5552 comments
sort by
Recent
Reset
Items displayed
  • gdhead77
    9 years 7 months ago
    Rejected!
    Well I am really disappointed that after sending everything in and getting a postmark at 8:00 AM EST on January 20 I received my rejection notice yesterday. What a shame. Not a well planned out event. Reminds me of the days in the late 80's when after using mail order for well over a decade and getting tix 100% of the time the rejections started to show up. Just a bummer that after following this band for 40 years, seeing 150+ shows with Jerry and god knows how many post-jerry I will not be able to attend.
  • Gratefully Medicated
    9 years 7 months ago
    Rolling Stone Article from 2/13 (Good Read) "Inside the GD 50"
    Rolling Stone 02/13/2015 - Inside the Grateful Dead's Final Ride Inside the Grateful Dead's Final Ride On January 5th, just after his band Phish ended a four-night run of shows in Miami, singer-guitarist Trey Anastasio received an e-mail from Phil Lesh, the former bassist of the Grateful Dead. Lesh asked Anastasio to join him and the other surviving members of his band — guitarist Bob Weir and drummers Bill Kreutzmann and Mickey Hart — onstage for reunion concerts this summer marking the Dead's 50th birthday and the 20th anniversary of the passing of founding guitarist Jerry Garcia. Anastasio recalls his immediate reaction: "It was a thrill and an honor." Still, he adds, "I thought about it for a minute, tried to think about the implications." Then he said yes. Jerry Garcia performing at the Shoreline Amphitheatre in June 1990. "Phil said all four of them thought it was the right thing," Anastasio says of the shows, to be held at Soldier Field in Chicago on July 3rd, 4th and 5th. Garcia last performed with the Dead at that 61,500-seat stadium, on July 9th, 1995; he died a month later, on August 9th at 53, of a heart attack. Anastasio notes that Lesh, in his message, "talked about the healthy relationships between the band members," that the reunion "was going to be a real positive experience. And Phil said, 'This is the last time I'm doing this.' He seemed pretty definitive about that." The Dead's July run — dubbed "Fare Thee Well" and featuring keyboard players Bruce Hornsby, who played with the Dead in the Nineties, and longtime Weir and Lesh sideman Jeff Chimenti — is on track to become the biggest single-act concert event of the year, and possibly the largest ever. Two weeks after the shows were announced, ticket requests via presale mail order totaled more than 400,000, well past capacity. Peter Shapiro, the New York-based promoter and entrepreneur who conceived the shows, says he and co-producers Madison House Presents are "looking at going 360" — opening up the seating behind the stage — and "going general admission" on the field "to accommodate more people and have more of a vibe." Shapiro estimates the cost of producing "Fare Thee Well" – and potential revenue — in "the multiple millions of dollars. But with this response, we can put on a show that takes the spirit of the Grateful Dead, what they were doing production-wise, and push it to the highest level." He promises vintage touches such as a tapers' section, specially printed commemorative tickets and "a safe, energetic lot scene." The demand for tickets ensures that "not everyone is going to get in," Shapiro warns. So he is working on simulcasting the shows around the country; Shapiro is already holding the dates at his venues, including the Capitol Theatre in Port Chester, New York, and the Brooklyn Bowl. The road to "Fare Thee Well" began in early 2014, when Shapiro made his first proposal to Weir, Lesh, Hart and Kreutzmann, based on returning to the site of their last concert with Garcia. The four received other offers from Live Nation and the producers of the Coachella and Bonnaroo festivals for 50th-birthday