The Commercial Break - Obey Your Master, Ticketmaster!
Episode Date: April 10, 2025EP#728: Bryan & Krissy take an entire episode to break down the current craziness in live entertainment ticketing. From availability to prices, venue hogging to scalping, starving artists to shutterin...g festivals, there is plenty of blame to go around! So the two people LEAST qualified to discuss the matter....discuss the matter. Watch EP #728 on YouTube! Text us or leave us a voicemail: +1 (212) 433-3TCB FOLLOW US: Instagram: @thecommercialbreak Youtube: youtube.com/thecommercialbreak TikTok: @tcbpodcast Website: www.tcbpodcast.com CREDITS: Hosts: Bryan Green & Krissy Hoadley Executive Producer: Bryan Green Producer: Astrid B. Green Voice Over: Rachel McGrath TCBits Written, Voiced and Produced by Bryan Green To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Okay, flights on air Canada. How about Prague?
Ooh, Paris. Those gardens.
Gardens. Amsterdam. Tulip Festival.
I see your festival and raise you a carnival in Venice.
Or Bermuda has carnival.
Ooh, colorful.
You want colorful. Thailand. Lantern Festival. Boom.
Book it. Um, how did we get to Thailand from Prague?
Oh, right. Prague.
Oh, boy.
Choose from a world of destinations, if you can.
Air Canada. nice travels.
And welcome back to WSHIT's continuing coverage of Spamageddon 2025.
Tens upon tens of people have fallen victim to an email and telephone scammer simply known
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I just wanted to update real quick on the scammer situation because there's
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On this episode of the commercial break.
When people are selling Taylor Swift sixth row tickets for 15, 20, $25,000,
and there's lots of people willing to pay it,
why wouldn't you?
It's basic economics, supply and demand.
It really is.
Now, so I want you to imagine yourself in a situation,
I think I know the answer for this for me,
but I wanna ask you,
you're lucky enough to get in quick
and you get $350 seats front row,
or second row, third row, really close to the stage.
And then someone falls sick a couple weeks ahead of time,
and unfortunately you're unable to go.
Travel, the commercial break needs an extra episode
like we always do, whatever the situation is.
And now you've got these extraordinarily valuable tickets
that you can't use.
The next episode of The Commercial Break starts now.
Oh yeah, cats and kittens, welcome back to the commercial break.
I'm Brian Green.
This is the dear friend and co-host of the show, Chris Joy Oldley.
Best to you, Chris.
Best to you out there on the podcast universe.
How the hell are you?
Thanks for joining us.
I am watching Reels from the recent Florida Gators win of the National
NCAA March Madness Tour tournament, if you will,
Chrissy.
Who would have thunk it?
The one year Brian decides not to do the brackets and pick all the number ones to go all the
way to the final four is the one year that all the number ones go to the final four.
I know I picked all four of the final fours.
You did.
But then to actually go to the championship, the loss.
Who'd you pick?
Well, I had Duke winning it all.
Okay.
Yeah, but I had Duke playing, no, no.
Florida?
No, Auburn.
Auburn, okay.
Both of those lost.
I also would have picked Duke to go all the way to the end if I had done a final four
bracket or I mean a March Madness bracket.
But like I told you a couple weeks ago, I don't do that because all I do is pick the
number ones and it never works out in my favor.
There's always some Cinderella team that comes and wrecks it for me.
And the one year that would have worked out in my favor.
Unbelievable.
But anyway, onward and upward, Masters week.
I'm watching these reels
These kids I mean they really have nothing better to do with their time jumping on light posts and one kid falls off the light Posts at the Masters. No, this is at the this is down in Florida
Yeah, yeah down at the University of Florida. They went wild and Gainesville wild and
One kid on the top of a street sign, like on the top of a traffic light, in Florida
the traffic lights have big poles because of the hurricanes.
They have poles.
They don't have wires.
They have poles and they hang out into the middle of the street.
He's on top of it bouncing like an idiot.
I don't know what he's proving to anybody.
I don't know what you're doing.
Why are people so excited about the guy on a traffic light?
It's not like he won the national championship, but people are going crazy. Nothing better to do but be drunk
I mean listen, you know, I was a kid once too. I get it
He falls off into the street and as the ambulance is carrying him away
Thousands of people watching this he raises his arm. I got a broken clavicle. He raises his arm and the crowd goes wild.
He's okay.
All right.
Cool.
Are his parents okay after they get that $38,000 hospital bill?
I don't know, but you know, congratulations to Florida game.
Well played.
I did watch all of the final four and the national championship that Houston Duke game
that was close.
It was intense.
It was intense. It was intense.
It was insane for 99% of the game.
Duke was clearly just gonna walk away with it.
And then all of a sudden the basketball gods
had something else in mind with Houston
and it was well played on both teams.
That is the way the ball,
that's the way the balls bounce, Chrissy, as they say.
But congratulations to the University of Florida. I was looking at the hat to the SEC, who had a
couple teams. They did. There you go. But I was looking at ticket prices the other day. I like to
do that when the big tournament games come and all the, you know, razzle dazzle, everyone gets excited.
I like to see which teams are willing to pay,
which fans are willing to pay the most for the tickets.
And I did find some reasonably priced championship,
Final Four, certainly, like in the, you know, $100 range.
Which is here.
Or was it, we had the Elite Eight.
No, we had the Elite Eight, yeah.
And those you could find for 50 bucks.
You could be in the nosebleeds for 50 bucks.
Very reasonably priced. $ dollars for the final for $150 for
the championship game.
Now you're way up there.
You're not, you know, you probably won't even be able to see what's going on, but
those are with the big ticket brokers, stub hub, vivid seats, stuff like that.
And it, it reminded me of a CBS this morning news piece that I had seen, which is probably the most detailed
accounting of why concerts, sporting events, and any live entertainment right now is so fucking
expensive to get into. I'm going to show it to you here. We'll watch this, we'll listen to it here in a minute.
And sorry, CBS News,
but I think this is a really comprehensive piece
and I think as many people need to hear it as possible
so that we all have a better understanding
of exactly why you can't get tickets
to see your favorite band or artist or sporting event
and how the mechanics actually work
and how Live Nation and Ticketmaster play into this.
So we all wanna-
It does not do the venues themselves.
It has a lot to do with a lot of things.
Yeah.
Like everything in life, it's complicated.
And while we all like to make Ticketmaster
and Live Nation out to be the bad guy,
and I think in a lot of ways,
they certainly are the heel in this situation.
It's not just them.
I know.
It's every cog in the wheel that is taking their piece
and making it more expensive, not being transparent,
employing tactics that are shitty,
that don't benefit the consumer.
So this may not be the funniest episode
of the commercial break ever,
but we're so interested in music and live events here,
given that we've canceled at least four ourselves.
Somebody asked me about it the other day,
they're like, did you reschedule your event in Florida?
And I laughed.
Yeah, yeah, we did.
But we don't know what the date is yet.
Yeah, we don't know what the date is yet.
It's rescheduled, we just don't know what the date is.
But what surprised Chrissy and I,
even about our short dip, our toe dip,
our tasty teener into the live.
And our fingernail tip.
Yeah, our fingernail tip, and then pulled it back out.
Just the tip, we gave you just the tip.
We told you there was gonna be a live event.
Some of you bought tickets to the live event,
then we yanked them.
That was a rug pull, they call that a rug pull.
We, even in our small experience,
we found that the ticket brokering sites
were selling tickets for $800.
Face value, $38, not $58, but they were selling tickets for $800.
Now I am sure no one bought $800 tickets because if they did, they got royally
fucked and I'm really sorry, but that's not exactly, that is the norm right now.
It is not the exception.
It's the norm.
