Anonymous wrote:We are going to Asia to see her. Resale VIP tickets were only a bit over face value and we will spend a week on vacation in addition to the show. It’s fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, I completely understand what you are saying OP. But she also wants everyone to buy her music music twice twice. And guess who gets to pay? Her fans! Just like for her concert.
Yes, I know it is to get back at a male record producer but it wasn’t like she needed the money. So the fans are expected to revenge buy on her behalf?
I don’t get the whole thing but people are willing to do it so capitalism rules the day!
Buy her music twice? OK, grandma. For the vast majority of people, it means that when you want to listen to one of her songs on Apple Music or Spotify, you simply click Taylor's Version, rather than the original recording. No additional cost incurred.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Elitist? It’s expensive, and it might be a status marker to some, but to me it isn’t “elitist.” That word has been co-opted by the far right. Is that what you mean, OP?
You’ve actually just defined what an elitist activity is.
Anonymous wrote:We entered the lottery to get a chance to buy tickets when they were released. It took hours because the site crashed and we were kicked to the back of the line to start over. I was able to get tickets for my daughter and a friend’s daughter in Philly. I went with my daughter and her friends. The concert was truly amazing. Taylor performed for 3 hours.
A lot of the issues OP raised are about our culture. I didn’t post about it on Facebook or instagram or snap chat or any other social media. Did I talk about going with friends? Yes, just like I talk about other aspects of my life.
We met plenty of other fans who got tickets like we did. Upon release by buying them. My biggest complaint is the monopoly that ticketmaster has on ticket sales. Stop following the influencers. Stop posting, viewing, and liking/commenting on braggy look at me and my amazing life photos on social media to people you don’t know if you don’t like how this activity is becoming elitist. You are helping to drive it whether you realize it or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With tickets being impossible to purchase the only way one can attend the concert is buy paying the exorbitant resale prices and/or flying to another location.
A trip that will cost about $5k or more.
This is ridiculous
+1000
Got front row seats to Pink instead. Great person and artist. Better performer.
Pink has always put on an amazing show!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:With tickets being impossible to purchase the only way one can attend the concert is buy paying the exorbitant resale prices and/or flying to another location.
A trip that will cost about $5k or more.
This is ridiculous
+1000
Got front row seats to Pink instead. Great person and artist. Better performer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We entered the lottery to get a chance to buy tickets when they were released. It took hours because the site crashed and we were kicked to the back of the line to start over. I was able to get tickets for my daughter and a friend’s daughter in Philly. I went with my daughter and her friends. The concert was truly amazing. Taylor performed for 3 hours.
A lot of the issues OP raised are about our culture. I didn’t post about it on Facebook or instagram or snap chat or any other social media. Did I talk about going with friends? Yes, just like I talk about other aspects of my life.
We met plenty of other fans who got tickets like we did. Upon release by buying them. My biggest complaint is the monopoly that ticketmaster has on ticket sales. Stop following the influencers. Stop posting, viewing, and liking/commenting on braggy look at me and my amazing life photos on social media to people you don’t know if you don’t like how this activity is becoming elitist. You are helping to drive it whether you realize it or not.
Countless people (us included) did exactly this and still ended up empty handed. You weren't more dedicated to getting tickets than we were. You were just plain lucky. Stop acting like if we had only behaved as you had, the outcome would have been different.
Anonymous wrote:Elitist? It’s expensive, and it might be a status marker to some, but to me it isn’t “elitist.” That word has been co-opted by the far right. Is that what you mean, OP?
Anonymous wrote:With tickets being impossible to purchase the only way one can attend the concert is buy paying the exorbitant resale prices and/or flying to another location.
A trip that will cost about $5k or more.
This is ridiculous
Anonymous wrote:We entered the lottery to get a chance to buy tickets when they were released. It took hours because the site crashed and we were kicked to the back of the line to start over. I was able to get tickets for my daughter and a friend’s daughter in Philly. I went with my daughter and her friends. The concert was truly amazing. Taylor performed for 3 hours.
A lot of the issues OP raised are about our culture. I didn’t post about it on Facebook or instagram or snap chat or any other social media. Did I talk about going with friends? Yes, just like I talk about other aspects of my life.
We met plenty of other fans who got tickets like we did. Upon release by buying them. My biggest complaint is the monopoly that ticketmaster has on ticket sales. Stop following the influencers. Stop posting, viewing, and liking/commenting on braggy look at me and my amazing life photos on social media to people you don’t know if you don’t like how this activity is becoming elitist. You are helping to drive it whether you realize it or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I can’t understand the need to pay those prices to then have to watch the broadcasted screen to even see the show from your way-up-there seats. Add in the traffic, long lines and being around fanatical people, no thank you.
Because your daughter can buy the shirt and talk to her friends who have the shirt or the hoodie about how great the show was and then look down on the kids whose parents didn't pay for them to attend