Ticketmaster Question

Voted Worlds #1 Most Loonatic Fanbase

Moderator: Andrew

Ticketmaster Question

Postby Rockindeano » Thu Feb 05, 2009 9:03 am

Does that slimy cocksucker Azoff own Ticketmaster?

Read this.

Springsteen Blasts Ticketmaster Over On-Sale
Bruce Springsteen
February 04, 2009 05:07 PM ET
Jonathan Cohen, N.Y.
Bruce Springsteen and his manager Jon Landau are blasting Ticketmaster for redirecting customers attempting to buy Springsteen tickets to their secondary ticketing site, TicketsNow.

On Monday, fans trying to make face-value purchases for tickets were instead sent to TicketsNow, "even when other seats remained available at face value," says a letter posted on BruceSpringsteen.net. "We condemn this practice."

"We perceive this as a pure conflict of interest," the post continues. "Ticketmaster is there to ensure that we have a good, fair sale of our tickets at their face value plus normal ticketing charges. TicketsNow is supposed to be a secondary site where people who already have tickets may exchange, trade, and, unfortunately, speculate with them. We have asked this redirection from Ticketmaster to TicketsNow cease and desist immediately and Ticketmaster has agreed to do so in the future and has removed its unwanted material from their and our site."

Springsteen and Landau also voiced outrage at the proposed merger between Ticketmaster and Live Nation, which they say would return concert ticketing "to a near monopoly."

"The abuse of our fans and our trust by Ticketmaster has made us as furious as it has made many of you," they concluded. "We will continue to do our utmost now and in the future to make sure that these practices are permanently curtailed on our tours."

Springsteen, who today debuted at No. 1 on The Billboard 200 with the Columbia album "Working on a Dream," begins a world tour April in San Jose, Calif.





This is fucked. I looked for tix and there were some for 65 and 95. Ten minutes later they were all on sale for 139 and up on ticket Now. This is truly fucked up.
User avatar
Rockindeano
Forever Deano
 
Posts: 25864
Joined: Thu Jul 22, 2004 2:52 am
Location: At Peace

Re: Ticketmaster Question

Postby RobbieG » Thu Feb 05, 2009 9:10 am

Rockindeano wrote:Does that slimy cocksucker Azoff own Ticketmaster?

Read this.

Springsteen Blasts Ticketmaster Over On-Sale
Bruce Springsteen
February 04, 2009 05:07 PM ET
Jonathan Cohen, N.Y.
Bruce Springsteen and his manager Jon Landau are blasting Ticketmaster for redirecting customers attempting to buy Springsteen tickets to their secondary ticketing site, TicketsNow.

On Monday, fans trying to make face-value purchases for tickets were instead sent to TicketsNow, "even when other seats remained available at face value," says a letter posted on BruceSpringsteen.net. "We condemn this practice."

"We perceive this as a pure conflict of interest," the post continues. "Ticketmaster is there to ensure that we have a good, fair sale of our tickets at their face value plus normal ticketing charges. TicketsNow is supposed to be a secondary site where people who already have tickets may exchange, trade, and, unfortunately, speculate with them. We have asked this redirection from Ticketmaster to TicketsNow cease and desist immediately and Ticketmaster has agreed to do so in the future and has removed its unwanted material from their and our site."

Springsteen and Landau also voiced outrage at the proposed merger between Ticketmaster and Live Nation, which they say would return concert ticketing "to a near monopoly."

"The abuse of our fans and our trust by Ticketmaster has made us as furious as it has made many of you," they concluded. "We will continue to do our utmost now and in the future to make sure that these practices are permanently curtailed on our tours."

Springsteen, who today debuted at No. 1 on The Billboard 200 with the Columbia album "Working on a Dream," begins a world tour April in San Jose, Calif.





This is fucked. I looked for tix and there were some for 65 and 95. Ten minutes later they were all on sale for 139 and up on ticket Now. This is truly fucked up.