Even the smallest of events, even the most useless entertainment you could ever see,
it's getting super high ticket prices because all of these people are trying to dip their
fingers in the pot, so to speak.
And this is causing a lot of problems all across the board.
Let me give you an example,
one that you were sharing with me the other day
and I went and did some more research on it.
Linkin Park, the venerable alt rock,
I don't even know what, what do you,
new rock, I guess would probably be the best,
new spelled N-U rock. 90s, 2000s. 90s, 2000s band that had some hits, no doubt. Chester
Benningfield. Just like No Doubt. Just like No Doubt, that's right. Just like No Doubt. They were
like New Ska or something, Ska Rock or something like that. But Linkin Park was one of the first on the scene with this brand of kind of hip hop rock,
heavy metal, you know, synthesized beats, rapping, if you could call it that, and really
in your face hard rock, along with some other melodic kind of more, I would call more grungy
stuff.
They kind of mixed it all together, this mishmash rock, and they hit on something like a cultural
zeitgeist. They had a moment where they were really popular,
and Chester, the lead singer of the band,
now they had not been as popular for a number of years,
but I think they were highly regarded with their fans,
and Chester died.
And I don't, what did he die of, an overdose?
Did he die of an overdose?
I think so, or hanging. I think so.
It was one of those, yeah. Oh, suicide, yeah, maybe. Yeah, he unalived himself as they like to say on the internet.
He unalived himself. I think I don't want to misspeak about that because I don't want to
be disrespectful to Chester. Chester Bennington death. Let, let me see here.
Death.
Yes.
Unalived by hanging.
Mm-hmm.
And the details aren't important.
What's important is that he unalived himself and a moment when Lincoln
Park was not at their zenith, they were not at their most powerful.
They had seen their moment.
Like oftentimes this happens with every major musical act.
They see their height, they fall from grace in the public's eyes.
The public gets sick of hearing all about it, hearing the same
song over and over again, whatever it is.
And then they go away for a while and then everything
old becomes new again.
And they see a resurgence in popularity.
We're seeing that all over the board,
all over the map right now with 80s bands,
80s bands and musical acts, 90s bands and musical acts.
Some have stayed...
Frankie Valli.
Frankie Valli 50s acts.
That guy is dead.
I'm still not convinced he's alive.
I still, go Google Frankie Frankie Valley and tell me and Google
Frankie Valley live and look at any of the concert footage from the last three years
and tell me you're not a hundred percent convinced. That's not a Boston dynamics robot with Frankie
Valley's actual skin pasted on it. It's amazing. But his mouth doesn't move.
He's singing but his mouth doesn't move or they claim he's singing.
And it's so hard to tell.
And I'm a, I consider myself a master lip sync detector.
Anyway, so right now, the concert business, especially the concert business, is just insane.
And we all know this because we are seeing one of the, we are alive at a time, we are
seeing one of the artists who is truly at the zenith of popularity, Taylor Swift.
She just went on her world tour and you couldn't get a ticket.
And if you could get a ticket, you were paying thousands of dollars, even for
the nosebleed seats or the standing on the standing room only seats, thousands of
dollars.
And if you went to a Taylor Swift concert during that period of time, you will know
that every ticket was standing room only.
Everybody was standing, screaming and singing the songs.
You could almost not hear it.
Almost made it an unenjoyable.
I went and saw her at her last concert in LA, the one that's on Disney plus right
now.
almost made it unenjoyable. I went and saw her at her last concert in LA,
the one that's on Disney Plus right now.
And I, it was a gift to my wife
and it was the most expensive ticket I have ever paid for.
And it was insane, but worth it to see her face,
to see the enjoyment in her face.
Yes, what a great husband.
But it was just crazy to me
that we were paying these kind of ticket prices. And Lincoln Park
is not at the zenith of their power. Chester passes away. Then years later, six, seven, eight,
ten years later, they decide they're going to put the band back together but with a new lead singer.
Some would say a PR problematic singer. She has some ties to the church of Scientology and some other
cultish type behavior, but some people really like her voice, uh, in place of
Chester's and some people don't appreciate it, but they announced a tour
where they were playing stadiums, 50, 60, 70,000 seats.
And you told me the other day that they were having problems selling those tickets and they were downsizing the venues.
Opening acts like Queens of the Stone Age were pulling out probably because they
couldn't be paid the same amount of money with a different sized venue.
I would imagine, you know, I don't think they were like, no, fuck Lincoln Park.
They were probably thinking to themselves, well, this isn't a good payday for us.
And they're downsizing because they cannot sell the tickets at the price
they need to sell them to in order to make the money they expected to make,
or to pay the crew or to fit those kinds of arenas.
They are even discounting tickets from $59 down to $39, the cheapest of seats,
which is today's day and age is a pretty reasonable ticket.
And there are still lots of seats available
to these tickets.
We heard this with, who else?
We've heard this about Katy Perry.
We've heard this about who else just had to roll back
her shows, Jennifer Lopez had to roll back,
cancel her shows.
Who are the two guys, the one that plays piano,
not white stripes, but one plays piano, one plays bass.
Do you know I'm talking about?
Black Keys.
The Black Keys had to cancel all of their stadium dates
and arena dates and go to smaller clubs.
This is happening more frequently.
The reason is because you and I have less money to spend on tickets right now because
every ticket that we buy is exorbitantly expensive because you can't get them when they go on
sale at the normal price.
And even at the normal price, they're exorbitantly expensive.
Comedy shows, entertainment, live show, all of it.
And there's a complicated hodgepodge of reasons why that is,
but the artist can no longer afford to go to a place
like say Dodger Stadium,
like Lincoln Park was scheduled to play,
and only sell two thirds of the seats.
They need to sell 100% of the seats
in order just to make the kind of money they need,
probably to cover the costs
and get a little bit of money themselves.
And so rather than take the chance that they won't, even six months ahead of time and they
can see it coming down the pike, they decide to go to an 18,000 seat venue rather than
a 60,000 seat venue.
So they have a chance of breaking even and making money themselves.
It used to not be like that.
There were lots of concerts that I used to go to
when I was a teenager and in my twenties,
it wasn't sold out.
But now you won't go to a not sold out concert
because they can't.
Same with planes.
Same with planes.
Because you cannot make money with a not sold out venue.
The venue charges as much as possible to the band,
the crew does, the equipment's expensive,
the merch is expensive to make,
and then you've got to deal with Ticketmaster, Live Nation, StubHub, Vivid Seats.
It is a complicated thing that is going on.
And it's not just one bad guy, there's many bad guys, and then many people who are just
trying to make a living doing this.
I'm going to see a lot of concerts this summer.
Already got a lot of concerts lined up.
And I'm thinking about divesting of some of those concert tickets because quite frankly, it's expensive to travel to go see them.
Like I wanted to get Oasis tickets. I got Oasis tickets in Chicago, but now I'm realizing that
everybody along the way is going to charge me an arm and a leg to get there, to stay there,
to be there. And the tickets were, I had to buy them through Ticketmaster because Oasis put a stop to StubHub
and places like that selling them.
Now I've noticed that StubHub does have the tickets
and they're selling them.
Okay, I might know someone who wants to buy those.
Okay, well, let me know.
It might be one of the concerts I just have to let go
because it's so fucking expensive.
How did we get here?
Why can't we go see a show for 40, 50, 60 dollars even,
like we used to? And I'm talking about inflation adjusted numbers. When I went to,
uh, give you an example. When I went to a fish, when I was 17 years old, 16, 17 years old, I paid
$20 for the ticket. That included the fees, 20 bucks, 20 bucks.
I would get in, I would sit on the lawn.
I'd be able to see the band.
It probably wasn't a hundred percent sold out.
The experience was good.
