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Tag: Taylor Swift tickets

  • Report: DOJ will sue Ticketmaster parent company Live Nation for antitrust violations

    Report: DOJ will sue Ticketmaster parent company Live Nation for antitrust violations

    No more surprises at checkout entertainment giants, Live Nation and Ticketmaster pledging to give us consumers the ability to see the full price of their tickets upfront. So you’ll know what you’re paying for before you get to the checkout page. This is an important start getting everyone at the table and getting their commitment to provide *** better market place for consumers which today is rigged against consumers is critical representatives for major companies including Live Nation Sea Geek, airbnb tick pick and others gathering at the White House Thursday. The announcement marking Biden’s latest effort to address economic issues that are top of mind for voters heading into the 2024 election. This is *** win for consumers in my view and proof that our crackdown on junk fees has real momentum. The entertainment industry has been under *** microscope in recent months. Following scenes like this, there are those who are in the business of grabbing up all the tickets at face value and sending them to *** secondary market where there’s multiple, multiple costs added. That’s what happened in the Taylor Swift situation while Thursday’s announcement may ease the shock factor at the end of your ticket purchase. Consumer advocates say the public won’t be protected until companies are faced with new laws. The problem is you can disclose everything, all the fees and all the costs and still take consumers to the cleaners. I’m Gloria Passino Reporting.

    Report: Justice Department will sue Ticketmaster parent company Live Nation for antitrust violations

    The Department of Justice is preparing to sue the country’s largest concert promoter and ticketing website Live Nation in the coming weeks for breaking America’s antitrust laws, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing anonymous sources familiar with the Justice Department’s plans.The lawsuit against Live Nation Entertainment, the parent company of Ticketmaster, will allege the ticketing company used its market-leading position to harm competition for live events, the Journal reported. But the paper wasn’t able to uncover specific details of the planned lawsuit.Shares of Live Nation dropped nearly 7% in premarket trading Tuesday. Live Nation and the Justice Department didn’t respond to request for comment about the Journal’s report.Ticketmaster drew the ire of U.S. government officials and fans after a system meltdown left millions of people unable to purchase tickets to Taylor Swift’s “Eras” tour in 2022.U.S. lawmakers grilled Live Nation executives at a hearing in January 2023, which, in a rare event, brought together Democrats and Republicans over the company’s industry dominance that critics argue is harming rivals, musicians and fans.Swift fans later sued Live Nation for “unlawful conduct” in the pop star’s chaotic tour sale, with the plaintiffs claiming that the ticketing giant violated antitrust laws.Joe Berchtold, president and CFO of Live Nation, has previously defended the company’s practices, saying at the 2023 hearing that that Ticketmaster does not set ticket prices, does not determine the number of tickets put up for sale and that “in most cases, venues set service and ticketing fees,” not Ticketmaster.He also rejected suggestions that its dominance has allowed for soaring fees, citing data from the market intelligence firm Pollstar showing that Live Nation controls about 200 out of approximately 4,000 venues in the United States, or about 5%.Rivals have previously spoken out, too: Jack Groetzinger, CEO of SeatGeek, alleged that many venue owners “fear losing Live Nation concerts if they don’t use Ticketmaster” and its services, and argued the company must be broken up.Live Nation and Ticketmaster merged in 2010, now billing itself as the “largest live entertainment company in the world.”

    The Department of Justice is preparing to sue the country’s largest concert promoter and ticketing website Live Nation in the coming weeks for breaking America’s antitrust laws, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing anonymous sources familiar with the Justice Department’s plans.

    The lawsuit against Live Nation Entertainment, the parent company of Ticketmaster, will allege the ticketing company used its market-leading position to harm competition for live events, the Journal reported. But the paper wasn’t able to uncover specific details of the planned lawsuit.

    Shares of Live Nation dropped nearly 7% in premarket trading Tuesday. Live Nation and the Justice Department didn’t respond to request for comment about the Journal’s report.

    Ticketmaster drew the ire of U.S. government officials and fans after a system meltdown left millions of people unable to purchase tickets to Taylor Swift’s “Eras” tour in 2022.

    U.S. lawmakers grilled Live Nation executives at a hearing in January 2023, which, in a rare event, brought together Democrats and Republicans over the company’s industry dominance that critics argue is harming rivals, musicians and fans.

