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Stadium of Fire sells out in minutes
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I know someone got tickets on Thursday because their cousin works at BYU, another because his aunt is a big time contributor to BYU. So this article wants the reader to think that everyone started on the same footing when it states, "Brigham Young University ticket sales sold its first ticket at 5 p.m." WRONG.
It would be an interesting article if you surveyed the BYU faculty/officials about how many tickets they were able to purchase before "official sales" began on Friday evening. I think the general public would be disappointed.
As mush as people want to go to the show, I hope they refuse to reward the scalpers for this greedy behaviour.
Much more fun that fighting the crowds and the smoke, and it's free to the public.
Will there be overflow seating at the conference Center? The Marriatt Center? The HFAC DeJong?
If feel sorry for the many dissapointed children out there. most of which cannot afford a scalped ticket.
I hope those that horded the tickets, feel bad, but I don't think they will.
I went through the complete process, entering valid address and payment information. Each screen along the process kept telling me I was purchasing the same 5 tickets I started with. When clicked on the button on final page to commit my life savings of $200 for the 5 tickets, the next screen simply read "Unable to confirm order, try again?" Of course by this time, all tickets were sold out.
I noticed there was a count down timer during the complete online process that started at about 5 minutes. The last time it was displayed it said 27 seconds were remaining. Did I run out of time?
I'm still waiting to find out what happened to my order. Did they charge my credit card or not? If not, what happened to the tickets they were holding for me?
"Folks were throwing down between $875 and $3,125 on the average envelope � a figure ticket sales personnel didn't expect.
They originally thought buyers would purchase six to nine tickets at a time according to average purchase data from the past three years, but when the clock struck 5, their calculations crashed � hard.
"Suddenly, everyone was buying 25 tickets at a time," Pelo said. "There's no way we could have predicted that.""
Are these people that out of touch? Do they live under a rock? Talk about being totally clueless! "No way we could haave predicted that" has to go down as one of the most ridiculous statements in a very long time. Wake up people!! EVERYBODY (except you) SAW THIS COMING!!
If you were in the online system BEFORE 5pm, you were automatically kicked out at 5pm when they turned on purchasing for these tickets. There is no such thing as lining up early for online tickets and you discovered that after waiting two hours. Next time, wait until the minute the tickets go on sale before going into the ticketing system.
The officials ought to look seriously at limiting the number of tickets sold to one individual to 10 or so.
I've heard that many in line did not even get tickets and that some in line went home to buy online and got skunked.
Do you have the same contempt for people who bought houses hoping to sell them for a profit? Everybody is for free enterprise as long as it's the other guy that pays.
What kind of clueless wonders do they have running the show here? Did they not research the scalping activity before deciding the ticket limit? How many of those online tickets were actually sold to people who are going to use them? If you want the answer, go to eBay and check out who the sellers are: it's all the big-time scalpers who sell nothing else but tickets. They have scores of well-coached "piece-workers" who deluge the online ticket office and get paid a bounty for every ticket they grab with a premium for the high-demand seats.
As someone else noted, all of us knew instantly what would happen when we saw the 25-ticket limit, and they can't figure it out? Pulleeeezze!!!
I was lucky enough to get tickets through my grandfather. He's a general authority and was able to get tickets for me and a bunch of my cousins.
Thanks BYU (and grandpa)!
What a bunch of losers buying the tickets on e-bay. some people seriously need to get a life.
And to the whiner complaining about the connected having access to tickets: Get connected, it pays.
The only true crazy people are the ones willing to pay the scalpers. If no one buys at the scalper prices, the price will come down. Here in Vegas you couldn't give the tickets to her concert in January. So many scalpers, not enough buyers. They had to dump the tickets for way UNDER face value. Someone called us, and gave us tickets, because to the glut of online sellers. If no one pays the high prices, the prices will drop like the U of U's basketball teams national rankings.
At one time it was normal to see a few diehard fans in tents, with sleeping bags first in line to get tickets to see their favorite performer, along with a bunch of homeless men. The homeless men were working for a scalper, in return for a bottle of whiskey, and 10 bucks, they would wait in line for hours, and buy a few hundred tickets. The scalper would basically control sales to the concert or event, by having a group of men stay in line.
It's sad that the BYU folks are so naive, not to know what to expect. As a result most are locked out.
If scalping is seen as such an egregious offense, it shouldn't be too difficult to make tickets non-transferable. Require a name for each ticket at the time of sale and ID at the gate. Parents ID might have to suffice for those too young to have ID. A pain? Yes. Worthwhile? Probably in this case.
We won't buy from scalpers, I hope those that are trying to make a huge profit from this get stuck with the tickets they will never be able to use.
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