performances. (The Dead played their first show, as the Warlocks, in May 1965.) But Shapiro, 42, had special qualifications. He "grew up on Dead tours," as he puts it; ran Wetlands, the New York jam-scene club, from 1996 to 2001; and since then has promoted many shows with the ex-members, particularly Lesh. "I believe in it," says Shapiro. "I'm a fan. I want to see it." Grateful Dead Anastasio's history with the Grateful Dead goes back to his first show, at the Hartford Civic Center in Connecticut in 1980. The guitarist regularly attended Dead gigs through 1984, when he began to focus on the launch of Phish. In 1999, he performed with Lesh in San Francisco at the bassist's first concerts after his 1998 liver transplant. Anastasio has also played with Weir and Kreutzmann. "The flow of the whole thing," Anastasio claims, "is in my DNA." Yet, he admits, "I never sat down and studied what Jerry played until the last two weeks. "It's really been unbelievable," he says, taking a break on a recent morning from his now-daily regimen of practicing Dead songs and analyzing the melodic purpose in Garcia's soloing and the musical genealogy inside his most iconic licks. "A couple of days ago, I started listening to 'The Wheel' [a Dead-show standard from Garcia's 1972 solo album, Garcia]. There's a line he plays after the first verse — it slides all the way from the bottom of the neck to the top. I learned it exactly, note for note. Then what I do, since I don't want to go out there and just copy Jerry — I play it in all 12 keys, so that I get it into my body. "The thing is, there is a lot more intent in those lines than people might think," adds Anastasio. "It was not just noodling. Based on the number of ideas Jerry had in any one-minute period, he was very much a musician first, a guitar player second. The music was coming out, and the guitar was a vehicle, a transparent filter." Garcia has also been, for Anastasio, a historical guide. Working through Garcia's "country-vernacular" playing in a Seventies version of "I Know You Rider" led Anastasio to a new passion. "All of a sudden," he says, "I found myself listening to Buck Owens, this Bakersfield-country sound," and particularly Owens' legendary lead guitarist, Don Rich. "That's what I've been doing, listening to Don Rich to get to Jerry." Anastasio and Weir have traded lists of Dead songs — 60 apiece — that each would like to play. They will meet "in a couple of weeks," Anastasio says, to "play a few things together and connect." The full band will "rehearse in June a little bit." Anastasio expects the singing to be largely shared by Weir, Hornsby, himself and the audience. "People have such lifelong relationships to these songs," Anastasio says. Then, a week after the Chicago shows, Anastasio will be back on the road with Phish. Asked if he is putting a lot of work and heart into an experience that will last only three days, Anastasio replies firmly, "No. To me, it's a labor of love. I'm learning so much. I kind of went away from this [in 1984]. Now I'm coming back to it, a little bit older, and rediscovering some great little gems. "I'm providing a service," Anastasio says of his role in what is likely to be the final live Grateful Dead reunion. "The cool thing is...it got me back inside the guitar. I thank them. And I thank Jerry."
  • Velveteen
    9 years 7 months ago
    USPS Money Orders cannot be tracked, basically
    I talked to post office lady. She said the system for money order tracking does not work well at USPS. First: you have to pay a fee to have access to tracking. Second: even if you do pay the fee, she said it takes like 2 weeks to even get any results. So that is why there have been no USPS money order cashed information out there. Just have to hope for empty mail boxes. Good luck every one.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

