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The Jonas Brothers Prove They're Still Got It at Triumphant Sunrise Homecoming

  • Writer: Larry Marano
    Larry Marano
  • 11 minutes ago
  • 2 min read

All images by Larry Marano


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The Jonas Brothers rolled into Amerant Bank Arena on October 24th like they'd never left, delivering a sprawling, 28-song celebration that felt equal parts retrospective and family reunion. The "Jonas 20: Greetings From Your Hometown" tour stop in Sunrise found Nick, Joe, and Kevin in peak form, mining two decades of catalog deep cuts and radio smashes with the kind of easy chemistry that only siblings can fake—or in this case, genuinely possess.


After The All-American Rejects warmed up the crowd with their own brand of 2000s nostalgia, the brothers launched into an instrumental intro before bursting into "Fly With Me" and the sultry "Love Me to Heaven," pausing mid-set for heartfelt speeches about their respective hometowns that added unexpected intimacy to the arena spectacle. The setlist was a masterclass in pacing: early career anthems like "S.O.S." and "Sucker" rubbed shoulders with newer material, while an acoustic medley of fan requests ("Hollywood," "Lucky," "Hello Beautiful") proved the band's willingness to hand over the reins.


Joe's charismatic frontman energy peaked during a crowd-filmed dance break in "No Time to Talk" and an impromptu gender reveal for a fan (it's a boy), while Nick's brooding "Jealous" reminded everyone why he briefly conquered solo stardom. Kevin, often the quietest Jonas, finally got his moment with the debut of "Changing," a new track that suggested there's still creative gas in the tank. The DNCE detour with "Cake by the Ocean" and a Busted cover of "Year 3000" kept things playfully eclectic, before Big Rob joined for the obligatory "Burnin' Up" fireworks.


The encore delivered gut-punch nostalgia: a shortened "Please Be Mine" gave way to "When You Look Me in the Eyes," performed alongside youngest brother Franklin Jonas in a moment so wholesome it could've powered the entire Florida grid. Twenty years in, the Jonas Brothers aren't reinventing the wheel—they're just reminding us why we fell for them in the first place.







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