If I wanted a fish shirt,
I'd throw in an extra seven or $10 and that would be it.
Now, if I wanna go see fish, I'm paying $150,
if not $200 to sit anywhere in the building and
I'm going to pay an extra $70 for a fish shirt, $15 for a beer, $30 for a hot dog and some
french fries or whatever it is.
I mean honestly, it's just kind of like they're going to rob you every bit of the way.
It's not fish that's doing that.
It's because that's where we are in this kind of experience. And it's really,
I don't know, upsetting to me as an entertainment lover that we've gotten here. How does Jeff deal?
Do they sell out menfo or do they typically have some tickets available at the door?
Danielle Pletka They have tickets available at the door.
Jared Sarkissian Okay, so they don't really deal too much with the pressures of like the
stub hubs and the vivid seats. Danielle Pletka
No, I mean, they're independent too. Jared Sarkissian
Yeah, they don't use... Danielle Pletka deal too much with the pressures of like the stub hubs and the vivid seats. I mean they're independent too.
Yeah they don't they don't they don't use.
They well I mean they do have to you have to use a ticket broker.
Yeah.
So they use um what's the it's.
Access?
It's somebody that's a ticket master adjacent.
Okay.
Because there's you know ticket master has all of these different companies too.
But yeah but they have a great deal with like the venue that they have the show at.
Right.
And then they charge a reasonable price.
Yeah.
I wish it could all be like that.
Because they're independent, I think.
Yeah.
It can't be like that.
They're the promoter too.
Because Ticketmaster owns the ticketing business.
Live Nation owns the venue business and Ticketmaster owns Live Nation. So when they put together a concert or even a comedy tour,
they come and they say,
don't worry about it, Mr. Musician or Mrs. Musician.
We're going to give you X amount of dollars per show.
You, X amount of dollars per show.
Sometimes it works like this.
If you're a big enough artist,
we're going to give you X amount of dollars per show.
We'll do the promoting, we'll sell the tickets,
we'll manage everything else down the road. of dollars per show. Sometimes it works like this if you're a big enough artist. We're going to give you X amount of dollars per show. We'll do the promoting,
we'll sell the tickets, we'll manage everything else down the line. But the amount of money that
they make is barely a living wage in a lot of cases. Like these medium-sized clubs, these people
are playing. It's really hard to be a musician, like a regionally successful musician. It's really
hard to be one of those these days. When I was in 33 Penis and Chopper Johnson, both my phallic related bands,
the music wasn't particularly good, but here's how it went.
We would get booked at a club and we would be responsible for selling our
own tickets, promoting our own show.
And then the venue itself would do their own bit of promotion.
They'd say these bands are going to be there this night.
They'd advertise in the local rags.
Maybe they'd put a radio spot on or two, nothing dramatic,
but you know, we're also talking about 300 seat,
300 people standing in a room.
And then they would say,
if you get to anything over a hundred people,
we'll split the door
with you, right?
And that door was 10 bucks.
And if we were lucky, we'll give you 5% of the bar, right?
Where they really make their money, 5% of the bar.
And then it'd be the manager's responsibility to go figure all that stuff out, to keep
an eye on the door, to click the button, to, you know, look at the bar tab at the
end of the night of the bar roll or whatever it was. It doesn't work like that anymore. These people are
getting paid peanuts by everybody along the line. Spotify, Ticketmaster, Live Nation,
Live Nation owns the venue. Ticketmaster is charging a bunch of ticket fees that
then they give most back to the venue, which I don't think a lot of people know
that. And the venue is in bed with them because that's how they make money.
They make money.
They make money on the fees. It's not just Ticketmaster making money for themselves.
It's Ticketmaster making money for the venue, but the venue then also charges the band for
all of the services and just using the room or the musician or whoever it is. It's a terrible
system that is set up for failure every single step of the way. And that's not even adding
into the question about whether or not
stub hub, vivid seats, and any number of thousands of ticket
brokers that are out there.
And now the evil part about this is, and I say it's evil.
I don't argue with anybody making their own money, but the evil part about this
is, is that just like everything else in our life, it has become a coaching business.
People are coaching other people how to be independent ticket brokers, to take those tickets
that you so desperately want to the band, to see the band, the music, the comedy, whatever it is,
teaching individuals like you or me how to use bots and multiple computers and IP addresses and
masking systems and
all this and selling them that software and subscription services to be your own
ticket broker so that you can get the ticket for Taylor Swift that my daughter
so desperately wants and resell it to me for thousands of dollars more.
The resale market is crazy.
Yes, this has become an MLM, essentially. It's an MLM.
And even though there's a real product involved, the independent ticket brokers can charge whatever they want and they do.
So some people say free market, baby free market.
But are we getting to the point where you can only afford to go see one
concert every two years because you're going to pay $3,000 to see even the
shittiest of bands who normally you wouldn't even think twice about paying
$50, let alone $1,000, but that the shittiest of bands who normally you wouldn't even think twice
about paying $50, let alone $1,000, but that's just the way it is now.
Free market, I agree with, and so does my phone.
Free market, I agree with, but sometimes I think it has its limitations.
And so that's why the commercial break is now selling tickets.
We've become a ticket broker.
We've become a ticket broker. Welcome to the commercial break is now selling tickets. We become a ticket broker.
Welcome to the commercial break brokers.
TCBB.
TCBB.
Get your favorite concert tickets here.
Got to make money somehow on this stupid fucking show or my wife's going to divorce me.
So there you go.
There it is.
All right.
I want to listen to this CBS This Morning piece and talk about it because I think it's
an interesting piece,
interesting enough to carry us through an episode.
And we're on vacation right now
while you're listening to this.
So it's low hanging fruit, quite frankly.
I'm being a ticket broker right now.
I'm brokering off some bad content for you.
All right, we'll be back.
You make this rather snappy,
won't you?
I have some really heavy thinking to do with Fortanac Park.
Hi, cats and kittens, Rachel here. Do you ever get the urge to speak endlessly into the
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chop day.
Okay, Martin, let's try one.
Remember, big.
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All right, back talking about the ticketing business
when it comes to live entertainment
and how it's just gotten out of hand, out of control.
I don't have any solutions
because I never do have any solutions,
but I thought that I would just bring it to the attention. This is a
really good piece that is done by CBS News this morning. And just to be clear,
we didn't do the journalism. No, there's no journalism here at the commercial
break. Other hard-working journalists did this. So stop by the CBS News
this morning website or YouTube channel or whatever to watch this in its entirety. But we're gonna
listen to it because I think it's important and I believe that it needs a
little bit more attention than I think CBS News This Morning can give it. So I
don't know how many of our listeners are tuning into CBS News This Morning, but
here we go.
It was $1,083 for two tickets.
The market is the market.
The prices are the prices.
Going to a concert has become an accomplishment.
Is one second, you don't have any extra time.
Tickets are more expensive than ever and seemingly harder to get.
I do know there's probably stuff out there that a retail fan has no shot at getting.
This guy who's talking is basically talking in his garage.
Yeah.
And by the way, this is a-
There's like a big air duct behind him.
Yeah, this is a Georgia ticket broker he's talking to.
We'll get to that part, but.
We've spent the last year
trying to understand how this happened.
Ticketmaster is kind of the fall guy in this.
Talking to artists.
Here's an example of a good deal memo.
Scalpers.
He made over $34,000 in one month.
And executives.
Is Ticketmaster a monopoly?
At the company's controlling concert ticketing.
Why does StubHub deserve the biggest share
of that woman's purchase?
This is the story of how the industry got here
and how it might soon change.
We can get those Sundays.
Hold off on Saturdays still though, okay?
On a Friday night in L.A.,
the emo rock band Something Corporate
is playing a reunion show at the Hollywood Palladium.
