balesleftboot
Sean Davis
Well done mate. Which one did you go for? I got the Wednesday Wembley one as I thought it would be less popular than the weekend ones.
Well done mate. Which one did you go for? I got the Wednesday Wembley one as I thought it would be less popular than the weekend ones.
That was my plan !!Well done mate. Which one did you go for? I got the Wednesday Wembley one as I thought it would be less popular than the weekend ones.
Got some yesterday in the pre-sale, not had any luck getting in today thoughBrought my tickets today
Easiest purchase I’ve ever done on Ticketmaster
Weird
Coldplay was harder to get (queue the abuse)
Either they have fixed the system or everyone what’s standing.
Friday nightWell done mate. Which one did you go for? I got the Wednesday Wembley one as I thought it would be less popular than the weekend ones.
Friday night LukeGot some yesterday in the pre-sale, not had any luck getting in today though
Which day did you go for?
I got in about 30 mins ago, 2 standing tickets, dynamic pricing £381 each, corporate thievery when they are advertised at £151Not defending TM as they developed the system to enable this to be possible. However, all the artists, managers, agent, promoters, etc are the people that decide if it’s an option. They have the choice, the ticket companies facilitate the sales on their behalf.
Now officially sold out -I got in about 30 mins ago, 2 standing tickets, dynamic pricing £381 each, corporate thievery when they are advertised at £151
They will want to beat Taylor Swift to go past that 8 Wembley sell out nightsWhen i finally got in £480 a ticket, i’ll wait on some hopefully extra dates being released and try again
I also have no idea how this is legal. Make no mistake though: the bands are just as culpable as the absolute cancer of a company that is TicketMaster. My ‘favourite’ bit is that they threaten to cancel the tickets of anyone reselling at over face value. I’d argue that advertising tickets at £150 and then switching the cost to £370 at point-of-sale is at least as bad as touting. Actually, it’s worse: at least a tout or a resale website tells you the price when you ask so you can make a rational decision about whether or not pay.
I’d need it to be some gig to justify paying that. You best hope they’re not having an off night.I got in about 30 mins ago, 2 standing tickets, dynamic pricing £381 each, corporate thievery when they are advertised at £151
Did you read the post above yours?I also have no idea how this is legal. Make no mistake though: the bands are just as culpable as the absolute cancer of a company that is TicketMaster. My ‘favourite’ bit is that they threaten to cancel the tickets of anyone reselling at over face value. I’d argue that advertising tickets at £150 and then switching the cost to £370 at point-of-sale is at least as bad as touting. Actually, it’s worse: at least a tout or a resale website tells you the price when you ask so you can make a rational decision about whether or not pay.
Spurs tickets don’t change QR code. Screenshots still work as far as I know.Did you read the post above yours?
Anyway, it is simple economics, sell the tickets for whatever you can get, makes perfect sense if some idiots are willing to fork out £400 for 2 hours of old hits.
PS - do they actually send out paper tickets nowadays, or is it all on an App and thus impossible to resell them (like the Spurs tickets that change QR code every few minutes so you can't take an image and get into the ground)