the day after the concert. In
Providence, Rhode Island, Mayor
Buddy Cianci cancelled a scheduled performance of the Who at the city's
Civic Center that same month. This was even though the Providence venue had assigned seating. The city of Cincinnati also imposed a ban on unassigned
festival seating on December 27, 1979, with minor exceptions, for the next 25 years. The incident was the subject of a book,
Are the Kids All Right? The Rock Generation and Its Hidden Death Wish, as well as a second-season episode of
WKRP in Cincinnati called "
In Concert". It also inspired scenes in the film
Pink Floyd – The Wall, whose 1982 premiere was attended by the Who's
Pete Townshend. In 2004, Cincinnati permanently repealed its long-standing ban on unassigned seating, two years after temporarily making an exception for a
Bruce Springsteen concert. The goal of lifting the ban was to attract more big-name acts. However, the city now mandates nine square feet per person at a venue, and the number of tickets sold for each event is adjusted accordingly. Paul Wertheimer, the city's first Public Information Officer at the time of the tragedy, went on to serve on a task force on crowd control, and later founded Crowd Management Strategies in 1992, a consulting firm based in Los Angeles. In 2009, 30 years after the tragedy, rock station
WEBN/102.7 aired a retrospective, including clips from news coverage in 1979. The P.E.M. Memorial was created in August 2010 to commemorate the lives of those who died while awaiting entry to the concert. Every first Saturday in December, local musicians perform at the P.E.M. Memorial. The free concert features old and new tunes to raise awareness of the P.E.M. Scholarship Fund. Of the 11 people who died that day, three were from
Finneytown High School – Stephan Preston, Jackie Eckerle, and Karen Morrison. Three scholarships are awarded annually to eligible Finneytown High School seniors who are pursuing higher education in the arts or music at an accredited university or college. In 2018,
Roger Daltrey visited the Finneytown High School and met with a group of family members of victims and survivors. Daltrey and the families later said the meeting brought a great deal of peace and healing. In 2014,
Pearl Jam played in the city and acknowledged the tragedy. They dedicated a cover version of the Who's "
The Real Me" to those who died. Pearl Jam had experienced
a similar tragedy in 2000, when nine people died in a crush during their concert at
Roskilde Festival. On the eve of the 35th anniversary of the tragedy,
Cincinnati Mayor John Cranley promised to have a historical marker on the site of the tragedy in 2015. A committee consisting of three concert survivors (Mike Babb, Thomas Brown, Rick Schwitzer) and one family member of victim Teva Ladd (Kasey Ladd) was pivotal in getting the memorial placed. The marker was dedicated at U. S. Bank Arena (as it was then known) on December 3, 2015. The Showtime series
Roadies dedicated an entire episode to the 1979 event. The episode, "The City Whose Name Must Not Be Spoken", showcases the "roadies" of a fictional band completing many rituals after someone on the tour bus mentions Cincinnati. ==The Who's return to Cincinnati==