Hi, how are you?
Fans have been paying about $70 for tickets to the tour.
When I woke up in New York City
from my sleep behind the wheel.
But where is-
I've never heard of this band.
Have you heard of Something's Corporate?
I have heard of them, but yeah, not about their money.
Yeah, I'm not informed about this band.
Exactly do those $70 go?
Something Corporate frontman Andrew McMahon
agreed to share those usually secret details for a show.
Here's an example of a good deal memo.
His team just blacked out exactly which show it was.
What do we have here?
I noticed the name of the agency on the top of that.
Start, the band set a ticket price of $56.
There's a gross potential of a couple hundred thousand
dollars being made.
But out of that 200 grand in ticket sales, half is deducted for venue-related show costs.
Thirty-seven grand in stagehand.
Jesus, $104,000 to rent the Palladium, where they probably seat 3,000 people, 4,000 people
maybe.
Leaving the band with a $100,000 payday.
But most of that goes to the band's own expenses.
Commissions and fees and payroll.
Their management takes a quarter.
Travel and crew costs take another.
Their management takes a quarter.
They gotta get a new management team.
That's crazy.
Quarter.
Meanwhile, that $56 ticket has had fees added,
though artists don't get that money.
So once you take away the venue show costs
and the band's touring expenses,
something corporate's actual profit from that $70 ticket
is about 10 bucks.
Okay, so let's do the math there.
Three, 4,000 people sit at the Hollywood Palladium.
I'm assuming, I'm just making an educated,
non-educated guess.
Making an educated, non-educated guess.
So they're going to make 30 to $40,000.
Looks like there's seven people in the band.
So they're each gonna walk away with six or $7,000
for a night's worth of work,
but maybe they're only working 100 nights a year year, a hundred and ten nights a year.
If you're lucky, I mean, these guys look like
they're a little bit older, right?
So they're not, and I don't think they're fish.
I don't think they're working 250 nights a year,
or I don't even think fish does that anymore.
But, um, so you're making 70, 80, 90 thousand dollars
a year on touring.
That's not, uh, no, I'm sorry, that's $700,000.
Oh, yeah, that's pretty good.
Yeah, never mind.
That's pretty good money.
That's good money.
And then we split that five ways.
Yeah.
McMahon isn't complaining that still seven grand
each for a night's work.
Oh, wow, my math was right.
Look at me.
I did that all in my head.
Except I didn't add a zero.
We love you, Los Angeles. Thank you for a beautiful night!
But the point here is each dollar fans pay...
To enjoy the show!
...is fought over by artists, venues, ticket companies and scalpers.
And time and again the industry's solution to these fights
has been to just charge fans a bit more.
Yeah, see I think that's really the issue is that at the end of the day, it comes down
to how much is the consumer willing to pay.
So the more that we feed the beast, the more that they continue to charge.
When people are selling Taylor Swift sixth row tickets for 15, 20, $25,000 and there's
lots of people willing to pay it, why wouldn't you?
It's basic economics, supply and demand. It really is.
Now, so I want you to imagine yourself in a situation,
I think I know the answer for this for me,
but I want to ask you, you pop on Ticketmaster,
wait in the line to get the Taylor Swift tickets
for the show here in Atlanta,
and you're lucky enough to get in quick
and you get $350 seats front row,
or second row, third row, really close to the stage.
And then someone falls sick a couple weeks ahead of time, third row, really close to the stage.
And then someone falls sick a couple of weeks ahead of time. And unfortunately you're unable to go travel.
The commercial break needs an extra episode.
Like we always do, whatever the situation is.
And now you've, and now you've got these extraordinarily valuable
tickets that you can't use.
And you look on the marketplace stub hub and stub hub says, you can
probably get $25,000 a piece for these tickets.
We're gonna take a 10% commission, $2,500 a piece,
or whatever the commission is,
it's probably way more than that,
but we're gonna do that,
but you can sell them on our marketplace,
or you can go to the Ticketmaster website
and sell them for $350, like you bought them for.
What would be your choice?
Well, I mean, that's a big difference.
I mean, come on.
OK.
But normally, I would say just as long
as I can get my money back.
Now, if somebody's going to pay $25,000.
$25,000.
That's what those tickets were going for.
Some of them were going for.
Not all of them, but some of them.
The best of seats and the best of shows
in the more affluent areas, Miami, LA, Chicago.
Well, at that point, too, it's a lot of corporate stuff.
You know, corporate people that are buying them
or people that just have tons of money to buy.
People that have tons of money to buy them.
And that's the problem is that just like Disney World
has become a premium, only rich people
can kind of afford it experience,
concerts are now becoming that way.
A large amount of them are becoming that way.
I'll tell you a little story before we move on here.
I'll tell you a little story.
When I was a bartender, it was, and I was giving myself Chianti Classico under the, under
the bar while day old bread, day old bread, not only day old bread, day old bread that had been on
someone else's table. I mean, that's insane, but anyway, it's not open anymore. So don't call me
about it. I don't want to hear about it. It's not open anymore. I wonder why. I can only imagine.
When I was working there, I ended up meeting a guy
at the end of the bar who would come in often,
older gentleman, probably in his late 50s, early 60s.
Not the Coke dealer.
No, but that guy was sitting at the end of the bar too,
because he knew that every dime I made
would go right into his pocket.
It was like I was working for him.
You do the work, you give it to me.
How's that?
Yeah.
So the guy and I became friendly
over the course of a couple of months.
And one day I asked him what he did
because he always seemed to be,
he was driving around a nice Mercedes,
surrounded by younger, beautiful women.
He was very eccentric, right?
And you could just tell he was.
He drank the best wine, champagne, you know,
get this girl whatever she want, get them.
Only the best.
Only the best for you.
That's why I'm at Lestrade.
Eating softshell crabs and three day old bread.
Soft-shelled crabs and three day old bread.
So I learned at the time that he was buying tickets.
He was paying people to stand in line or doing it himself. Stand in line at the box office, buying the tickets and then reselling them on
this black market that was very virgin ground at the time, very young.
But he was making two, three, $400 sometimes on a ticket on the
most in demand of concerts.
Most tickets he was making 50 or 60 or a hundred dollars, but he was doing it in
volume and he was building an organization.
He had four or five people working for him.
He had an office down in Buckhead. He was doing it and he was well connected organization. He had four or five people working for him. He had an office down in Buckhead.
He was doing it.
And he was well connected in the music industry.
A lot of times the bands would give him their tickets.
I've heard of that too.
Yeah.
And we'll get to this in the story, but he, the bands would give him their tickets.
Let's say a band, let's say, uh, a guy like Ari Shaffir comes into town.
Ari Shaffir comes into town and Ari Shaffir comes into town, and Ari has 20 tickets available per the contract
to give away at his disposal.
Not the best tickets, but good tickets, right?
And he says, yeah, Brian, Chrissy,
and what are their hangers on?
Brian wants to ask me to send to the show.
And maybe a couple of other people that I know in Atlanta,
but I got 10 of those tickets left.
Not Ari, but a lot of times bands and musicians when they,
especially when the tickets are in demand, they will give those
over to someone that they know that will then resell them.
Maybe not directly to the ticket broker, but kind of directly to
somebody who knows the ticket broker.
And then that's a way that the band would make a little bit of
extra cash for the night, especially the bands that were on a run.
The hot band, Linkin Park, not included in that.
But you understand what I'm saying.
Jen Lopez, not selling her tickets to the ticket brokers.
Wasn't Justin Bieber, wasn't there a thing about him doing that?
He was doing it.
I think that the boss, Bruce Springsteen at one point had, there was mumblings that he was doing it.
There was, and I don't know any of this to be true or not.
