STAGE TUBE: Justin Bieber Performs Live on TODAY

By: Jun. 15, 2012
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Megastar Justin Bieber performed live on this morning's TODAY show as part of the Toyota Concert Series. Over 8000 screaming fans swarmed the plaza to get a glimpse of the pop star. Watch the live performance below!

All TODAY concerts are free and open to the general public. You do not need a fan pass to attend. Here's the lineup for the rest of the Summer Concerts on TODAY:

JUNE
22: Kenny Chesney, #ChesneyTODAY
29: Maroon 5, #Maroon5TODAY

JULY
6: Flo Rida, #Only1FloTODAY
13: Zac Brown Band, #ZacBrownTODAY
20: Hot Chelle Rae, #HCRTODAY

AUGUST
17: Shakira, #ShakiraTODAY
24: Train, #TrainTODAY
31: Jason Mraz with special guest Christina Perri, #MrazTODAY

SEPTEMBER
3: Matchbox Twenty

Additional performances may be announced throughout the season. Access to concerts is available on a first-come, first-served basis outside of TODAY's studio at 49th Street and Rockefeller Center.

NBC News pioneered the morning news program when it launched TODAY more than 55 years ago, with Dave Garroway as host. The live broadcast provides the latest in domestic and international news, weather reports and interviews with newsmakers from the worlds of politics, business, media, entertainment and sports. After more than 48 years of the standard two-hour format, the third hour was launched in October of 2000, followed by the fourth hour in September 2007, making Today the only four-hour hour national morning show broadcast. The program is unparalleled in its ratings dominance in the morning news arena, serving as America's overwhelming favorite for more than an unprecedented eleven consecutive years.

Since the program’s premiere broadcast on January 14, 1952, Today’s hallmark has been its ability to revise an entire edition to bring viewers breaking news as it happens. In that fashion, Today delivered immediate coverage of such events as Hurricane Katrina and its aftermath, the Tsunami that wreaked havoc in a dozen Asian nations, the September 11 terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center, the death of John F. Kennedy, Jr., the tragic high school shootings in Littleton, Colorado, the crash of TWA Flight 800, the death of Princess Diana, and the Oklahoma City bombing and trials.



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