What is a host page?

A public profile for an individual karaoke host, KJ, DJ, MC, or stage name.

A host page is the public KaraokeCrowd page for an individual karaoke host, KJ, DJ, MC, or stage name. It brings the useful details into one place: who runs the night, where they host, what events are coming up, and how people can find or book them.

Most host pages are for a specific person or stage name, not the business behind the show.

What if you only know the company or show name

Sometimes a flyer lists only a karaoke company, crew, or show name. That's fine: use that public name as a placeholder host profile so the events can be linked. When someone later knows the actual host, we can update the profile or split the placeholder into the right person-level host pages.

Hosts do not need to create a Business to claim their own host page. Business records are for venue operators, production companies, or teams that manage multiple listings or hosts; solo hosts can stay solo.

What people can do on a host page

Singers can use a host page to:

  • See upcoming karaoke nights run by that host.
  • Find the venues where the host appears regularly.
  • Follow the host and get updates when linked events change.
  • Share the host page with friends who like that room or style.

Venues and organizers can use it to:

  • Check whether a host is active nearby.
  • See the kinds of nights they run.
  • Find public booking or contact links when the host has added them.
  • Share one clean page instead of a pile of social links.

Hosts can use it to:

  • Keep a public schedule that is tied to real venue listings.
  • Show regular nights, one-off events, specialties, and booking links.
  • Help search engines and AI assistants understand where they perform.
  • Give singers a stable page to follow, even when social posts disappear.

Why a host page is useful

Most karaoke discovery is scattered across venue calendars, Instagram posts, flyers, and group chats. A host page gives that work a permanent home.

When events are linked correctly, the host page can show where that host is appearing next without anyone rebuilding the schedule by hand. When a venue changes time, cancels a night, or adds a new recurring karaoke night, the linked host page updates with the same directory data.

It also helps people search by host instead of only by venue. That matters when singers follow a particular KJ, when a host moves to a new room, or when a venue wants to find someone local who already runs karaoke nights.

Why a host page can look empty

A host page only shows events that are linked to that host. If the host is performing but the page has no upcoming events, the events may already exist under the venue without the host attached.

Use the guide about linking hosts to existing events if you know the event is already in the directory.

How to get or improve a host page

Anyone can submit a host or suggest edits to a host page. Add the public name people recognize, the city or area, any public links, and evidence that helps a guide verify it. Suggestions go through the same review process whether they come from the host, a venue, or someone who knows the local scene.

Use a name that helps people pick the right host. If the host is only listed as "DJ Mike" or "DJ Sarah", add the company, crew, city, or show name when that is how people know them: "DJ Maya - Songbird Karaoke", "Karaoke with Marco", or "Lucky Voice KJ Team". The duplicate check on the new-host form shows similar host pages while you type, so use those matches to decide whether the name needs more detail.

Keep it respectful: submit public, useful information that helps people find real karaoke nights. Don't add private phone numbers, private addresses, gossip, personal disputes, or promotional copy that the host or venue would not reasonably expect on a public directory.

If the host or their team wants to manage the page directly, they can claim it after the public page exists. Claiming is just the verified-control path; community suggestions still work for unclaimed pages.