

Nov 5, 2025
Ty Dubiski recalls how a trapped and surging crowd separated him from his sister, and how Madison Dubiski’s death from compression asphyxia led to his family’s new mission.
Ten people died in the horrific crowd surge that pinned concertgoers in an enclosed area at Travis Scott’s Astroworld Festival in Houston on Nov. 5, 2021. In his first media interview, Ty Dubiski describes losing his sister in the chaos and spending the past four years trying to make sense of the tragedy, largely through the family’s Pink Bows Foundation set up in Madison’s honor. This is his account, as told to Rolling Stone.
Collection includes women’s and men’s lines; half of proceeds support crowd safety education and event safety training HOUSTON, May 1, 2026 /PRNewswire/ — Pink Bows Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to improving crowd safety at live events and founded by the family of Astroworld victim Madison Dubiski, today announced a limited-edition product collaboration with Makeup Junkie Bags, a Texas-based company […]
Read PostPink Bows Foundation is excited to announce its partnership with Birdies for Charity, a fundraising program designed to maximize community giving. Through this partnership, donations made in support of Pink Bows Foundation will go further, helping us continue our work and extend our impact. The Texas Children’s Houston Open Birdies For Charity® presented by Chevron, is […]
Read PostNov 18, 2025
LONDON & HOUSTON- Pink Bows Foundation (“Foundation” or “Pink Bows”), a Texas-based nonprofit organization dedicated to advancing safety at live events, has been announced as the official nonprofit partner of the Union Jack Classic— a landmark Big 12 college football matchup between Arizona State University and the University of Kansas, taking place at Wembley Stadium on […]
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