    Swift fans later sued Live Nation for “unlawful conduct” in the pop star’s chaotic tour sale, with the plaintiffs claiming that the ticketing giant violated antitrust laws.

    Joe Berchtold, president and CFO of Live Nation, has previously defended the company’s practices, saying at the 2023 hearing that that Ticketmaster does not set ticket prices, does not determine the number of tickets put up for sale and that “in most cases, venues set service and ticketing fees,” not Ticketmaster.

    He also rejected suggestions that its dominance has allowed for soaring fees, citing data from the market intelligence firm Pollstar showing that Live Nation controls about 200 out of approximately 4,000 venues in the United States, or about 5%.

    Rivals have previously spoken out, too: Jack Groetzinger, CEO of SeatGeek, alleged that many venue owners “fear losing Live Nation concerts if they don’t use Ticketmaster” and its services, and argued the company must be broken up.

    Live Nation and Ticketmaster merged in 2010, now billing itself as the “largest live entertainment company in the world.”

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  • Ticketmaster Hacks To Secure Your Taylor Swift’s Eras Tickets, As Told By TikTok

    Ticketmaster Hacks To Secure Your Taylor Swift’s Eras Tickets, As Told By TikTok

    Between Ticketmaster crashing and people reselling their tickets for thousands of dollars, the mayhem that the Eras tour has caused so far is ridiculous.

    Sales for her European leg have started. To avoid the chaos that ensued when the US tickets were released, there is no general sale for these tickets. Only those people who’ve registered for the pre-sale will get a code to buy tickets on their city’s selected date.

    Some lucky fans have managed to secure tickets at cost price. If you’re wondering just how you can too, we scoured the internet to find the best tips and hacks.


    Here’s every tip we found, according to Tiktok:

    1. Have your payment information already logged into your Ticketmaster account to save time when checking out
    2. Turn off all other devices using the wifi and sit near the router when buying tickets
    3. If you received a code with multiple emails, try buying with different emails on different devices and go with whichever queue moves the fastest
    4. Refresh the page when the countdown is over to be in the front when joining the queue (this one seems a little risky – but apparently, it works)
    5. Don’t be picky, you want to be there, so take whatever tickets are left!
    6. If you reach the ticket buying page and there are no tickets left, keep refreshing the page as more may potentially be added
    7. If you didn’t get chosen for a code when registering, then you can try for resale tickets Luckily, you can only sell resale tickets at cost value in a lot of places in Europe – Unlike in the US where tickets were resold for thousands of dollars

    Happy ticket hunting!

    Disclaimer: these hacks have not been verified by Ticketmaster. They are based on advice from the TikTok below:

    Emma Mchugh

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  • Analysts coin the ‘TSwift Lift’ for the revenue bump businesses get when Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour comes to town

    Analysts coin the ‘TSwift Lift’ for the revenue bump businesses get when Taylor Swift’s Eras Tour comes to town

    When Taylor Swift puts on a show, not only Swifties are cheering. Hotel revenues per available room can more than quadruple when the blockbuster Eras Tour stops in a city, analysts from CreditSights found. This year in Nashville (which Swift considers her hometown), revenue per room doubled during the three nights when Swift was in town versus the same time the previous year when there was no tour.

    This “TSwift Lift,” as CreditSights dubbed the Eras-induced stimulus, isn’t exclusive to hotels. In Chicago, the pop star’s three-night stay (from June 2-4) revved up transit revenue, pushing the Chicago Transit Authority to its highest post-pandemic ridership. During her short stay, Swift generated over 43,000 extra bus and rail rides. Chicago hoteliers also reaped the TSwift Lift, as the first two days of the singer’s shows resulted in record hotel bookings for the city, an average of 44,383 per night.

    Swift’s two shows next weekend in Cincinnati for over 130,000 fans are predicted to generate over $48 million for the city and create or support close to 1,000 jobs. Why is the Eras Tour so wildly popular and profitable? In addition to Swift being among the most important and influential artists of her generation, her latest tour is a journey through her entire musical career, which began when she was just 15, and so draws fans across generations. Each show is a 10-act tour de force that lasts between three to four hours. 

    Three and a half million people registered for Ticketmaster’s ticket presale program for the tour’s U.S. leg, though the presale almost immediately crashed the website. Journalists have covered the tour as a massive cultural as well as economic event.

