Anonymous wrote:I love her. I don’t care if she does your f$&ing concerts. If they’re that important to you, find something better to do with your time. Create something of your own. Concerts are fun and being a fan is fun, but if any of it is making you angry you need to get a grip.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Doesn’t it show actually how insane humans are, Obsessed over a hippo or singer Its humans running around throwing things at people or hippos it’s and screaming their name in the streets
I agree people are crazy but I feel like performers need to be a little more professional here. Concert tickets are so expensive now and some people bought airline tickets to fly in from places where she isn’t performing. It just sucks not to take that into consideration, or I guess not really care that you fans are now just out what might have been considerable money for them—-young people that worked all summer saving up money for this big splurge. If she can’t handle the social media crazies, she should just disengage from that. Or, alternatively, she should just shake it off, because, as a wise woman once said, haters gonna hate, hate, hate. (I know TS gets a lot of shit but she does really have some good advice for her generation.)
Travel insurance may help you more than Taylor swift quotes next time.
Travel insurance doesn’t generally cover “the performer I wanted to see cancelled”. Anyway. I’m not the person that bought the tickets, but I know young people that saved up for them, and for similar tickets. I think performers can get a pass for true emergencies and mental health or other health collapses — if her mom died, or she was hospitalized with exhaustion, I think everyone would understand. But this is coming off more like her feelings got hurt because people were mean, and she feels like she didn’t sign up for that. Which is guess is fine. But your fans should know that when they purchase tickets it’s contingent on your feeling the vibe to perform, and they should discount the value of the tickets accordingly. I think that’s true for any service provider — part of what you pay for is reliability so if they aren’t going to be reliable, you probably pay less.
I guess her fans will know that from now on, but I also think this is part of the problem with mental and chronic illnesses. We as a society just blame the person rather than understanding that people who are suffering from mental health issues may not fit the mold of the USA puritanical work ethic. Wouldn’t it be better for everyone if we understood that some people need a little more leeway in life so they can contribute some to our society. Right now it is very much: be a top performer or we don’t need you. When really everyone could use the in between acceptance of: I’m doing the best I can right now at some point in their professional lives.
Save the Petulant Pop Stars!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Doesn’t it show actually how insane humans are, Obsessed over a hippo or singer Its humans running around throwing things at people or hippos it’s and screaming their name in the streets
I agree people are crazy but I feel like performers need to be a little more professional here. Concert tickets are so expensive now and some people bought airline tickets to fly in from places where she isn’t performing. It just sucks not to take that into consideration, or I guess not really care that you fans are now just out what might have been considerable money for them—-young people that worked all summer saving up money for this big splurge. If she can’t handle the social media crazies, she should just disengage from that. Or, alternatively, she should just shake it off, because, as a wise woman once said, haters gonna hate, hate, hate. (I know TS gets a lot of shit but she does really have some good advice for her generation.)
Travel insurance may help you more than Taylor swift quotes next time.
Travel insurance doesn’t generally cover “the performer I wanted to see cancelled”. Anyway. I’m not the person that bought the tickets, but I know young people that saved up for them, and for similar tickets. I think performers can get a pass for true emergencies and mental health or other health collapses — if her mom died, or she was hospitalized with exhaustion, I think everyone would understand. But this is coming off more like her feelings got hurt because people were mean, and she feels like she didn’t sign up for that. Which is guess is fine. But your fans should know that when they purchase tickets it’s contingent on your feeling the vibe to perform, and they should discount the value of the tickets accordingly. I think that’s true for any service provider — part of what you pay for is reliability so if they aren’t going to be reliable, you probably pay less.
I guess her fans will know that from now on, but I also think this is part of the problem with mental and chronic illnesses. We as a society just blame the person rather than understanding that people who are suffering from mental health issues may not fit the mold of the USA puritanical work ethic. Wouldn’t it be better for everyone if we understood that some people need a little more leeway in life so they can contribute some to our society. Right now it is very much: be a top performer or we don’t need you. When really everyone could use the in between acceptance of: I’m doing the best I can right now at some point in their professional lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Chappell Roan should look to Madonna to learn about professional concert behavior.
I assume this is a joke since Madonna makes her audience wait two hours before she goes on stage at 10 pm.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Doesn’t it show actually how insane humans are, Obsessed over a hippo or singer Its humans running around throwing things at people or hippos it’s and screaming their name in the streets
I agree people are crazy but I feel like performers need to be a little more professional here. Concert tickets are so expensive now and some people bought airline tickets to fly in from places where she isn’t performing. It just sucks not to take that into consideration, or I guess not really care that you fans are now just out what might have been considerable money for them—-young people that worked all summer saving up money for this big splurge. If she can’t handle the social media crazies, she should just disengage from that. Or, alternatively, she should just shake it off, because, as a wise woman once said, haters gonna hate, hate, hate. (I know TS gets a lot of shit but she does really have some good advice for her generation.)
Travel insurance may help you more than Taylor swift quotes next time.
