![]() “I can tell you that the last thing we want is to work this hard and have it peak at some place we’re not happy with,” Schmidt says. Maslow says he thinks Big Time Rush is “just getting to where we want it to be.” Schmidt quickly adds that they can see the road they want to travel further on, too. “But when I had that fan show up at my house that was kind of too much.” “We love and support our fans,” Henderson says. Schmidt has been followed by a photographer while driving in Los Angeles. Maslow mentions a recent birthday party at a hotel that a few fans managed to crash through clues on social media. They say their fans have been terrific, if occasionally a little overzealous. They say their fame still is mostly a kick. “And these guys, for the rest of my life, I’m going to be part of this.” “There’s only a few guys who get to experience it,” he says. Pena ticks off acts from the classic ‘N Sync and the Backstreet Boys to the current One Direction and says Big Time Rush is proud to be part of that group. They feel pretty good about how far they’ve come with both the TV series and the band so far, and seem genuinely thrilled to be one of a handful of boy bands around right now. “I think we put like 600,000 tickets on sale for this tour,” Schmidt says. “The reasoning there was that everybody wanted to come see us (earlier in the year) and we sold out so fast so people couldn’t get tickets,” says Henderson. For the current tour, which runs into October, the group is playing larger outdoor theaters and arenas, jumping up from crowds of 6,000 or 7,000 in the winter to 10,000 or more now. That tour hit 17 cities in February and March, playing mostly sold-out venues such as Gibson Amphitheatre in Universal City. by a concert special filmed earlier this year when BTR played a show in Nashville, Tenn. This Monday the episode will be followed at 7:30 p.m. The third season of “Big Time Rush” is currently airing new shows at 7 p.m. ![]() Nine days out of 10 we’re just having fun together.” “But it’s like brothers do in any family. “Sure, we have fights from time to time,” he says. “But we’ve heard so many stories about people (on other shows) hating each other. “We think this is the way it’s supposed to be,” Maslow says of how easily they meshed. “I’ve seen these guys more in the past four years than I’ve seen my family in the last 10,” Pena says. ![]() But in the end, the BTR guys say they’re glad he did. Show creator Scott Fellows took his time in piecing together the cast for a show that is often seen as a modern-day version of “The Monkees.” Maslow jokes that for a year or more he and Pena called each other to check on any updates. ![]() Henderson had only appeared in the TV series “Friday Night Lights” before deciding to swap those lights and his home in Texas for the brighter lights of Hollywood. Maslow, who grew up in San Diego, had acted in theatrical productions there. Schmidt and Pena had acted in TV, movie and commercial roles since they were kids. I returned it today and I couldn’t believe it’s been that long.” “I leased a car when I came out here in August 2009. “It blows my mind,” says Carlos Pena, like cast- and band mates James Maslowand Logan Henderson, 22. “The stuff we’ve done, it’s amazing,” says Kendall Schmidt, 21, as he sits on the floor of the bungalow that contains four large trunks packed with clothes for each of the guys. Sound check and a meet-and-greet are finally over, so the stars of the Nickelodeon’s “Big Time Rush” – a TV series about a boy band which created a real-life boy band, too – have a few minutes to talk about the whirlwind their lives have been since the show premiered in January 2010. The four guys of Big Time Rush are backstage trying to cool off in their overheated dressing room a few hours before they’ll hit the stage for thousands of fans at Verizon Wireless Amphitheater in Irvine on Thursday.
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