    The tour tickets sold out so quickly and demand to attend so high that huge crowds have been informally camping outside stadiums to sing along to the music that wafts outside of the venue and into the parking lot. Videos of the makeshift concerts have garnered hundreds of thousands of views online, including a TikTok showing reportedly 20,000 Swifties in a parking lot outside Philadelphia’s Lincoln Financial Field.

    Swift’s die-hard fandom is helping her make $11 million to $12 million in ticket sales per concert, and fans spend an average of over $1,300 to attend an Eras show, including tickets, clothing, and travel.

    Research company QuestionPro estimates that the superstar could add a staggering $4.6 billion in consumer spending to the U.S. economy as she supercharges business at each of the 47 stops on her tour. 

    Swift is predicted to earn half a billion dollars from the tour. 

    The worldwide Eras Tour will conclude in London in August 2024.

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    Rachel Shin

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  • A brief history of scalping concert tickets – National | Globalnews.ca

    A brief history of scalping concert tickets – National | Globalnews.ca

    There are few things more frustrating to a music fan than being shut out of a sold-out concert only to see tickets for sale at inflated prices on the secondary market. And how do those guys selling tickets on the street outside the venue get their inventory?

    Scalpers (“ticket touters” to the British and “leveraged arbitragers” to ardent capitalists) are as old as live events themselves. When the Greeks opened the first-ever outdoor amphitheatre in 325 BCE — it was built into the hillside of the Acropolis and sat up to 17,000 people in its 55 semi-circular rows — there was no doubt some dude in a robe outside the gates yelling “Who’s got seats?” The same would have happened at the first Roman theatre in Pompeii in 80 BCE. And I’d lay money on the same thing happening outside of Shakespeare’s Globe Theatre for the premiere of A Midsummer Night’s Dream in 1604.

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    Scalping (a term that first appeared in the 19th century referring to brokers of railway tickets) has always been a problem. How could a regular person get into shows when there were crowds of “ticket speculators” and “sidewalk men” who employed people to stand in line for them (“diggers) and had secret access to insiders at the box office who gladly handed over tickets for a cut of the proceeds (known as “ice”)?

    When Jenny Lind, a singer known as “The Swedish Nightingale,” toured the United States in 1851, the very best seats in the house mysteriously disappeared immediately only to reappear in the hands of speculators who sold them with significant markups. A ticket with a face value of $3 might go for $6. There was a rumour that Lind’s agents were in on the scam, something that damaged her in the eyes of the public.

    When Charles Dickens went on a book tour of America in 1867, his public readings sold out in minutes. George Dolby, Dickens’ manager, lamented about a show in Boston. “[B]y eight o’clock in the morning, the queue [outside the box office] was nearly half a mile long and about the time that the employers of the persons who had been standing in the streets all night began to arrive to take their places. … [T]he horrid speculators who buy all the good tickets and sell them again at exorbitant prices.” In New York, fans waiting in line were offered as much as twenty dollars for their place in line by scalpers looking to acquire tickets.

    Dickens hated this, especially since he and his manager were accused of being in on the swindle. He wrote to his sister-in-law: “We are at wits; end how to keep tickets out of the hands of speculators. … The young under-graduates of Cambridge have made a representation to Longfellow that they are five hundred strong and cannot get one ticket.”

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    Time and time again, theatres, performers, managers, agents, promoters, and governments have tried to clamp down on scalping. In 1927, New York City looked into the situation with Broadway theatres and local music halls. Nothing happened. The same with an investigation in 1949. And again in 1963. Nothing, it seemed, could be done about a black market in theatre tickets that totalled millions of dollars each year. It wasn’t uncommon for a box office manager to earn beyond $25,000 a year and buy a new Cadillac every year. Guess where that supplementary income came from?

    The problem only became bigger when rock concerts became big business. In the days before computers, box offices had racks of printed tickets, the best of which vanished before sales even began.

    Maintaining an accurate ticket count (and thus a proper accounting of revenue) was impossible using the system of hard tickets sold through a box office. Surely there had to be a solution. This is where the first computerized ticket-selling programs came into existence. The first, Computicket and TRS (Ticket Reservation Services), arrived in the middle 1960s, prompting their systems as a way to cut down on scalping by keeping track of every single ticket sold.

