by sockii on 02 Mar 2007 18:49
>Well, and you can try to get tickets in the general sale. A few people
>have reported getting seats that way. Although it's a crapshoot, since
>more people relay tales of not being able to gain access to
>Ticketmaster.com at all during that period.
It's not impossible, but it can be advisable to have a buddy also trying to get tickets at the same time...one hand on the computer, one hand on your cell phone to see who gets through first. That's how vespapod and I did MSG, and we both managed to get tickets in the general sale. (Plus I also got those Fenway tickets I'm selling off, all $95 ones but they were very good seats, and they didn't sell out instantly or anything like that.)
>Since I'm talking about it anyway I'll go on and report more
>details...People on TPT.com are saying U2 tix went this way: folks who
> bought in more than one transaction were cancelled...Others are
>recounting other TM-sold tours where tix were cancelled at the last
>minute and without notice...so who's to say you won't buy one in the
>secondary market that doesn't work when you get to the venue?
Well, just to calm the nerves a bit, in that second case I believe it was mentioned that was a Ticketmaster error, that they'd double-cancelled tickets, yes? Plus it was also a Springsteen gig and they confirmed that Springsteen is super-anal about these kinds of things. If the person in question had checked their cc a few days before the show, they would have seen the refunded purchase and been able to call ticketmaster at the time to correct the error.
So I'm not saying there's NO reason to worry, just that there are ways you can protect yourself and be vigilant. Check your credit card activity leading up to the show to make sure there are no unexpected charge cancellations. And also stick with hard-copy tickets instead of ticketfast bar-code tickets...because how are they going to stop you at the door once you've already got a hard copy ticket in hand, unless there's someway they have every usher having a master list of "people's whose tickets shouldn't be honored", or something like that?
And with protecting yourself with secondary market tickets, well...that's one thing Stubhub has in its favor. You're supposed to be protected as a buyer in case, for whatever reason, you buy a ticket through them that isn't honored at the door.
I'd just try not to stress out about things TOO much, you know?