Travel insurance doesn’t generally cover “the performer I wanted to see cancelled”. Anyway. I’m not the person that bought the tickets, but I know young people that saved up for them, and for similar tickets. I think performers can get a pass for true emergencies and mental health or other health collapses — if her mom died, or she was hospitalized with exhaustion, I think everyone would understand. But this is coming off more like her feelings got hurt because people were mean, and she feels like she didn’t sign up for that. Which is guess is fine. But your fans should know that when they purchase tickets it’s contingent on your feeling the vibe to perform, and they should discount the value of the tickets accordingly. I think that’s true for any service provider — part of what you pay for is reliability so if they aren’t going to be reliable, you probably pay less.
I guess her fans will know that from now on, but I also think this is part of the problem with mental and chronic illnesses. We as a society just blame the person rather than understanding that people who are suffering from mental health issues may not fit the mold of the USA puritanical work ethic. Wouldn’t it be better for everyone if we understood that some people need a little more leeway in life so they can contribute some to our society. Right now it is very much: be a top performer or we don’t need you. When really everyone could use the in between acceptance of: I’m doing the best I can right now at some point in their professional lives.
I think that’s an interesting point but right now the “cost” is just shoveled entirely into the ticket buyer who is disappointed. Maybe the solution is that a performer with a health issue could be upfront about it and say “this is my plan but it’s all contingent on how I feel; if I can’t make it, fans will get a 75% refund” . And then the promoter would have to build all that cost into the compensation for her…..or something. I don’t know the answer but I think if we’re going to shift to a model that is less focused on work ethic, then there needs to be a conversation about how that burden or cost would be shared. Its an interesting question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Doesn’t it show actually how insane humans are, Obsessed over a hippo or singer Its humans running around throwing things at people or hippos it’s and screaming their name in the streets
I agree people are crazy but I feel like performers need to be a little more professional here. Concert tickets are so expensive now and some people bought airline tickets to fly in from places where she isn’t performing. It just sucks not to take that into consideration, or I guess not really care that you fans are now just out what might have been considerable money for them—-young people that worked all summer saving up money for this big splurge. If she can’t handle the social media crazies, she should just disengage from that. Or, alternatively, she should just shake it off, because, as a wise woman once said, haters gonna hate, hate, hate. (I know TS gets a lot of shit but she does really have some good advice for her generation.)
Travel insurance may help you more than Taylor swift quotes next time.
Does travel insurance cover a performer saying they can’t perform?
No. That poster is just grasping at straws.
Maybe I am but here is some info about CFAR (a cancel for any reason) trip insurance. I haven’t used it, but it seems to be a thing?
https://www.nerdwallet.com/article/travel/cancel-for-any-reason-cfar-travel-insurance-explained#can-i-really-cancel-for-any-reason-what-does-a-cfar-policy-cover
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Doesn’t it show actually how insane humans are, Obsessed over a hippo or singer Its humans running around throwing things at people or hippos it’s and screaming their name in the streets
I agree people are crazy but I feel like performers need to be a little more professional here. Concert tickets are so expensive now and some people bought airline tickets to fly in from places where she isn’t performing. It just sucks not to take that into consideration, or I guess not really care that you fans are now just out what might have been considerable money for them—-young people that worked all summer saving up money for this big splurge. If she can’t handle the social media crazies, she should just disengage from that. Or, alternatively, she should just shake it off, because, as a wise woman once said, haters gonna hate, hate, hate. (I know TS gets a lot of shit but she does really have some good advice for her generation.)
Travel insurance may help you more than Taylor swift quotes next time.
Travel insurance doesn’t generally cover “the performer I wanted to see cancelled”. Anyway. I’m not the person that bought the tickets, but I know young people that saved up for them, and for similar tickets. I think performers can get a pass for true emergencies and mental health or other health collapses — if her mom died, or she was hospitalized with exhaustion, I think everyone would understand. But this is coming off more like her feelings got hurt because people were mean, and she feels like she didn’t sign up for that. Which is guess is fine. But your fans should know that when they purchase tickets it’s contingent on your feeling the vibe to perform, and they should discount the value of the tickets accordingly. I think that’s true for any service provider — part of what you pay for is reliability so if they aren’t going to be reliable, you probably pay less.
I guess her fans will know that from now on, but I also think this is part of the problem with mental and chronic illnesses. We as a society just blame the person rather than understanding that people who are suffering from mental health issues may not fit the mold of the USA puritanical work ethic. Wouldn’t it be better for everyone if we understood that some people need a little more leeway in life so they can contribute some to our society. Right now it is very much: be a top performer or we don’t need you. When really everyone could use the in between acceptance of: I’m doing the best I can right now at some point in their professional lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Doesn’t it show actually how insane humans are, Obsessed over a hippo or singer Its humans running around throwing things at people or hippos it’s and screaming their name in the streets
I agree people are crazy but I feel like performers need to be a little more professional here. Concert tickets are so expensive now and some people bought airline tickets to fly in from places where she isn’t performing. It just sucks not to take that into consideration, or I guess not really care that you fans are now just out what might have been considerable money for them—-young people that worked all summer saving up money for this big splurge. If she can’t handle the social media crazies, she should just disengage from that. Or, alternatively, she should just shake it off, because, as a wise woman once said, haters gonna hate, hate, hate. (I know TS gets a lot of shit but she does really have some good advice for her generation.)
Travel insurance may help you more than Taylor swift quotes next time.
Does travel insurance cover a performer saying they can’t perform?
No. That poster is just grasping at straws.