They start performances 2 weeks after this (on the 27th). Chicago tech and dress rehearsals will likely be a week long (guessing). I'm not saying it's impossible to pull off another performance the following Monday, but Cynthia being in a Broadway show is not the only thing which will prevent it.
Caption: Every so often there was a rare moment of perfect balance when I soared above him.
Relevance81491 said: "I meant adding inventory that was heals for the general on sale ... Dirty ****ing troll
"
Wow! What harsh rhetoric for someone who failed to be more clear and specific in their original post. Don't blame me for your inability to post with clarity.
TonyVincent said: "Yeah, not sure why they went on with the pretense of a public sale when it was already sold out..."
Well, the ticketing system was set-up to require a pre-sale code for one period of time, and to not require one for another period of time. That system is not connected to whether or not seats are available or how the pre-sale and public sale are set-up.
haterobics said: "TonyVincent said: "Yeah, not sure why they went on with the pretense of a public sale when it was already sold out..."
Well, the ticketing system was set-up to require a pre-sale code for one period of time, and to not require one for another period of time. That system is not connected to whether or not seats are available or how the pre-sale and public sale are set-up.
"
I more meant that Town Hall and/or Ticketmaster could have updated their sites to say "SOLD OUT" instead of keeping "Tickets go on sale to the general public at noon on 8/18!" like they did.
TonyVincent said: "I more meant that Town Hall and/or Ticketmaster could have updated their sites to say "SOLD OUT" instead of keeping "Tickets go on sale to the general public at noon on 8/18!" like they did."
Ticketmaster never says something is sold out, since more tickets can always show up for whatever reason later (producer releases more seats, bot-purchased tickets canceled, credit card didn't go through, show producer enables Resale on Ticketmaster), and Town Hall is just a rented venue, so they aren't really concerned about it, either. Before the "public sale," we heard from JRB and cast members that it was sold out and that "few if any" tickets would be available Wednesday, so any expectation that tickets were held back and were about to be available were self-generated by people who wanted/needed that to be true.
haterobics said: "Good point from JRB: "(For the record, folks, I TWEETED the presale code. Every single person on Twitter could see it. You ARE the general public.)""
That's not a good point. That's the remark of an asshole. Does he think people sit around all day and refresh his twitter feed?
Whoever was in charge of the onsale for this did a terrible job. Of course JRB is defending himself and not admitting it.
Updated On: 8/18/16 at 02:30 PM
I agree neonlightsxo. I've never heard of a presale where they allowed all the tickets to go on sale. It's ridiculous and shouldn't have happened. Many people don't use Twitter.
Agreed -- and also, many people use Twitter but can't possibly follow all the artists they love. Plus, following someone doesn't mean seeing everything they tweet.
haterobics said: "Good point from JRB: "(For the record, folks, I TWEETED the presale code. Every single person on Twitter could see it. You ARE the general public.)""
I for one don't think this was an "asshole" remark as neon thinks. It's a fair point, and even if he had only sent it to his mailing list, the code could have leaked easily. I'd rather a lot of fans having a chance at the getting the ticket and not some random dude stealing all tickets and selling them at a higher price.
The only thing they could have done differently was to not have a presale. Beyond that, I think it would be wise to remember it wasn't a concert to make your dreams come true - it was a project these artists wanted to pursue, to generate funds for a cause. If you cannot see beyond your personal gain or loss, you're the asshole. Not the artist.
Caption: Every so often there was a rare moment of perfect balance when I soared above him.