And I like Bruce Springsteen.
I don't see why he needed to do that if he did that, but maybe he didn't.
Who knows?
But it's not uncommon.
It's not uncommon for your favorite football player, basketball player,
baseball player to sell their tickets on the black market either, because they
have the best seats in the house and who's gonna go to 162 home
games for the brand, what family member, maybe your wife or your husband or maybe
maybe your kids but certainly not filling out 10 seats every single game.
Why wouldn't you make a little extra cash? So this guy introduced me to the
business and taught me how it worked and on occasion I would go stand at a box Gosh. So this guy introduced me to the business
and taught me how it worked.
And on occasion, I would go stand at a box office
for him to get these tickets.
I didn't think much of it at the time.
Was this before or after Jam Land production?
This was before Jam Land,
but during my 13 year long bud light
and cocaine induced haze.
Yes.
I didn't think much of it at the time.
I really didn't because there were so few people who even knew about ticket brokers
that it wasn't like a thing.
And he did sell a lot of tickets to corporations, to people, you know,
people could afford and put them on the corporate card and whatever.
And at that time, when you saw, when there was a $20 ticket
and you sold it for 65 bucks,
to me, even back then it was like, eh, whatever.
It's an in-demand ticket.
This has been going on for time and more.
This is nothing new that these ticket brokers do this.
But what they do is they suck up available tickets
for fans who are really diehard,
who are standing out there in the cold
and the wet and the rain, not know, who are sitting at home in their
pajamas clicking on, clicking, clicking, clicking, clicking.
Yes.
All right, let's get back.
Refresh, refresh, refresh.
Tickets go for so high now.
Consider the history of the infamous ticket fee.
In the 80s, as artists demanded a bigger cut of the box office, venues scrambled for new revenue.
Ticket fees, which cut out the artist, were the answer, says New York Times music writer Ben Cesario.
There was a guy named Fred Rosen who became the CEO of Ticketmaster,
and he's the person who really created the modern ticketing business as we know it.
You know, it was field of dreams. If you build it, they will come. And they did.
What Rosen built was a network of ticket outlets and phone centers that made it easy for fans
to buy.
That was new.
Seats 18 to 20.
But for that convenience,
There was a convenience charge of 120.
They were charged higher and higher fees.
Handling charge.
I mean, just to touch it, they charge you $3.
Fans.
Oh, $3.
Three, those were the days.
Those were the days, $3.
Planned, but venues signed on because,
and this was the key part,
Ticketmaster let those venues keep most of the fee.
Yeah, Ticketmaster is kind of the fall guy in this.
It's set up for that purpose.
Fred Rosen.
That's a very interesting point that I think is important to hear.
Ticketmaster gives most of those fees back to the venue.
It's how Ticketmaster gets the business of the venue is they bribe them essentially.
They say, we'll do all the hard work as far as the ticketing is concerned.
Or they just buy the venue.
Yeah, or they just buy the venue through Live Nation. That's right, or they manage it or whatever it is.
But Ticketmaster becomes the fall guy
because they're set up to be the fall guy
and they're okay with that
because it's such a lucrative business.
He used to say that his client is not the consumer.
It's the venue.
He's there to take the heat for that venue.
In exchange for taking that heat, Ticketmaster won control, the exclusive right to sell all
the tickets.
In the 90s, Pearl Jam tried to escape this system, even taking their case to Congress.
The issue at hand here is whether Ticketmaster is a monopoly.
But that failed, and venues and other…
Man, A for effort, Pearl Jam.
I know. A for effort.
Yeah.
That was nice of them to try.
They saw it coming and they knew what was going on and they, all of them
valiantly fought that effort.
It's so much so that for one whole tour, like one year, two years.
I remember that.
Yeah.
They would only sell tickets through their own like fan club or whatever it was,
but they were losing money at a huge clip when they were the biggest band in rock and roll.
They were losing money, they weren't able to play the venues they wanted to,
and you can't set up your own Ticketmaster when you're Pearl Jam.
How do you do that? It's a billion-dollar corporation.
Artists stuck with Ticketmaster.
In the UK and in Europe,
they have a different ticketing system.
And it's usually not these exclusive contracts.
The cost of a ticket and the cost of a fee overseas
tends to be a lot lower than in the US.
But artists like touring in the US
because they make more money here.
There's people willing to pay it.
Yeah, that's right.
Because we're the dumb-dumbs who are willing to pay the fee.
The concert scene is shaped by the combined power of Ticketmaster and Live Nation.
Or buy it and pay later on your credit card.
That's the craziest shit.
I was seeing the New Orleans, not the Jazz Fest, but there's another major music festival
that happens down in New Orleans.
Do you know what I'm talking about?
I can't remember the name of it.
It's like, under the Derby delay.
I don't even remember what it was,
but there are huge bands that are playing four days.
It was like a lineup that I've never seen before.
Rivaling Jazz Fest.
And they have tickets that go up into the $2,500 for super VIP experience and all this other stuff.
You know, the heated bathrooms and people that wipe your ass and all this other shit.
All this premium shit. Put it on layaway.
Yeah.
You can, yeah, pay, put $500 down now, pay us $50 a month forever and ever in 15% interest. It's crazy.
Yeah, well, and plus you too, you get caught up. Like, oh my God, I really wanna be there.
I really wanna see the experience.
Yeah, and so the fact that you're able
to actually buy tickets, like say for a Taylor Swift
or like Prince's last shows, I remember us doing this,
just like the fact that we could even just get them,
just put them on the credit card quick, you know?
And then, yeah, people get caught up with that.
They merged in 2010 and now some venues say
Ticketmaster isn't helping them out,
but specifically supporting Live Nation,
which owns their own venues and promotes their own artists.
We can't compete.
Steven Parker, executive director
of the National Independent Venue Association,
says Live Nation uses its power across the industry to strangle competition.
Basically making it so that artists have to play every single date at Live Nation venues or Live Nation operated venues or Live Nation partner venues.
Yeah, that's the problem is that the artists, if they want to be in the big leagues and make that, you know, make a living doing this,
they have to get in bed with Ticketmaster and Live Nation. Pearl Jam learned that lesson the hard way, but
that's, it's the way that the system has been. It's by design.
Last May, the Department of Justice made a similar claim.
It is time to break it up.
Saying Live Nation and Ticketmaster illegally use their power to push down competition and push up ticket prices.
Is Ticketmaster a monopoly?
Well, obviously, there's a claim that we are.
Dan Wall is the antitrust lawyer who helped get the Ticketmaster...
Is the antitrust lawyer who's making a billion dollars a year defending Ticketmaster.
...Live Nation merger approved in the first place.
He calls the DOJ's case a performance.
Look at that guy's office.
Look at that guy's office.
It's amazing.
Unbelievable to be that guy for one day.
The lawsuit that would have no impact on ticket prices.
The Justice Department is trying to break you up.
You have senators on both sides of the aisle saying you're a monopoly.
There was a poll that said 60% of Americans think the two companies should be broken up.
Why are they all wrong about this?
We are obviously the leading company in this industry.
There's no doubt about that.
That's an interesting way of putting it.
It creates a certain...
Yeah, what do you think those guys are going to say?
We are the leading podcast on my street.
Laughter We are the leading podcast on my street. Laughter.
...of jealousy.
I think it creates a certain amount of rivalry,
a certain amount of fear.
But we stand by what we do.
It is the one ticketing company.
Well, of course you do.
You have to.
You're being paid by them to say that.
I mean, take a look at it from the consumer point of view
or the musician's point of view.
But is there a better way? I don't know, I don't have the answer to that.
Is the better way buying tickets by mailing Eddie Vedder,
please send me two tickets to your concert,
here's a check for $50?
