The Belasco Box Office Staff Proves Yet Again What As%h*l#s They Are — Page 2
Posted: 4/29/12 at 7:22pm
Posted: 4/29/12 at 7:27pm
Posted: 4/29/12 at 7:29pm
What's the problem with mustaches now?
Posted: 4/29/12 at 7:31pm
Updated On: 4/29/12 at 07:31 PM
Posted: 4/29/12 at 7:38pm
But yeah, there are may customers who are wrong. I've never understood people who seem to think that if they're rude or yell a lot they'll get better service.
Updated On: 4/29/12 at 07:38 PM
Posted: 4/29/12 at 7:47pm
But, if we're talking rude box office staff - the Broadway has some of the rudest box office staff I've ever dealt with. I've dealt with them during three different productions [Promises, Promises, Shrek, and Sister Act] and they are just rude and inconsiderate. On the flip side, the box office staff of the Neil Simon are wonderful - always pleasant, helpful, and never once not gone the extra mile in helping a customer.
I've worked in customer service for several years, and seeing such awful customer service annoys me to no end, because I am someone who goes the extra mile for a customer.
Updated On: 4/29/12 at 07:47 PM
Posted: 4/29/12 at 7:48pm
So I was actually thinking nice things about their staff when I saw your thread, Jordan...
Posted: 4/29/12 at 7:49pm
Posted: 4/29/12 at 7:55pm
Posted: 4/29/12 at 7:57pm
Updated On: 4/29/12 at 07:57 PM
Posted: 4/29/12 at 8:06pm
But while the customer is not always right, they do deserve to be treated with respect, granted they enter the establishment showing the same respect to the staff.
I've said many times that my first job was at Blockbuster when I was 14. I've been spit on (over late fees), had my life threatened (for not holding a copy of the movie HEAT for someone when it was released), been shot at (this was Florida, so...y'know...) and been treated like shlt more times than I care to mention. But the difference is the only time I was ever rude to someone was when they were rude to me beyond the standard "I'm very upset here over such-and-such and I need to be heard". I'm very proud of the fact that when I switched stores, they needed to hire two people to replace me and that store lost a lot of business when customers followed me to the new store. And after I left the company all together I still received phone calls from them all the time for questions about movies, the store etc.
Now I'm not saying I was always a ray of sunshine. Those who know me know that just isn't me. But when you've been at work for all of 5 minutes like this man was today and you're already being so outlandishly nasty to someone who's done nothing but smile and say hi - Well you're in the wrong job and union or not, you need to be let go.
Posted: 4/29/12 at 8:09pm
Posted: 4/29/12 at 8:12pm
Posted: 4/29/12 at 8:18pm
Exactly Jordan
Posted: 4/29/12 at 8:18pm
Posted: 4/29/12 at 10:03pm
Much better policy, Jordan. During my box office years I would not have been unkind or impatient in any of the circumstances posted in this thread.
But the guy who told me he was going to shoot me between the eyes because I couldn't improve on his 9th or 10th row tickets? Nah, not so much respect. I treated such customers with about as much respect as they treated me (minus the threats of actual violence, of course). (This was in the 70s; nowadays, that sort of threat would probably merit a visit from Homeland Security).
Frankly, I think treating people more or less as they treat you is a pretty good way to go through life. It's certainly the way I try to approach message boards.
Posted: 4/29/12 at 10:44pm
The biggest problem with the Chicago theatres, which are all run by Broadway In Chicago, is their box offices at performance time. They use all windows for everything (Will Call, Sales, Season Ticket Exchanges, etc.). So if you're there to pick up Will Call before a performance, you can stand there waiting 15-20 minutes as other people are buying tickets for future shows or making exchanges and taking up loads of time trying to make decisions. They need a dedicated Will Call window so those who already paid for their tickets can get them and be seated in time. We arrived 20 minutes before curtain for Billy Elliot and were next in line with about a dozen people behind us and by the time we got our tickets, we were forced to wait in the lobby during the opening number to wait for late seating. Over a dozen of us! We were all begging in the line for ANYONE to get our tickets and were ignored. The house manager said they had nothing to do with the box office and refused to help us. I wrote a letter to Broadway in Chicago and never received a response. So from now on, I either don't use Will Call or I pick up the tickets during lunch or the day before. You never EVER make people wait to pick up their tickets they have already purchased for that performance over people who have not yet bought tickets or people not even attending the performance. It's ludicrous.
Posted: 4/29/12 at 11:19pm
A rush ticket is a really great privilege and many of them are partial view. Those are probably the only ones the box office staff have the authority to sell, even if the rest of the theater isn't full. Just assume all rush tickets are partial view (or balcony, etc) so that you're not disappointed.
Posted: 4/29/12 at 11:28pm
Posted: 4/29/12 at 11:31pm
There's so many things wrong in that statement, my mind doesn't even know where to start.
Updated On: 4/29/12 at 11:31 PM
Posted: 4/29/12 at 11:41pm
(I've had a bad day too...
Posted: 4/30/12 at 12:27am
Posted: 4/30/12 at 12:41am
Ummm no. I work in a box office and rush tickets should definitely NOT always be assumed to be partial view. And if any ticket is partial view, it should be stated when the ticket is being sold.
Posted: 4/30/12 at 12:47am
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