Live creator example

See how a Cuehour schedule page reads to fans.

Everything below is a real example of the public page experience: one stable link, local timezone conversion, and calendar reminder links that stay clear on mobile.

What this example shows

Fans can switch timezones without leaving the page.

Upcoming streams stay in one easy-to-scan list.

Calendar links show exactly what they add.

Fan-facing page

This framed area is the public page fans would open from a creator's bio, post, or announcement.

Example URL: cuehour.com/c/demo
Official stream schedule
AV

Live schedule

Azura Vale

Weekly karaoke, late-night chats, and collabs. This page always shows the latest stream times in your local timezone.

@azuraUpdated just now

Next stream

Planned

1d 2h 0m

Karaoke + chatting

Starts Sat, Apr 25 at 5:06 PM

Warm-up set, JP/EN chat, requests open.

YouTube

Google Calendar uses your Google Calendar timezone. The .ics file creates a standard reminder only and does not read or modify your personal calendar.

Upcoming schedule

Upcoming streams stay in one simple list.

Karaoke + chatting

Next up

Sat, Apr 25 at 5:06 PM

YouTubeAsia/Tokyo
Planned

Surprise zatsu stream

Sun, Apr 26 at 7:06 PM

TwitchAsia/Tokyo
Surprise

Collab game night

Mon, Apr 27 at 7:06 PM

YouTubeAsia/Tokyo
Rescheduled

Members-only aftershow

Tue, Apr 28 at 9:06 PM

BilibiliAsia/Tokyo
Canceled

Good to know

This link updates when stream plans change.

Times are shown in your selected timezone.

Google Calendar uses your Google Calendar timezone.

Calendar links create reminders only; they do not access your calendar.

Official stream schedulecuehour.com/c/demo