I don't know.
In this country, that is 100% on the side
of the artist and the fan, not run for the benefit of ticket brokers
and ticket scalpers and big resale prices
and big resale fees.
It is complicated too because these venues,
as a fan, you want to go to a venue that's a good venue.
Of course you do.
Clean Nice offers things that you would like to purchase there that has good lighting,
has good stuff.
And so these venues, you have to pay for it.
Exactly.
Do you want to go see Brian fall off a stage in Tuscaloosa, Alabama?
Or do you want to go to, I don't know, wherever it is, to the Coca Cola Roxy?
It's brand spanking new, beautiful, well run, you know, merch is in pretty places.
I mean, even the Variety Playhouse now, that used to be a dive bar that was really big.
Now it's a clean, sparkly, shiny place in the middle of little fucking five points.
It lost a little bit of its luster because now it's got a lot of bluster, so to speak. I mean, I hate to use the rhyme, but I do it all the time.
And it is a complicated question about whether or not this is the right way or
the wrong way to do it, because it is the system we have, like it or not.
It is the system we have.
And whether you like it or not, I bet you like sitting in your pajamas, pressing refresh, trying
to get those tickets rather than standing out in the rain, going to the box office,
calling somebody up and trying to have them walk you through getting tickets. Or better
yet, again, sending an envelope to your favorite band and hoping that you get tickets in some
silly lottery. That doesn't make sense.
This is a complicated system.
Now he said we are on the side of the musician and the consumer, not the big resale companies
charging high prices.
You're also charging high prices.
It starts with you.
You're charging $50 ticket fees on $70 tickets.
That is insanity. How can you charge a $50 ticket fees on $70 tickets. That is insanity.
How can you charge a $50 ticket fee?
I agree what you do is valuable.
I agree the service you offer is convenient.
$50 convenient?
I don't even make $7 an hour working here at the commercial break.
And I think we can all agree that the commercial break has
built something quite amazing.
We're independent.
It rivals Live Nation and Ticketmaster. We are independent. Yes, thank you. No big corporations
here. No big podcast here. All right, let's take a break. We'll get back to it.
Let me do something Brian has never done. Be brief. Follow us on Instagram at The Commercial Break.
Text or call us, 212-433-3TCB. That's 212-433-3822. Visit our website, tcbpodcast.com,
for all the audio, video, and your free sticker. Then watch all the videos at
youtube.com slash The Commercial Break. And finally, share the show. It's the best gift
you could give a few aging podcasters.
See, Brian, that really wasn't that difficult, now was it?
You're welcome.
Okay, let's get back to the CBS Saturday morning report here.
Wanna have a good cue?
The real problem with ticketing, Wal says,
We can get those Sundays.
Hold off on Saturdays still though, okay?
is caused by scalpers.
I mean, I do know there's probably stuff out there
that a retail fan has no shot at getting.
Well, thank you.
Thank you for that.
How do you do it?
Thank you for that, Mr. Independent Tigger Broker.
All Things Go is a two-day music festival
at the Merriweather Post Pavilion in Maryland.
So just concert tickets, what do you think?
Very hard to get.
Last summer, Leve, Renee Rapp, and Hozier topped the bill.
It sold out so fast.
Like so many on sales these days,
It's one second, you don't have any extra time.
buying tickets was a kind of competition.
I was clicking on the website, and then it was all sold out.
So then I started Googling, like,
you know, resale tickets for All Things Go.
The All Things Go ticket sale that froze out
Melissa Santos had happened five months before.
Yeah, so All Things...
On an April morning, we spent with Aaron Farah
in a Georgia office park
as he tried to get those very same tickets.
It's like, you know, the festival.
It's in Maryland.
Farrah used to be a teacher, but has been buying and selling tickets.
He used to do good in the world, and now he's screwing you over for the All Things Go festival,
which I'd never heard of, but there's lots of festivals I've never heard of.
Since 2008, when a poker buddy…
He's a pretty big hustler.
...suggested scooping up scenes...
He's a pretty big shithead, so I decided to go the way of...
Perfect hustler.
...to a Jonas Brothers show.
I think I made like three or four hundred bucks.
And it was... that thing came on my phone, I was...
I like how Dwight Schrute...
There's a picture of Dwight Schrute behind him.
That's true. It's him. That's true.
It's classic. That's classic.
I was hooked.
His operation remained tiny, he was still teaching.
Scraping by.
Until desperate for enough cash to score super lucrative tickets.
It was Van Morrison in Clearwater, Florida.
He reached out to an acquaintance with deeper pockets.
So I called Kevin up, I was like, I need $2,000 to get these.
And he didn't even blink. He's like, sure. And I was like I need $2,000 to get these and he didn't even blink
He's like sure I was like who who was it? He said Van Morrison. I was like never heard of him
What who's never heard of?
Guys, this is the guy who is helping the guy
Defeat you on the ticket line is the guy who doesn't even know who fucking Van Morrison is and he's too old
Not to know who Van Morrison is.
I have to say, I guess you have.
What Kevin McCurley lacked in musical knowledge
he made up for in business ambition.
9,500 in profit.
Not just starting their own ticket company,
called 9,500 House in Profit.
Sounds great.
Who's Mikkel Jackson?
Elite.
Hey, it's Kevin with Smart Scalpers.
But packaging their ticket techniques and franchising them to new brokers.
Usher. We sold 105 tickets.
Like this.
Oh my God. The world is being taken over by a bunch of guys in their mom's basement.
Broker. Just last month, he made over $34,000 in one month.
Made like...
Oh, get me signed up.
Oh, no.
Welcome to Brian's Scalpers Club Elite 100.
The commercial break brought to you by Scalpers.
I like TCBB.
Yeah, TCBB, screwing you every step of the way.
Profit, profit, yeah.
I've learned a lot of stuff about the ticket business.
Sean Vint. I've learned a lot of stuff about the ticket business. Sean Vint.
I've learned a lot of stuff about the ticket business.
I've also learned how to wear gray shoes with black shorts and dark blue shirts.
Gelder, a full-time firefighter, started working with a low.
Oh, well, God bless you, son.
Part-time three years ago.
My biggest wins, probably Taylor Swift.
You got Taylor.
Yes, I did.
How many did you get?
I had four. Those seventh row four seats to Swift's Miami show,
netted Van Gelder $10,000.
Ooh!
Woo hoo hoo hoo hoo!
Four tickets.
How are they getting the really good seats?
They're just, it's bots.
They're so good, they have all the pre-sale codes,
they're so good with the bots. They're so, this is what all the pre-sale codes. They're so good with the bots.
They're so, they just, this is what they do for a living.
You and I do this every couple of months.
They do this every morning.
Yeah.
Very upset because they weren't going.
So unfortunately I chose money over daughters.
My daughters will never forgive me.
Therapy, but at least I got a brand new fix box.
The market is the market.
The prices are the prices.
But the right to sell at those prices goes only to those who manage to snag tickets.
Every day, ordinary fans like Melissa Santos are pitted against pros like Elite.
If you have those Sundays, we'll get those Sundays.
Some of what Elite does is useful
for any ticket buyer to copy.
There you go, there's the code.
Do your best to access a pre-sale
through your credit card or a fan club sign up.
The public on sale, often on Friday, is often too late.
Do you bother buying on Friday?
Very rarely.
I mean, we won't even waste our time.
If the on-sales start...
Wow. Well, they're trying to make a profit,
so for them it might be the time they put in
might not be worth it for the results that they get.
But for most of us, that's how we get our tickets.
Yeah.
Friday morning.
Or to 10, get logged in well before...
I like to log in Saturday at about 3.15 p.m.
