I doubt it is that hard, but they’re also fighting against the convenience of ease of access for having everything in one place, as long as you’re looking at shows for more established artists. For example, if you’re into death metal and hardcore punk in NYC, and like to go to the odd electronic show, tickets are spread across a mix of Dice, AXS (which I forgot whether or not it’s just live nation in disguise), Shotgun, the Resident Advisor app, and then a handful of venues where you just have to go buy tickets straight on their website. Then you travel a few hours south to Baltimore, and it’s like half those apps no longer exist, and you need to find new ones. Same if you go to the west coast. On the other hand, if my sister wants to go see a major act likeKesha or something again, she can just search that artist and see all their upcoming shows across not just the whole of the US, but in multiple other countries and buy tickets with the one account for any of them.
Ticketmaster and Live Nation definitely suck, and people are rightfully pissed about it, but I don’t know how many of them are actually mad enough to go back to doing the legwork of keeping up on show listings for multiple venues and installing 5 different apps to avoid them.
This as well as many of the contracts the venues have with Live Nation/Ticketmaster have non compete clauses barring them from being able to sell tickets directly or use another service.
I think you identified the need for a law to be written to ban such agreements on monopoly grounds. We could just ban all non compete clauses and the world would be a better place as the majority of them are unenforceable and unethical to begin with.
Problem is our FTC approved the merger allowing the monopoly to proceed. So I doubt any type of law blocking that will be passed any time soon with this clown circus in charge.
The ticket monopoly baffles me. Surely it can’t be that hard for someone to set up an independent site?
I doubt it is that hard, but they’re also fighting against the convenience of ease of access for having everything in one place, as long as you’re looking at shows for more established artists. For example, if you’re into death metal and hardcore punk in NYC, and like to go to the odd electronic show, tickets are spread across a mix of Dice, AXS (which I forgot whether or not it’s just live nation in disguise), Shotgun, the Resident Advisor app, and then a handful of venues where you just have to go buy tickets straight on their website. Then you travel a few hours south to Baltimore, and it’s like half those apps no longer exist, and you need to find new ones. Same if you go to the west coast. On the other hand, if my sister wants to go see a major act likeKesha or something again, she can just search that artist and see all their upcoming shows across not just the whole of the US, but in multiple other countries and buy tickets with the one account for any of them.
Ticketmaster and Live Nation definitely suck, and people are rightfully pissed about it, but I don’t know how many of them are actually mad enough to go back to doing the legwork of keeping up on show listings for multiple venues and installing 5 different apps to avoid them.
This as well as many of the contracts the venues have with Live Nation/Ticketmaster have non compete clauses barring them from being able to sell tickets directly or use another service.
I think you identified the need for a law to be written to ban such agreements on monopoly grounds. We could just ban all non compete clauses and the world would be a better place as the majority of them are unenforceable and unethical to begin with.
Problem is our FTC approved the merger allowing the monopoly to proceed. So I doubt any type of law blocking that will be passed any time soon with this clown circus in charge.