Nov 5, 2025
Madison Dubiski was among the 10 people who died because of a crowd surge at Houston’s NRG Park on the night of Nov. 5, 2021. Her parents created the Pink Bows Foundation in her honor.
Four years ago Wednesday, a crowd surge at the Astroworld Festival in Houston led to the deaths of 10 people. After the tragedy, the family of one of the victims created a foundation that holds crowd safety training around the world, including at a recent event in Houston.
A man whose sister died at Travis Scott‘s 2021 Astroworld Festival is telling his harrowing story four years later. On Wednesday (Nov. 5), Rolling Stone published an article where Astroworld Festival survivor Ty Dubiski recounted attending the fateful festival with his sister Madison and a group of friends on Nov. 5, 2021. XXL Magazine: Read Article
Read PostTy 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 […]
Read PostThe Pink Bows Foundation, in honor of 23-year-old Madison Dubiski, of Cypress, developed a training protocol that is internationally accredited, its website says. It’s been four years since the 2021 Astroworld festival tragedy, where 10 people were killed and hundreds were injured in a crowd surge during Houston rapper Travis Scott’s concert. KVUEabc: Read article
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