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Welcome2Solutions Forum >> Main Forums >> General Discussion >> What is karaoke like now?
What is karaoke like now?
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upamfva


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Join Date: 6.11.2021
Posts: 788

Posted: 7.5.2022 1:26:52

What is karaoke like now?



Early in the pandemic, a choir practice in Washington turned deadly when 45 out of 60 singers were infected, despite using hand sanitizer and staying distanced.To get more news about Karaoke Melbourne CBD, you can visit starsktv.com.au official website.

Emily Oster, a Brown University economist who has been studying COVID-19 data, said that the story taught us lessons about the airborne spread of the virus.
To better understand what karaoke is like now, we took actress and comedian Sherry Cola (“Good Trouble”) and her friends to The Venue before California''s regulations were relaxed June 15. The Venue is a restaurant in Koreatown with 13 private karaoke rooms. We also asked experts about any risks associated with karaoke.

"When you''re yelling, singing or forcibly expelling air, your droplet particles can move farther," said Dr. Catherine Le, an infectious disease physician who heads Cedars-Sinai Medical Center''s COVID-19 Recovery Program and wrote the children''s book "Coronavirus Is Boo Boo."

“Singing is higher risk than a buffet,” Oster said, "but again, it depends on your environment, and the chances of someone in Los Angeles coming into a karaoke bar with COVID is low.”Private karaoke, which is closer to the risk of having an indoor dinner with friends you know and trust, is safer than a karaoke bar, where you sing onstage and are sharing space with strangers whose vaccination statuses you don’t know.But even at a karaoke bar, vaccinated people don’t need to worry about getting infected by people who were previously singing on stage.

Though Le and Oster don’t believe the microphone is a huge risk for COVID, they generally recommended wiping down microphones if you don’t know the person who used it before you.It’s almost like having a drink,” Le said. “It’s right up there, right against your mouth.”“I’m having a lot of non-COVID feelings,” Oster said. “Always wipe the microphone, for reasons that are not about coronavirus.”

The Venue provides foam covers for its microphones, said Sarah Bennet, general manager of the restaurant. Other precautions adopted include full-body temperature checks, a contactless menu, extra sanitizing procedures in between guests and a hand sanitizer bottle for each room.

Masks are still required for customers who are not fully vaccinated, and vaccination cards are required for parties of more than 30 guests, Bennett said.


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