Jameson Rodgers Injured Fan with Full Beer Can, Faces Lawsuit

photo: Matthew Berinato


Jameson Rodgers was one of the more promising artists in pop country music right before the pandemic. After co-writing hit tracks for Jason Aldean, Luke Bryan, Florida Georgia Line, and others, he was signed with Columbia Nashville, an imprint of Sony. Jameson’s debut single “Some Girls” when #1 on country radio in 2019, as did the followup, “Cold Beer Calling My Name” with Luke Combs in 2020. Jameson also toured with Combs, opening some 60 dates for Luke on the road.

But then it was as if Jameson Rodgers dropped off the face of the earth. After releasing the album I Bet You’re From a Small Town in 2021 through Sony, it appears Jameson Rodgers was dropped from the label. He released a 3-song EP called JAMO through a label called Head Coach Records in 2024, and recently self-released a song called “Couldn’t Wait To Grow Up” independently. But he’s failed to chart with any of the new music.

Perhaps you could point to the implosion of Bro Country as the reason the industry moved on from Jameson Rodgers. But there might be a much more serious reason. Recently revealed as part of a major lawsuit, Jameson Rodgers is being sued by a woman named Samantha Haws who was hit in the head when Rogers allegedly threw a “full, unopened beer can” into the crowd at the Barefoot Country Music Festival in Wildwood, NJ in June 2022.

According to the lawsuit, Rodgers and others threw full, unopened cans of Miller Lite beer from the stage into the crowded audience. One struck Samantha Haws “violently and without warning in the head and facial area,” resulting in “severe, painful and permanent bodily injuries.”

The lawsuit was originally filed in New Jersey in July of 2024, but recently came to light after a judge ruled that Rodgers’ label Sony could not remove themselves from the case. Along with suing Rodgers himself, Samantha Haws is also suing Sony. The label says it had nothing to do with the festival, or the security for it, but the court ruled the label can remain a defendant in the case moving forward since Rodgers could be found to have been an “agent” of Sony while performing at the festival.

No ruling has been made on the viability of the lawsuit itself, but the revelation that the alleged behavior of Rodgers also drew Sony into a potentially costly lawsuit might explain the singer’s disappearing act. Though there were no reports of the incident in 2022 when it happened, there have been many high-profile incidents lately of both artists and fans getting hit by flying beer cans, especially at the concerts of Gavin Adcock and Treaty Oak Revival where it’s become part of the culture.

The lawsuit against Jameson Rodgers and the injuries allegedly suffered by Samantha Haws underscore how serious this matter is in country music, and specifically for the country music industry.

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