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    Great in theory, but despite decades of advancements with computerized ticket selling, paperless tickets, and fan-driven ticket exchanges, scalpers and secondary-market companies still manage to get their hands on tickets.


    Click to play video: 'Madonna announces world tour with stops in 3 Canadian cities'


    Madonna announces world tour with stops in 3 Canadian cities


    The problem is not going away. In fact, things are just getting weirder and more contentious with things like Ticketmaster’s professional reseller program. “Diggers” and “ice” also still exist in the digital realm. Instead of bribing box office managers and hiring people to stand in line, they use bots, fake identities, access comp tickets, and infiltrate sales meant for fan clubs. They’re pretty resourceful and tech-savvy people.

    This past Friday, Jan. 20, Madonna started selling tickets for her worldwide 40th-anniversary Celebration Tour, Ticketmaster’s first major on-sale challenge since the Taylor Swift fiasco late last year. Although tickets were advertised for as little as $40, you have to wonder how many of those made it into the hands of fans at that price and how many are now controlled by the secondary market (StubHub, SeatGeek, Vivid Tickets, etc.) as well as individual scalpers.

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    Also this week, a new campaign called Make Tickets Fair launched in the U.K. and EU. The goal is to educate the public about the perils and protocols of ticket reselling. It may help a little bit, but I can’t help feeling that organizers are wasting their breath.

    It all comes down to this: When you have a perishable high-demand commodity like a concert ticket, someone is always going to find a way to make money from someone else’s desires. It’s a game of Whack-A-Mole as old as live entertainment itself.

    Alan Cross is a broadcaster with Q107 and 102.1 the Edge and a commentator for Global News.

    Subscribe to Alan’s Ongoing History of New Music Podcast now on Apple Podcast or Google Play

    &copy 2023 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Alan Cross

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  • Some Taylor Swift fans will have 2nd chance to buy tickets, says Ticketmaster – National | Globalnews.ca

    Some Taylor Swift fans will have 2nd chance to buy tickets, says Ticketmaster – National | Globalnews.ca

    Though Taylor Swift fans are still seeing Red after Ticketmaster‘s botched ticket sale, the company is giving some Swifties a second chance to score tickets to the singer’s 2023 Eras Tour.

    On Monday, Ticketmaster sent an email out to select fans informing them they will have a “limited opportunity” to purchase no more than two tickets each for one of Swift’s upcoming shows.

    “You were selected for this opportunity because you have been identified as a fan who received a boost during the Verified Fan presale but did not purchase tickets,” the email read.

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    “We apologize for the difficulties you may have experienced, and have been asked by Taylor’s team to create this additional opportunity for you to purchase tickets,” Ticketmaster continued.

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    Many fans took to Twitter to share screenshots of the email from Ticketmaster.

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    The new sale is in response to a fiasco which occurred during the original Swift tour ticket presale, when, after hours of waiting in oft-malfunctioning digital queues, the majority of fans were unable to purchase tickets. Immediately following the presale, scalpers were attempting to resell Swift tickets for up to US$28,000 ($37,430).

    On Nov. 17, Ticketmaster cancelled the general sale for Swift’s U.S. Eras Tour “due to extraordinarily high demands” and “insufficient remaining ticket inventory.”

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    Ticketmaster used a “Verified Fan” presale to sell Swift tickets — a common practice for the company — that aims to limit the number of scalpers and bots buying tickets to popular shows by providing registered fans with a special ticket-buying code.

    The company claimed more than 3.5 million people registered for the presale. In a statement, Ticketmaster wrote it sold more than two million tickets and fielded 3.5 billion system requests, which is four times its previous peak.

    A group of Swift fans has since filed a lawsuit against Ticketmaster and its parent company Live Nation, claiming the ticketing site engaged in “fraud, price-fixing, and antitrust violations.”

    Swift herself also commented on the mismanaged ticket sale in November and said she and her team are working “to figure out how this situation can be improved moving forward.”

    She claimed it was “excruciating for me to just watch mistakes happen with no recourse.”


    Taylor Swift posted a statement to her Instagram account about Ticketmaster’s sale cancellation on Nov. 17, 2022.


    Instagram / @taylorswift

    On Monday, Ticketmaster issued an apology on its website and said select fans will receive staggered invitations to purchase tickets based on tour dates in each city. All of the invitations will be sent prior to Dec. 23.