Right. Oh yeah, that's on sale. Oh go to
StubHub.com. Let me hop on. And don't just click the first Google search result for a
show that usually takes you to expensive resale tickets even if tickets aren't even on sale.
I made the mistake of buying something on those before. Oh I bought on StubHub? No just like
Googling the the artist and then the first thing that pops up.
Yeah.
I was thinking it was that was the site.
Well, that's what was going on with TCB tickets, too, is the first 12 results were for ticket brokers.
And it wasn't until you got almost to the second page.
Did you actually see the venues website?
Yeah.
Instead, go to the band or venues official website and from there, find the link to the primary on sale.
Anna, let's just get those.
But yes, brokers are also using techniques
not available to the general public.
Sunday, yeah, get those Anna, please.
Once the sale started, we saw Farrak get those tickets.
He's talking to him.
What are those techniques?
Oh, watch.
That are not available. He shows you a few. Oh, those techniques? Oh, watch. That are not available.
He shows you a few.
Oh, okay, okay.
But some of these you don't have access to
even if you wanted to have access to them.
Click a web plugin that showed how many seats
were still available in each section.
500 tickets left.
Oh.
Okay.
How does the plugin get into the system
have an open API, what they call an open API or an open call
that allows them to constantly monitor how many tickets are being sold and which ones are available.
That can only be done if first there's a back door somewhere on the website of Ticketmaster.
To the venue.
Or to the venue or someone is feeding them that information on purpose.
That's nifty. You can see the count.
Yep.
Based on that number.
Yep.
Yeah, that's nifty.
Yep, I'm screwing you.
Yep.
I'm screwing you.
I sure am.
He decided whether to buy.
Let's pass on Saturdays, okay?
Cause so many were still remaining.
Yeah, just not worth it.
And while Farrah in McCurley told us-
This is the most irritated interview I've ever seen.
This guy's so irritated with the fact that CBS is there.
Also, they're literally set up in a garage.
There's a vacuum, a water heater there.
There's four desks.
And air ducts.
Yeah, there's four mismatched desks.
Yeah.
Doesn't make it sound like a very attractive business
to be in.
Don't use bots to buy tickets.
The definition of a bot is a squishy thing.
We had noticed one of their YouTube videos.
Now all these tools are out there.
Touted stub tools and Primo browser.
So that is a multi-session browser.
Which helped brokers mask their IP address
and log into many Ticketmaster accounts,
letting them avoid caps on how many tickets they can buy.
Really the sky's the limit of on how many tickets they can buy.
Really the sky's the limit of the number of tickets you can buy.
The services cost $250 a month and are only available to ticket brokers.
That's the problem.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Is that even though they're saying they're democratizing the purchase and sale of tickets,
there's still a hurdle to get in that door to really democratize it.
If everybody had these tools available to them, then I would
see how you could make that claim.
But when you are essentially gating those tools that make it very easy
for you to get the best tickets and not for me to get the best tickets,
then you're not democratizing it.
What you're doing is you're essentially, you know, making a
hierarchy where you sit on top
collecting the most amount of money.
Use something like stub tools
that allows you to have so many sessions.
Do you think the average fan has a fair shot
to get these tickets?
I think so because they're, again,
they're just trying to buy two or four tickets.
Yeah, but you...
But that's harder to get when...
I'm going to let him talk.
He makes the point for me.
I'm sorry, I'm getting ahead of myself.
Someone else just bought 24.
Not necessarily. If... So...
Well, how's that?
If someone buys 24, that's 24 fewer than other people can get.
Yeah, but if they want to buy four tickets,
they can get their spouse, their kid, their parents.
So they can also have the same amount of opportunity as we
do.
That guy is as dumb as he looks.
He really is as dumb as he looks.
This is the guy who's funding the independent broker in Georgia, by the way, who started
this MLM for ticket brokers where you can buy a course and become a broker.
It doesn't make any, what you said is the dumbest thing in the world.
It doesn't hurt the consumer that you're taking 380 tickets out of the pool available to the
real fan or to the person that just wants to go to the concert.
And you're telling us that we have to get like a whole like battalion of human people,
of people, which is what we have been doing, by the way, we have been getting as many people
as we can
to all get on at the same time
so that one of us hopefully can hit on it
and buy as many tickets as possible.
Okay, so people should assemble a team.
It's possible, yes.
9.59.
Sure.
Okay, so you think it's fair.
You think the current landscape is fair?
I'm not saying it's fair, but I'm not saying it's unfair.
Okay, what are you saying?
You are such a moron.
Yes, one or the other.
Oh, what a moron.
Whether it's legal has also been a bit vague. The 2016 Bots Act makes it illegal to circumvent
a security measure used by the ticket issuer to enforce posted event ticket purchasing limits.
But the Federal Trade Commission has enforced the act just once,
even as brokers seem to violate it daily.
So this is an executive order.
President Trump has now called on the FTC
to rigorously enforce the BOTS Act, giving them
six months to make a plan.
Who was that guy next to him?
Kid Rock.
Oh, God.
Yeah.
Kid Rock was in the Oval Office with Trump.
And by the way, why does Trump have
to sign everything with a signature that's one page big?
Like, a whole page.
Yeah, he does a whole sharp thing.
I know, he only signs with Sharpies.
Struggling to carry out the law, stopping brokers has been the job of ticket companies.
We get to help people get to these magical moments.
Mostly Ticketmaster.
Is it your goal to get tickets in the hands of people who intend to
go to the show rather than people who just are buying the ticket to resell it? Oh, 100%. Dan
Wall is a long-time top lawyer for Ticketmaster. And what kind of grade would you give yourself
on how that's going at the moment? Well, we're tough graders. You can get it 99.9% right and you give yourself an
F.
Do you think you're...
Well, we grade ourselves awful tough.
Yeah.
You can get it right five and a half percent of the time, but we're still going to give
ourselves an F, Dave.
Well, are you getting it even that much?
Anywhere near 99.9% when millions and millions of tickets are being sold by scalpers. In a large on-sale, we regularly knock down and defeat millions of bots.
We're in an arms race with the people who are trying to figure out how to intercept
these tickets.
We've met people doing this.
I'm sure you have.
And they buy tickets, and then they resell them, and then they buy some more tickets and they
resell them.
But their Ticketmaster account doesn't get closed.
Why aren't you able to spot the folks doing this and close those accounts?
We spot a lot of them.
That's a bullshit.
And honestly, we don't spot them all.
But you feel like you're doing an okay job of this.
This isn't going to be abated until we get to the root cause of this, which is the extraordinary
profitability of the resale market.
The biggest resale pl-
Well, you get to the root of that by not making the tickets so expensive in the first place
and making them more accessible.
Feel me out on this one. If I don't have
to pay $180 face value for every ticket that I go see, I will go see more
concerts, making more tickets available because more musicians will be able to
make a living on the road, making more tickets generally out there in the open
public. The cheaper that it is, the more people that get in on it, the more people that
get in on it, the more people can make a living doing it, the more people that
make a living doing on it, the more of these events take place all around the world.
We also on the same, at the same time that we're hearing about tour
cancellations and all this stuff, we're also hearing about festival closures
all over the place, festivals that can't do this anymore because they're getting
charged an arm and a leg all along the way. They can't find profitability
and people can't buy the tickets so they can't sustain the model. Period.
Form is StubHub, which sold 40 million tickets last year.
40 million!
Five years ago what would that have been?
Millions and now we're in the tens of millions.
We spoke to Chris Miller before he stepped down
as StubHub's chief business officer.
When you look at what-
Before he stepped down, yeah.
The secondary market has done,
it's sort of democratized access.
Brokers aren't villains, he says,
but part of a free market that sites like StubHub
have made more efficient,
giving everyone an equal chance
to buy or sell at transparent prices.
