Fights broke out between Travis Scott fans at his concert in New Zealand on Wednesday moments before he took the stage.
The rapper, 33, was performing at Eden Park in Auckland as part of his Circus Maximus tour when ticket holders decided to fight each other.
Shortly after the concert, videos surfaced online showing fights in both the stands and the general admission mosh pit.
The teenagers were seen unleashing a barrage of punches and kicks while surrounded by a cheering crowd.
According to reports from the New Zealand HeraldPolice made no arrests at the concert.
Similar chaotic scenes also unfolded during the Melbourne leg of Scott’s tour, with one young man being knocked out.
In shocking footage posted to TikTok earlier this month, patrons were seen trying to make their way through security and into the mosh pit as Scott performed.
In the clip, security guards are seen restraining rowdy members of the public, as die-hard fans battled for free access to the mosh pit.
Fights broke out between Travis Scott fans at his concert in New Zealand on Wednesday moments before he took the stage.
Another reveler was also knocked to the ground and left unconscious in the mosh pit at Scott’s show in Sydney.
In the video, Scott had already taken the stage when a group of men standing in the back of the general admissions area appeared to become agitated.
A shirtless man strangled another concert-goer before violently throwing him to the ground.
“Knock him out,” one person shouted.
“Wow, World Star,” said a second, referring to a news site famous for its wrestling videos.
The victim lay motionless as other concerned attendees came to his aid.
The rapper, 33, was performing at Eden Park in Auckland as part of his Circus Maximus tour when ticket holders decided to fight each other.
Scott’s concerts have earned a notorious reputation for their rowdy crowds since a fatal incident killed several attendees in Houston, Texas, in 2021.
The Astroworld Festival killed nine concertgoers in Houston, Texas, on November 5, 2021.
The county medical examiner said the deaths were caused by compression asphyxiation, meaning people had suffocated in the crowd packed into the mosh pit.
Scott was cleared of any wrongdoing and the deaths were ruled an accident.
Similar chaotic scenes unfolded during Scott’s tour in Sydney, when a reveler was also thrown to the ground and left unconscious in the mosh pit.