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Ticketmaster cancels public sale of Taylor Swift tickets

After days of glitches and long waits, frustrated fans trying to buy Taylor Swift tickets during presale windows, Ticketmaster, on Thursday said they were canceling Friday’s slated public sale.

Maggy Donaldson (AFP)
New York, United States
Fri, November 18, 2022

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Ticketmaster cancels public sale of Taylor Swift tickets Ticket frenzy: American singer Taylor Swift attends the In Conversation With… Taylor Swift event during the 2022 Toronto International Film Festival at TIFF Bell Lightbox on Sept. 9 in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Ticketmaster on Thursday said they were canceling Friday’s public on-sale for the Taylor Swift—The Eras Tour “due to extraordinarily high demands on ticketing systems and insufficient remaining ticket inventory.” (AFP/Valerie Macon)

After days of glitches and long waits, frustrated fans trying to buy Taylor Swift tickets during presale windows, Ticketmaster, on Thursday said they were canceling Friday’s slated public sale.

"Due to extraordinarily high demands on ticketing systems and insufficient remaining ticket inventory to meet that demand, Friday’s public on-sale for the Taylor Swift | The Eras Tour has been canceled," the ticketing broker tweeted.

It was not immediately clear whether that sale would be rescheduled or how many unsold tickets remained. Ticketmaster did not immediately respond to an AFP request for clarification.

"I have absolutely NO idea what to do now," said 23-year-old fan Cody Rhodes, whose cousin had a presale code earlier this week—but after waiting five hours had been booted out of the queue. 

"Ticketmaster's statement was so vague. They said [it was] canceled, not postponed, so now I wonder if there are any tickets left for them to sell," the 23-year-old told AFP. 

He doubted his ability to afford resale tickets which can soar into the thousands of dollars, but said he'd likely try.

"It just really sucks that Ticketmaster handled this situation so poorly," Rhodes said.

In a blog post, the company said that on Tuesday over 2 million tickets were sold for Swift's string of shows set to kick off in March—the most tickets ever sold for an artist in one day.

More than 3.5 million people pre-registered as "verified fans,” a system intended to keep out bots, and some 1.5 million people were then given presale codes to purchase tickets.

But Ticketmaster nevertheless cited a "staggering number of bot attacks" along with fans without codes trying to purchase tickets—meaning their site experienced 3.5 billion system requests, they said, four times the company's previous peak.

"Even when a high demand on sale goes flawlessly from a tech perspective, many fans are left empty handed," Ticketmaster said. 

"Based on the volume of traffic to our site, Taylor would need to perform over 900 stadium shows [almost 20 times the number of shows she is doing] [...] that's a stadium show every single night for the next 2.5 years."

Unwind merger?

The debacle reignited concern over Ticketmaster's privileged position in the ticketing industry.

The company—which is owned by Live Nation, the event promotion behemoth—is a dominating force and for years concert goers have complained of hidden fees, soaring costs, rampant scalpers and limited tickets due to presales.

A number of lawmakers questioned the 2010 merger of Ticketmaster and Live Nation, with some calling for probes into the state of the industry's competition.

Tennessee's Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti meanwhile voiced concern over the presale and said "he and his consumer protection team will use every available tool to ensure that no consumer protection laws were violated.”

A number of antitrust and consumer protection groups in recent months have launched a campaign "to investigate and unwind the 2010 Live Nation-Ticketmaster merger,” saying that its vast power in the industry allows it to "hike up ticket prices, tack on expensive junk fees and exploit artists, independent venues and fans”.

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