Azoff does not own it yet. This has been a pratice against ticketmaster for years. Good example was 2 yrs ago with Hannah Montana tickets. Arenas were sold out with in seconds only to find tickets 5 minutes later on ticketnow at double to triple the price. Seems scalpers have the program to hack in at will and looks like they did this for the Springsteen shows.
User avatar
RobbieG
LP
 
Posts: 573
Joined: Sun Sep 02, 2007 11:04 am

Postby weatherman90 » Thu Feb 05, 2009 9:19 am

I can't stand those scalping sites. The sad thing is, they often hold a lot of the best seats for any given show.

Fortunately, the paperless ticketing used with AC/DC eliminates the scalpers, so I hope that they will implement paperless for all shows.
Matt
--------------------------------------
www.melodicrockconcerts.com
User avatar
weatherman90
Cassette Tape
 
Posts: 1565
Joined: Tue Aug 14, 2007 11:03 am
Location: Bismarck, ND

Postby nolippin » Thu Feb 05, 2009 9:20 am

Actually, it is the other way around. Ticketmaster owns Azoff. There is a thread around here about it from a few months ago.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB1224730 ... lenews_wsj


OCTOBER 23, 2008 Ticketmaster to Acquire Star Power in Azoff Deal Article
Comments
more in Media & Marketing »Email Printer Friendly Share:
Yahoo Buzz facebook MySpace LinkedIn Digg del.icio.us NewsVine StumbleUpon Mixx Text Size
By ETHAN SMITH
Ticketmaster Inc. has reached an agreement to acquire what is widely regarded as the music world's most powerful artist-management company and install the management company's boss at the helm of the combined company, a bid to find a new business model for an industry undergoing seismic shifts.

The complex transaction would combine the world's largest ticketing company with its most influential gatekeeper for talent. Irving Azoff and his company, Front Line Management Inc., handle the affairs of scores of the world's biggest singers and musicians, including Christina Aguilera, the Eagles, Jimmy Buffett and Neil Diamond. Ticketmaster could use a close affiliation with such artists to persuade concert venues to continue using its ticketing services.

The combination stands to give Ticketmaster new leverage in a battle for supremacy in the concert business with Live Nation Inc. Until recently, Live Nation was a concert promoter whose sole business involved staging live events. In the past year, however, it has announced plans to start a ticketing service to compete with Ticketmaster. And it has begun signing artists such as Jay-Z and Madonna to lucrative long-term deals in which Live Nation will oversee a wide array of the acts' business interests, including touring, ticketing, merchandising and, in some cases, recording.

Ticketmaster is now trying to outmaneuver its rival. Under the terms of a deal announced Thursday, Ticketmaster expects to acquire a majority interest in Front Line, creating an entity called Ticketmaster Entertainment Inc. Mr. Azoff is to be named chief executive of the new entity. Ticketmaster's current management, led by Chief Executive Sean Moriarty, is to report to Mr. Azoff, who is also to continue overseeing Front Line.

Placing a talent manager in charge of the dominant ticketing system raises the potential for various conflict-of-interest issues. Mr. Azoff, in particular, is known for using the leverage his stable of artists provides to procure favorable terms in an array of deals.

Mr. Azoff said he wouldn't attempt to use the combined resources of the new company to give his clients an advantage in the market for concertgoers' dollars. "All artists will benefit," he said, "whether they're Front Line artists or not."

Ticketmaster already owns a minority interest in Front Line, a stake it inherited from Ticketmaster's former parent, IAC/InterActiveCorp, from which Ticketmaster was spun off in August. To attain a majority in Front Line, Ticketmaster is to pay about $123 million to Warner Music Group Corp. for the roughly 30% stake that Warner has owned since last year.

In an interview, Barry Diller, chief executive of IAC and chairman of Ticketmaster, said: "Ticketmaster is obviously going to expand in the things that it does, in the areas that it provides services, and having it led by the force that is Irving Azoff gives Ticketmaster a really good chance to continue to be successful."

Mr. Azoff is expected to trade an unspecified portion of his Front Line holding for about 4.5% of Ticketmaster's total shares, a stake worth at least $35 million that would make Mr. Azoff one of Ticketmaster's largest shareholders. Mr. Azoff is to retain a "sizable" minority interest in Front Line, Ticketmaster said.

