| So I read that the tickets can only be resold at face value through ticketmaster. Does this mean there will not be any in stub hub? |
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I am
Also wondering about this. There are already tickets on stubhub. How will that work? |
| Probably means that you can sell on Ticketmaster, but only at face value, so anyone going for higher will sell on other sites. Ticketmaster restricted Eras Tour tix so they could not be resold on Ticketmaster, but that did like nothing to tamp down scalpers. |
| We already bought face value resale on Ticketmaster. Got shut out of presale. I don’t really understand it though. |
They will be effed! When I bought the tickets on Ticketmaster, it was very clear that you could only resell them for what you bought them for through Ticketmaster. |
| “Tickets will be non-transferable and can only be resold at face value on Ticketmaster,” The website reads. “In New York, Colorado, Illinois, and Utah, state laws don’t let artists fully control resale so tickets can be transferred. But even there, prices will remain at face value. Nothing is perfect, but we’re doing what we can to help protect against scalpers, and keep tickets in fans’ hands.” |
No, the tickets are non-transferable. Typically if you sell on stubhub/tikpik you later transfer the tickets to the purchasers email address. That is not possible with these tickets. The people that have them on StubHub did not read the fine print when they bought the tickets. |
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I hope everyone who bought tickets to scalp not only can’t sell them for more than face value, but also lose everything they paid in service fees and taxes.
That ticket presale was an absolute bloodbath. I’ve never seen anything so poorly managed and communicated. |
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Ticket presale was entirely populated by bots. 24k "in line" ahead of someone I know trying to buy tickets.
Nope. |
No different from Eras tour. Why do we allow them to have a monopoly? Should be an antitrust case. |