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Adele is making time for a superfan to show how much she cares.

On Saturday, the “Oh My God” artist FaceTimed Eleni Sabracos, a longtime supporter who posted a viral video from Las Vegas on Friday lamenting various unsuccessful attempts to see the Grammy winner in concert. The video racked up 9.5 million views on TikTok after Adele postponed her Las Vegas residency the day before it was scheduled to open.

“I bought tickets to her show in London, and I flew to London ... and she canceled her show,” said Sabracos, who has been trying and failing to attend an Adele concert since she was a teenager.

“Flash forward to 2022: My brother surprised me with Adele tickets to her Vegas residency. I am in Vegas right now, and Adele canceled her show. Again! Why!”

Sabracos even made a custom T-shirt that reads, “I love Adele like Adele loves Beyoncé,” which she was wearing when Adele FaceTimed her this weekend in Las Vegas with some much-needed good news.

“I will cover all of your costs [for the show],” the “Easy On Me” hit-maker told her. “I will fly you in, and you’ll see me onstage, and I’ll come and see you.”

After at least three thwarted efforts to see Adele live — including one involving a sketchy Craigslist ticket purchase, which she admits “was her own doing” — Sabracos now has a personal date with Adele.

The singer stayed busy on the phone during the weekend, connecting with more fans in Las Vegas via FaceTime, even calling to surprise some in a pop-up shop at Caesars Palace.

The feel-good exchange came days after a “gutted” Adele tearfully announced that she had no choice but to delay her Vegas residency, citing delivery issues and the COVID-19 pandemic. The show, “Weekends With Adele,” was originally slated to run Fridays and Saturdays at the Colosseum at Caesars Palace through April 16.

“I’m so sorry, but my show ain’t ready,” she said in a video message.

“We’ve tried absolutely everything that we can to put it together in time. ... Half my crew, half my team are down with COVID. They still are. And it’s been impossible to finish the show. And I can’t give you what I have right now ... I’m sorry it’s so last-minute.”

Disappointed fans, such as Sabracos, had booked flights to Sin City and paid thousands of dollars for tickets to the sold-out concert series. The beloved vocalist promised that “all dates will be rescheduled.”

“We’ve been awake for over 30 hours now trying to figure it out and we’ve run out of time,” Adele added in her message.

“I’m so upset, and I’m really embarrassed and I’m so sorry to everyone who traveled to get here. I’m really, really sorry.”

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FILE - Bjorn Ulvaeus, of ABBA, poses for photographers in a recreation of the Swedish recording studio Polar on Dec. 13, 2017, in London. Ulvaeus is launching a radio show on Apple Music. The songwriter and guitarist will host the "Björn from ABBA and Friends' Radio Show" on Apple Music Hits starting Monday, Jan. 24, 2022. (Photo by Vianney Le Caer/Invision/AP, File)

LOS ANGELES — ABBA’s Björn Ulvaeus is launching a radio show on Apple Music, with hopes of figuring out why his songs like “Mamma Mia” and “Dancing Queen” have stayed stuck in the heads of so much of the world for so many decades.

The guitarist, singer and co-songwriter from the Swedish supergroup will host the “Björn from ABBA and Friends’ Radio Show” on Apple Music Hits starting Monday.

The limited series includes music and conversations with Ulvaeus’ friends and collaborators, starting in the first episode with his fellow producer, songwriter and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Nile Rodgers.

Ulvaeus and Rodgers talk about the secrets of hit-making and why ABBA’s music has remained in the public consciousness.

“I have long wanted to ask some emotionally intelligent as well as intellectual people who know about ABBA about why they think our songs have lasted for such a long time — almost 40 years — because I don’t understand it myself,” the 76-year-old Ulvaeus said.

The show comes amid a major ABBA renaissance. Ulvaeus and bandmates Agnetha Fältskog, Anni-Frid Lyngstad, and Benny Andersson released their first new music together in four decades in November on the album “Voyager.” And in May, a series of holographic live shows are set to begin, created by the group and George Lucas’ special-effects company, Industrial Light & Magic.

Ulvaeus’ other guests on the radio show include Catherine Johnson, the British playwright who wrote the stage play of “Mamma Mia” and the screenplay for the subsequent film.

Johan Renck, the creative director of the forthcoming concerts, guests on another episode, all of which air at 3 p.m. Eastern this week and can be streamed thereafter.

Ulvaeus is the latest of many music stars to host a show on the service. Others include Elton John, The Weeknd, J Balvin and Shania Twain.

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