The deal highlights the degree to which the live-entertainment business, like the record industry before it, is consolidating as it faces challenges brought on by the Internet and, more recently, the economic downturn.

Ticketmaster for decades maintained a near-monopoly on sales of tickets to major concert and sporting events, allowing it to dictate terms. That has sometimes alienated fans, the most vocal of whom have complained about the service charges that are tacked on to the face value of tickets.

The game has changed dramatically in recent years, however, with the rise of a new secondary ticketing market -- anchored by companies such as eBay Inc.'s StubHub -- that has enabled easy buying and reselling of tickets that are often originally purchased through Ticketmaster. The new market has forced Ticketmaster to play catch-up by building its own resale service.

The announcement of Live Nation's ticketing service posed a new challenge. Live Nation -- at this point Ticketmaster's largest client, generating 17% of Ticketmaster's $1.2 billion in revenue last year -- plans to issue its own tickets for the venues it owns and has poached arenas and stadiums that had been longtime Ticketmaster clients. In so doing, Live Nation has touted its direct relationships with artists, whose concerts it promotes and books.

Close new relationships between Ticketmaster and more than 100 of the biggest names in live entertainment could pose a challenge to Live Nation's nascent ticketing business.

By joining forces with Mr. Azoff and his numerous high-profile clients, Ticketmaster is trying to trump its rival. As one person close to the deal put it, "We'll see your Jay-Z and raise you Jimmy Buffett."

Certain aspects of the deal between Ticketmaster and Front Line needed the blessing of Cablevision Systems Corp., which owns 10% of Front Line. An objection from that front was never likely, however. Cablevision CEO James Dolan moonlights as a guitarist in a blues band called JD & the Straight Shot -- managed by Mr. Azoff.

Write to Ethan Smith at ethan.smith@wsj.com
nolippin
8 Track
 
Posts: 857
Joined: Mon Jun 26, 2006 5:12 am

Postby finalfight » Thu Feb 05, 2009 12:01 pm

My question was answered below.
Last edited by finalfight on Thu Feb 05, 2009 3:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
finalfight
 

Postby Andrew » Thu Feb 05, 2009 12:08 pm

An Open Letter of Apology to Bruce Springsteen, Jon Landau and the entire Springsteen Tour Team:

While we were genuinely trying to do the right thing for fans in providing more choices when the tickets they requested from the primary on-sale were not available, we clearly missed the mark. Fans are confused and angry, which is the opposite of what we hoped to accomplish. We sincerely apologize to Bruce, his organization and, above all, his fans.

We recognize that we need to change our course. We have committed to Bruce and state publicly here that we have taken down all links for Bruce’s shows directing fans from Ticketmaster to TicketsNow. This redirection only occurred as a choice when we could not satisfy fans’ specific search request for primary ticket inventory, but to make sure there is no misunderstanding in the future, we also publicly state that we will never again link to TicketsNow in a manner that can possibly create any confusion during a high-demand on-sale. Specifically, we will not present an option to go to TicketsNow from Ticketmaster without the consent of the artist and the venue, both of whom work together to bring the joy of live entertainment to millions of fans.

If any fans inadvertently purchased tickets in the resale marketplace believing in error they were purchasing from the initial on-sale, we will refund the difference between the actual purchase price and the face price of the ticket. (Please don’t abuse this good faith gesture – we did not give brokers any preferential access to tickets.)

We are committed to helping deliver the most transparent and best live entertainment experience to fans. We will do better going forward.

Sincerely,

Irving Azoff, CEO, Ticketmaster Entertainment
User avatar
Andrew
Administrator
 
Posts: 10961
Joined: Thu Aug 29, 2002 9:12 pm
Location: Hobart, Tasmania, Australia

Postby StoneCold » Thu Feb 05, 2009 3:21 pm

*
User avatar
StoneCold
Compact Disc
 
Posts: 6310
Joined: Fri Jul 14, 2006 2:32 pm


Return to Journey

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 37 guests