Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Then probably some of those folks re-selling their tix.
I'd try the public first. You can always pay the stubhub market rate if you strike out.
It seems I can get better seats than I will when it goes to the public. Since it's a special gift I don't want nosebleeds for this. I don't mind paying more as long as the tickets are actually legit. -OP
You don't know unless you try. The StubHub tickets will be there if they strike out. Try not to support the scalpers unless you have to. Those are scalpers' tickets. Regular ticket buyers rarely post on StubHub that fast.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Then probably some of those folks re-selling their tix.
I'd try the public first. You can always pay the stubhub market rate if you strike out.
It seems I can get better seats than I will when it goes to the public. Since it's a special gift I don't want nosebleeds for this. I don't mind paying more as long as the tickets are actually legit. -OP
Anonymous wrote:Then probably some of those folks re-selling their tix.
I'd try the public first. You can always pay the stubhub market rate if you strike out.
Anonymous wrote:Stubhub in general is legit. They have a guarantee--you will not be out money. (Though if their security system fails and you end up without good tix it's possible you could find yourself with the refund rather than a seat at the show.)
If they have tix on their site before the public on-sale, though, that seems fishy. Unless there was a pre-sale (to amex holders, fan clubs, whatever) and some of those are on already?
"Ticket brokers" like to post online sales "on spec" -- selling tickets they don't have yet, and then going out and finding tickets to fill those orders. But Stubhub shouldn't be allowing that.