Yet Another Cycling Forum

Off Topic => The Pub => Arts and Entertainment => Topic started by: Aidan on 23 November, 2011, 07:02:21 pm

Title: Stopping resellers of tickets
Post by: Aidan on 23 November, 2011, 07:02:21 pm
About time someone did

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-15852582

Strikes a positive chord with me.  I hate it when I cant get a ticket, but theres loads on sites like Get Me In at highly inflated prices.   Get me in  is owned by Ticketmaster company and I dont believe for one tiny little minute that all the tickets being sold are from people who cant make it.

I recently spent all day trying to get a £35 ticket for Billy Connolly.  When I finally got through they had all gone.   Now available at £100+ on lots of reselling sites.

I dont mind paying a fair price but this obvious profiteering really rankles. 
Title: Re: Stopping resellers of tickets
Post by: rogerzilla on 23 November, 2011, 07:06:56 pm
The word is that the touts' price often drops shortly before the event as the prices being asked aren't achievable.
Title: Re: Stopping resellers of tickets
Post by: hubner on 23 November, 2011, 07:15:50 pm
Quote
She declined to comment on which methods were being used to identify resold tickets, but said it was the first time the gallery had taken such measures.

Have these tickets got the buyer's name on them?
Title: Re: Stopping resellers of tickets
Post by: mattc on 23 November, 2011, 07:53:20 pm
There was a BBC music docco last week - possibly about grunge?
Anyhoo, the band in question boycotted Ticketmaster (along with a few other acts) and it created a huge ruckus, but basically most of the music industry didn't seem to give a shit. the band lost loads of bookings cos TM had a monopoly with the venues.

So I think hardly anyone cares, cos everyone in the business gets rich, and punters are too blinded by adoration and/or being a teenager.
Title: Re: Stopping resellers of tickets
Post by: Aidan on 23 November, 2011, 08:01:12 pm
There was a BBC music docco last week - possibly about grunge?
Anyhoo, the band in question boycotted Ticketmaster (along with a few other acts) and it created a huge ruckus, but basically most of the music industry didn't seem to give a shit. the band lost loads of bookings cos TM had a monopoly with the venues.

So I think hardly anyone cares, cos everyone in the business gets rich, and punters are too blinded by adoration and/or being a teenager.

You're probably just about spot on, doesn,t stop it annoying me though, maybe its because I'm a couple of years past being a teenager  ;)
Title: Re: Stopping resellers of tickets
Post by: Cudzoziemiec on 23 November, 2011, 09:53:56 pm
A sure way to stop, well to greatly reduce, ticket reselling, would be to stop selling them in advance. Just have people queue up, pay their £16 and go see Leonardo. This would also be a lot "fairer" for disorganised people like me!
Title: Re: Stopping resellers of tickets
Post by: Tewdric on 23 November, 2011, 10:04:48 pm
A sure way to stop, well to greatly reduce, ticket reselling, would be to stop selling them in advance. Just have people queue up, pay their £16 and go see Leonardo. This would also be a lot "fairer" for disorganised people like me!

Unfortunately that would never wash with the licensing authorities for popular events in general, but more for pop gigs and sporting events.  Advance ticketing is the most powerful tool for controlling crowd numbers, hence the large number of free events that are ticket-only. 

A popular art gallery exhibition is an interesting one.  I guess they don't want the grief and bad publicity of the inevitable family-with-disabled-child-came-down-from-Inverness-specially who couldn't get in.

Glastonbury have got good at preventing reselling, but the measures you need to take are expensive in themselves.
Title: Re: Stopping resellers of tickets
Post by: Efrogwr on 24 November, 2011, 01:06:55 am
The word is that the touts' price often drops shortly before the event as the prices being asked aren't achievable.

A long time ago, mind, I got four ten pound tickets for  £35. He could probably afford the difference.
Title: Re: Stopping resellers of tickets
Post by: tiermat on 24 November, 2011, 08:04:10 am
There was a BBC music docco last week - possibly about grunge?
Anyhoo, the band in question boycotted Ticketmaster (along with a few other acts) and it created a huge ruckus, but basically most of the music industry didn't seem to give a shit. the band lost loads of bookings cos TM had a monopoly with the venues.

So I think hardly anyone cares, cos everyone in the business gets rich, and punters are too blinded by adoration and/or being a teenager.

It was about Pearl Jam - those miserable buggers.  I enjoyed it.  they took on Ticketmaster in their idealistic days.

Now they have just sold out, they have even done a TV advert for Target, the US supermarket chain!!!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pearl_jam#Dealing_with_success:_1993.E2.80.931995
Title: Re: Stopping resellers of tickets
Post by: Pancho on 24 November, 2011, 08:24:14 am
Why stop reselling?

At least it gives you the choice of paying more for a ticket. If tickets are allocated by some other means then tough.

I often buy tickets for Test Matches from resellers (aka touts). Sometimes I pay over the face price, sometimes less.