lead guitarist, died in October after a September fall at his home studio.
In a statement following the death of his Kiss bandmate Ace Frehley in October, Gene Simmons celebrated the guitarist, saying, “No one can touch Ace’s legacy.” But in an interview with the The New ...
Dec. 9 (UPI) --KISS co-founder Gene Simmons and others testified for and against the proposed American Music Fairness Act during a Senate Judiciary subcommittee hearing Tuesday in Washington. Simmons ...
EXCLUSIVE — Kiss bassist Gene Simmons descended on Capitol Hill on Tuesday to testify before a Senate Judiciary subcommittee in support of a bill that requires the radio industry to pay artists when ...
Kiss legend Gene Simmons testified before a Senate Judiciary subcommittee today, and he had some pretty harsh words for the way musicians are treated by terrestrial radio. “Let’s call it for what it ...