When demand is low, fans can get great deals.
Alright, this is StubHub.
But yes, StubHub builds that market by partnering with brokers like Elite.
StubHub charges brokers lower fees to sell on the site than ordinary fans pay when they sell.
And what happens to a ticket when a broker scoops it up?
Well remember Melissa Santos at All Things Go?
When she was shut out of face value tickets, she went to StubHub just a couple hours later
and paid more than $540 each. $1,000 to see Hoser.
I mean, come on, that's crazy.
Met a woman sitting on the lawn at All Things Go,
paid $540 on StubHub.
But the fact is she paid it.
She did.
That is the thing.
She did pay it, so she likes that music.
That's all I gotta say. But it's as long as people are willing to pay it, so she likes that music. That's all I gotta say.
$100 based on your ticket.
But as long as people are willing to pay it,
this is gonna be happening.
This is gonna be a problem.
So once all the fees and expenses and costs of the show
come out of the wash, the artists made about $100,
the promoter and the venue made about 70,
the broker made 110, and StubHub made 180.
Why does StubHub deserve the biggest share of that woman's purchase?
Well, I would first start with saying that all things go should be working directly with StubHub to participate in the market dynamics.
There's a way to collaborate here that everyone can participate in. So yeah, that's what he's suggesting is that they give a portion of the
tickets to StubHub so that they can allow their free market willy-nilly
however much you want to pay you get to pay you know essentially supply and
demand way of looking at the marketplace dynamics. That the promoters get more of
the process. The promoter can take a... That's what everyone has been up in arms about with
Ticketmaster this last year and a half, two years, is this surge pricing, demand pricing, just like airline tickets.
The more, the less that are available, the more that you will pay.
I don't disagree with supply and demand, but I'm not sure this is the right way to look
at it.
Participation, the artist can take a participation.
We do this in sports all the time.
What Miller is suggesting...
A participation.
A participation. That's a, yeah, that's a nice way of saying it.
A huge fee.
Is nothing less than the fork in the road
ticketing now stands at.
StubHub is offering to share their profits
from resold tickets with musicians like Andrew McMahon
if StubHub is also allowed to handle the original on sale,
the part Ticketmaster now does exclusively.
If artists accept scalping, they can get in on the action.
I don't want anything to do with it.
I would turn down every check that got sent to me
by a StubHubber, Vivid Seats, or any of these guys,
because I think what they're doing is...
I mean, I think it's disgusting.
McMahon wants to take the other side of that.
I want to go see this band now.
Yeah, because something corporate is not so corporate.
Work in the road and end scalping,
which might finally be possible since tickets are digital.
McMahon now only allows resale
on Ticketmaster's face value exchange.
Billie Eilish, Foo Fighters, and Pearl Jam do that too.
We wanna make it easy if you decide
you need to get rid of your ticket to get rid of it,
but you're gonna sell it back
for the same price you bought it for.
I think it's misguided.
Miller called.
Yeah, yeah.
Hi, hi, hi.
I'm so shocked.
He said that.
I don't think I'm making so much money.
This is the StubHub guy.
Yeah, I really wanna get at those Pearl Jam tickets.
I think it's misguided.
I think it's misguided.
I think you're misguided.
Well, Space Value Exchange, a power grab
that can trap fans with high-priced tickets
they aren't allowed to sell for less.
We don't believe the artist can control the pricing
in the aftermarket, no.
It's their show, it's not the scalper show.
Ticketmaster, even though they have their
own resale site, told us they support laws to cap resale prices. There's nothing socially beneficial
about scalping. It's just a ripoff and it's taking that money from the fans. Yeah, okay. I understand
what this guy, what he's saying, but that's not how Ticketmaster acts because they are in fact surge pricing now themselves
and adding exorbitant fees onto what is a pretty simple
piece of the puzzle.
Find the right ticket, make sure that seat is available
and hand that to the customer willing to pay it.
I think that should be a cap at like a 5% fee
of the ticket value or something along those lines.
And that starts the conversation about the band
or the musician or the agent
or whoever's putting the deal memo together
to look at the actual costs,
give the band a fair cut of the ticket
and then price it out based on how close
or how far you are from seeing the actual musician.
And then also how much you're willing to pay the
fair market value for that particular musical act. StubHub shouldn't, no one
should get in bed with StubHub. That's a ridiculous idea. And if we could, we
shouldn't get in bed with Ticketmaster or Live Nation either, although I think
that door has already been closed. But there is a better way to look at this
somehow, some way, some shape, some form.
And I'm telling you, if the ticket prices were lower,
more people, more musicians would be on the road,
more people would go see more shows
solving some of this problem.
And there will always be the Taylor Swift's of the world.
There'll always be this cultural zeitgeist
where everybody has to go and they're willing to,
look at Cabbage Patch Kids.
Those things were selling for $3,000 in 1985. Beanie Bab. Those things we're selling for $3,000 in 1985.
Beanie Babies. Beanie Babies. $3,000 in 1985 and now they're back at $3,000 and I threw them away.
Where's the Dick Tracy nostalgia when you need it? From the Dick Tracy Market? Yes, where's the Dick
Tracy Market? I would have made a killing on that.
All right, well, there you go.
Very interesting look at the ticketing business in general and the reason why we're all paying
so much money to go see these live shows, sporting events, comedy, and all things in
between.
You know, I don't have any of the great answers.
I just have some ideas. But
one of those ideas was to start the commercial break. So don't trust me on anything. Okay?
I'm not here for answers. I'm just here to ask more questions. I'm here to muddy the
waters not clear them up. What do you want from me? I'm just a guy. Just a guy doing
a podcast. But I will tell you what, that's the guy who's funding the Georgia
ticket brokers and making the MLM out of it he's a pretty dumb human being yeah
he's pretty dumb I hope I see him at the Kroger elite elite so original that's
the elite okay don't use Elite, okay?
But they're probably wrapped into StubHub anyway.
You wouldn't even know it.
Yeah.
Okay, May 31st, the 12 hours of TCB.
Speaking of lowering chicken prices.
Yeah.
Speaking of doing more shows.
12 hours of TCB, May 31st, all to raise awareness about mental health awareness and your mental health and my mental
health and so we're all going to be out of mental health by the end of the day and celebrating
five years of the commercial break in coordination with our partners at Odyssey, CTB New York,
Covert Creative and WePlash.
We're super excited.
It's going to be a great time. I think. Are we super excited? I don't
know. Talk to me on the morning of the 31st.
It's going to be exciting. It's going to be fun. We're doing it.
We'll be recording earlier than we ever have.
And as we're happy about it.
Yeah. Just be happy about it. Okay. Stop texting me. Yes, we're doing it. It's going to happen.
Will we make it through all 12? I don't know.
That's another question.
That's the experiment.
Yeah, that's the experiment.
That's right.
TCBpodcast.com, your free schwag, audio and video
at the commercial break on Instagram,
212-433-3TCB and youtube.com slash the commercial break
for all the episodes same day to air here on the audio.
Okay, Chrissy, that's all I can do for today.
I think so.
I'll tell you that I love you.
And I love you.
Best to you.
Best to you.
And best to you out there in the podcast universe.
Until next time, Chrissy and I will say,
we do say and we must say,
Goodbye.
Goodbye. I'm gonna be a good boy I'm gonna be a good boy I'm gonna be a good boy
I'm gonna be a good boy
I'm gonna be a good boy
I'm gonna be a good boy
I'm gonna be a good boy
I'm gonna be a good boy
I'm gonna be a good boy
I'm gonna be a good boy
I'm gonna be a good boy
I'm gonna be a good boy
I'm gonna be a good boy I'm gonna be a good boy Thanks for watching!