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    Ticketmaster merged with Live Nation in 2010, resulting in control of more than 70 per cent of the primary ticketing and live event venues market.

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    In November, the U.S. Justice Department launched an inquiry into whether Live Nation has abused its power in the multibillion-dollar live music industry. The investigation began before the Swift ticket sale outrage.


    Click to play video: 'Taylor Swift ticket chaos leads to US Justice department probe of Ticketmaster, Live Nation'


    Taylor Swift ticket chaos leads to US Justice department probe of Ticketmaster, Live Nation


    Live Nation denied any wrongdoing and claimed the company “takes its responsibilities under the antitrust laws seriously and does not engage in behaviours that could justify antitrust litigation.”

    Ticketmaster echoed this sentiment in a statement. The company wrote: “Ticketmaster has a significant share of the primary ticketing services market because of the large gap that exists between the quality of the Ticketmaster system and the next best primary ticketing system.”

    &copy 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Sarah Do Couto

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  • Taylor Swift addresses ticket sale cancellation chaos: ‘It really pisses me off’ – National | Globalnews.ca

    Taylor Swift addresses ticket sale cancellation chaos: ‘It really pisses me off’ – National | Globalnews.ca

    If trying to buy tickets to Taylor Swift‘s upcoming tour felt like “going through several bear attacks,” the Blank Space singer agrees with you.

    In a statement posted to Swift’s Instagram account on Friday, the singer criticized Ticketmaster‘s messy handling of ticket sales for her upcoming The Eras Tour.

    On Thursday, Ticketmaster cancelled the general public sale after hellish presales left fans experiencing technical difficulties on the company’s website and waiting several hours in queues, only to be unable to make a purchase.

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    In her statement, Swift, 32, wrote that she asked Ticketmaster “multiple times if they could handle this kind of demand and we were assured they could.”

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    She claimed it was “excruciating for me to just watch mistakes happen with no recourse.”


    Taylor Swift posted a statement to her Instagram account about Ticketmaster’s sale cancellation on Nov. 17, 2022.


    Instagram / @taylorswift

    The singer said she has always been “extremely protective” of her fans. She claimed to have brought several elements of her career to her own in-house team over the last few years “SPECIFICALLY to improve the quality of my fans’ experience by doing it myself with my team.”

    Swift and her teams are currently working “to figure out how this situation can be improved moving forward,” she wrote.

    She also echoed earlier data provided by Ticketmaster that said more than 2.4 million tickets had already been sold for The Eras Tour. She said those who did obtain tickets must have felt like they “went through several bear attacks to get them.”

    These tickets were sold as a part of presales on Tuesday and Wednesday.

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    In her statement’s conclusion, Swift addressed the thousands (if not millions) of disappointed fans who did not score tickets. It did not offer an alternative method of acquiring tickets, or really any other option other than accepting that you won’t be seeing her on tour.

    “And to those who didn’t get tickets, all I can say is that my hope is to provide more opportunities for us to all get together and sing these songs. Thank you for wanting to be there. You have no idea how much that means,” she wrote.

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    On Thursday, Ticketmaster broke the hearts of Swifties everywhere when the company tweeted out the news of the general sale’s cancellation.

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    “Due to extraordinarily high demands on ticketing systems and insufficient remaining ticket inventory to meet that demand, tomorrow’s public on-sale for Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour has been cancelled,” the company wrote.

    It remains unclear if the public sale will be rescheduled at some point or if it’s cancelled entirely.

    During Tuesday’s “Verified Fan” presale (an attempt by Ticketmaster to limit the number of scalpers and bots buying tickets to popular shows), fans experienced confusing technical outages and queue wait times of up to eight hours.

    A Ticketmaster spokesperson told Variety the site’s technical issues were a result of a “staggering number of bot attacks as well as fans who didn’t have invite codes drove unprecedented traffic on our site.” The company said this led to “3.5 billion total system requests — 4x our previous peak.”

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    By Wednesday, tickets had been pushed onto resale websites like StubHub for tens of thousands of dollars. Reuters reported some early ticketholders were trying to sell their seats for as much as US$28,000 ($37,430).

    Originally priced tickets ranged from US$49 ($65) to $449 ($600) each.

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    The upcoming tour will see Swift, 32, perform 52 shows across the U.S. There are no Canadian dates on Swift’s upcoming tour, but many fans north of the border had planned on heading south to catch a show — but maybe not at these prices.

