Luke Combs pays back young fans who bought their own tickets to his show

Luke Combs repaid two children who set forth a hard effort to go to one of his shows.
Bo Fenderson, 12, and his companion Tanner stacked five strings of wood to pay for their own passes to the Bangor, Maine show, WABI-TV announced.
"We made $100 bucks stacking 5 lines of wood, purchased two Luke Combs tickets. Man, he sounds great. Our Dads swore it was an exercise in futility, goodness however they were off-base. The present my twelfth birthday, goodness Lord trouble usually rolls in like a flood," Fenderson's sign read.
Brushes recognized the sign during his Friday night show and pulled $140 out of his wallet to take care of the children for their tickets.
"How much would you say you were tickets? $100? $200? You all paid $200, 100 bucks each," he said. "Wow, I just got $140 here. You all need that, repay yourselves. I'll get you some more."
The "Delightful Crazy" vocalist welcomed the children to come hang out behind the stage after the show.
"I thought it was cool to see him strolling towards us," Tanner told the power source.
"He came towards us, and we had the option to meet with him. I thought it was truly cool," Bo added.
Bo's mom told WABI-TV that Combs was a "incredible good example" to the children.
"He's an extraordinary good example to take the time and do that, and truly recognize what they did," Desiree told the power source. "It wasn't simply Luke, it was the remainder of the staff too that got it going and made it a highlight come track down us and the young men and satisfy that guarantee that he made to them. I think for every one of the sisters, the cousins, and the companions that they generally educated a significant example."
"I simply believe it's actually something astonishing for him to have done this to support examples that we attempt to impart in our kids," Tanner's mother, Justine, likewise shared with the TV station. "They went knowing, and just to make it this huge is astounding. It's so endearing."
Brushes additionally discounted all passes to his Saturday night show in Bangor after he encountered vocal issues.
The blue grass music star "declared that he was all the while going to perform but, since of the state of his voice, he didn't feel he could put on a genuine act," radio broadcast B98.5 detailed.
"Thus, he planned to discount the cash concert attendees had paid for passes to the show," the power source said. "Noticeably annoyed with everything going on, he made sense of that he comprehends the expense of showing up at a show goes far past what is paid for the tickets. For some individuals there are lodgings, suppers, sitters, gas, and that's just the beginning. Discounting the cost of the tickets was, to him, the least he could do."
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