Even if it’s not at a Knicks game, you’re never safe from James Dolan’s wrath.

Polly Mosendz, a reporter for Bloomberg Businessweek, says she was kicked out of the Paramount, a small theater in Huntington, where Dolan’s blues band, JD & the Straight Shot, was performing.

“He was not happy that a reporter had come to see his show,” Mosendz wrote Friday morning. “He said he hadn’t authorized an interview and that I wasn’t allowed to be there — despite this being a public show in a public venue — and repeatedly insisted that his music was not about him and therefore should not be mentioned in the article (an article about a CEO whose company happens to run one of the world’s most significant music venues).

“At one point, he flipped my notebook closed. Finally he stormed off and summoned security guards to make me leave. When I protested, one of them offered me cash to cover the cost of my ticket. He said that while removing reporters was not the venue’s policy, Dolan was the headliner and could make such requests. Actually, Matt Costa played last, Sorry to have missed you, Matt.”

Businessweek had contacted Dolan for an article about his tenure as owner of the Knicks and he declined comment. Mosendz bought a $38 ticket to see the show to add a paragraph on the band for the larger feature story on Dolan. The band was second on a three-act bill. Mosendz approached Dolan before his set, but he quickly had her removed, insisting that since his music was not about the team, it should not be included in the article.

Dolan has previously encountered trouble during his musical endeavors, kicking out a fan holding a “Quit your day job. Sell the Knicks” sign during his performance at the Pilgrimage Film Festival in September.

Of course, Knicks fans have seen this act before at Madison Square Garden. In March, Dolan was videotaped berating a fan for telling him to “Sell the Knicks.” He kicked the fan out and banned him from the arena. In 2017, former Knicks star Charles Oakley was asked to leave the Garden after directing comments to Dolan, who was sitting just a couple of rows in front of him.

Apparently, Dolan wants to keep his Knicks and his band separate.

“Later I contacted MSG to ask for comment about the incident,” Mosendz wrote. “A spokesperson for the company asked that the following statement be included in the story, in its entirety: ‘the reporter was there to write a story about the Knicks. The Knicks were not playing that evening.’”