    Ticketmaster merged with Live Nation in 2010, resulting in control of more than 70 per cent of the primary ticketing and live event venues market.

    Swift released her latest album, Midnights, in October. The U.S. tour is scheduled to start in March 2023 and end in August.

    &copy 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Sarah Do Couto

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  • Taylor Swift public ticket sales cancelled by Ticketmaster after ‘high demands’ – National | Globalnews.ca

    Taylor Swift public ticket sales cancelled by Ticketmaster after ‘high demands’ – National | Globalnews.ca

    UPDATE: The general public sale of Taylor Swift tickets set to take place Friday was cancelled by Ticketmaster on Thursday afternoon.

    “Due to extraordinarily high demands on ticketing systems and insufficient remaining ticket inventory to meet that demand, tomorrow’s public on-sale for Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour has been cancelled,” the company posted to Twitter.

    It remains unclear if the public sale will be rescheduled at some point or if it’s cancelled entirely.

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    During a pre-sale on Tuesday, Swift fans were met with overwhelming wait times and technical issues on Ticketmaster’s website when they attempted to make a purchase. Though the company said it tried to work quickly to address any problems as a result of the overwhelming ticket demand, some eager Swifties waited up to eight hours to try and purchase tickets through Ticketmaster on Tuesday.

    On Thursday, a Ticketmaster spokesperson told Variety the site’s technical issues were a result of a “staggering number of bot attacks as well as fans who didn’t have invite codes drove unprecedented traffic on our site.” The company claimed this led to “3.5 billion total system requests — 4x our previous peak.”

    ORIGINAL STORY: With ticket prices this high, some Taylor Swift fans will only be seeing the artist in their Wildest Dreams. 

    On Tuesday, hopeful American fans rushed to Live Nation’s Ticketmaster website to try and score pre-sale tickets to Swift’s The Eras Tour, but technical outages, long wait times and limited availability left many panicked and disappointed.

    By Wednesday, tickets had been pushed onto resale websites like StubHub for tens of thousands of dollars. Reuters reported some early ticketholders were trying to sell their seats for as much as US$28,000 ($37,430).

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    Originally priced tickets ranged from US$49 ($65) to $449 ($600) each.

    The upcoming tour will see Swift, 32, perform 52 shows across the U.S. There are no Canadian dates on Swift’s upcoming tour, but many fans north of the border had planned on heading south to catch a show — but maybe not at these prices.

    Tuesday’s “Verified Fan” presale (a system used by many popular artists) provides special digital codes to certain fans to buy tickets before a general, public sale. It is intended to deter scalpers and bots from purchasing tickets, though the success of Verified Fan pre-sales is unclear.

    Ticketmaster released a statement that claimed Tuesday’s presale resulted in “historically unprecedented demand.” It said millions of people joined the queue to try and purchase tickets.

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    A new round of Swift ticket presales, for Capital One credit card holders, proceeded on Wednesday with fewer complaints on social media. Some fans said wait times stretched past three hours in online queues, and many left empty-handed when ticket allotments sold out.

    Ticketmaster merged with Live Nation in 2010, resulting in control of more than 70 per cent of the primary ticketing and live event venues market.

    On Wednesday, Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti said he would investigate customer complaints about Ticketmaster.

    Though Ticketmaster has not been accused of misconduct, Skrmetti said at a press conference that a lack of competition could be leading to higher ticket prices and poor customer service, Bloomberg reported.

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    Democratic New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez also criticized the 2010 Ticketmaster and Live Nation merger. On Twitter, she claimed Ticketmaster “is a monopoly.” She said the Ticketmaster-Live Nation merger “should never have been approved.”

    Democratic Sen. Richard Blumenthal also tweeted about the Swift ticket snafu, writing that it “is a perfect example of how the Live Nation/Ticketmaster merger harms consumers by creating a near-monopoly.”

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    Across social media, Swift’s fans have loudly chided Ticketmaster and the resale market, claiming greedy companies and opportunistic scalpers are taking advantage of the artist’s dedicated fanbase.

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    Swift released her latest album, Midnights, in October. The U.S. tour is scheduled to start in March 2023 and end in August.

    With files from Reuters 

    &copy 2022 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

    Sarah Do Couto

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