17 years 6 months
Body Block
<? // pull in news from "50th Anniversary" feature type taxonomy $news = views_embed_view('story_lists', 'block_50news'); echo $news; ?>

Grateful Dead Original Members Add Two Dates To Final Concerts

April 10, 2015

The original members of Grateful Dead have announced two additional shows at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, California on June 27th and 28th, as part of their “Fare Thee Well: Celebrating 50 Years of Grateful Dead” run. Along with the three shows at Chicago's Soldier Field on July 3rd, 4th, and 5th, the run will mark the original members' last-ever performances toget

Custom Sidebar

Shop the 50th Store»

,

Facebook

body .rhinoSocialWidget .rhinoWidgetInner { padding:0; } body .rhinoSocialWidget { margin:0; } body .rhinoSocialWidget .rhinoWidgetInner .posting { padding:0; } ,

Free Grateful Dead Art

Check in throughout the year for new additions!

Display on homepage featured list
Off

dead comment

user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 6 months
Permalink

That could certainly happen. I have to think that since they are so slow, they are verifying every email address not just bounceback ones.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 6 months
Permalink

on GD50 Limbo on facebook. email time 15:38 from gdtstoo. batch #170
user picture

Member for

16 years 5 months
Permalink

Hey now... So if you're like me, I was shut out of tickets and am now forced to keep an eye on the e-bay, StubHub, re-seller market. Since the ticket master debacle, I've been closely watching prices, seats, Bears season ticket holder offerings, and yes, lucky GDTS TOO golden e-mail recipients, all with tickets to offer. Folks, e-bay auctions are ending, tickets are selling, and dead heads are buying tickets and they're buying them at incredible price points. A decent pair of tickets, "decent," defined as a seat with a view of the stage, are selling for a minimum of $1,750 a pair. This is for 300 level seats. 100 and 200 level seats are an order of magnitude above that. The times, they are a changing, gang. Dead heads are older, wiser and in this case, prepared with resources to buy, buy, buy. I was hoping to see a decline in prices but I just don't see the laws of supply and demand working in my favor. Anyone have any thoughts on this?
user picture

Member for

9 years 8 months
Permalink

As someone else has pointed out, we will most likely have to wait until June when the actual hard tickets are printed and available before we see any real price drops, if this theory holds water. At this point I don't see them dropping significantly before showtime, but no one really knows. I am in the same stinking sinking boat as all the other poor ticketless #%$@s out there! Bleak and grim are what we are facing trying to get non-scalped tickets. Imagine 100,000 deadheads trying to acquire 500 tickets. This is what I feel are our odds are to get just 1 ticket. We have .5% chance, or 200 to 1 and I think I am overestimating our chances. Hard to stay positive when it seems almost certain that you will not get a ticket. But I got my ticket to Veneta, OR...(just need a time machine now)
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

10 years 5 months
Permalink

Got mine returned yesterday. Everyone have fun, going or not. If you have not heard, keep dreaming. As to secondary market prices, I would guess sales right now are to buyers who do not care about price paid, and persons who are panicked about missing out. Both types are in the sellers' favor. If prices are going to come down, it will probably not occur until May. Prices now are just prices now. They do not show what prices will do two plus months from now. I am in the process of listening to '74 straight through. So amazing, the best year?
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 6 months
Permalink

Someone else posted an email from batch #170 on fakebook an hour ago with the same time stamp as the previous postee email from batch #170. That's two from the same batch. Not sure if we've seen that before. I guess it doesn't mean anything besides the may have mistyped more than one email from that batch. Edit: As someone noted in a response to the fakebook post about receiving an email today, "So could be a long time before they get into the 400's at this pace!"
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 4 months
Permalink

It is unsettling to know that MO's were cashed and no information with no email. All lines of communication are closed right now and that is unsettling.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

GDTSTOO is a righteous organization....they will make good on either tix or pink slip...which unfortunately is white.....it's evidence based!
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

12 years 4 months
Permalink

No question about the stand-up nature at all. Without love in the dream...just worried about my original post about cyber-oblivion...not really a way to plug-in that type of snafu into a database of bounce-back email situation
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

11 years 5 months
Permalink

Feeling like...William-O, my guineas are too few...
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

11 years 5 months
Permalink

I just hope for the love of everything we (fans) believe in that no one burns their cities or destroy all the ladies in the area-o...cuz they can't get in.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

Never got the song til the 93 Dead thing....saw Joan Osborne (fake Donna) n the boys minus Jerry with Jimmy Herring tackle it from the 12th row.....awesome.....the fact that Hunter n Dylan opened didn't hurt the buzz that night. I now look back at previous Peggy-O's in awe....
user picture

Member for

13 years 6 months
Permalink

Peggy-O is one I consistently search for new versions of on the Internet Archive.What I like about those performances, similar to Althea and Stagger Lee, is Jerry singing a song he really (currently) likes and trying to show a crowd that does not yet love it, why he loves it. Cool down boy, Settle back (still in limbo) easy Jim
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

Couldn't have said it better....while Stagger Lee isn't on my top forty....Althea is haunting through the years... Thinking a lot about less and less.....
user picture

Member for

17 years 2 months
Permalink

when go to heaven came out in 78 or 79 (whenever), i thought, althea was ok, but wanted to hear it live. I didn't see dead live until june 80 in tempe, az.: I got it then...great tune....still love it. Peggy O has always been one of my favorites. heard it at my first dead show in landover, md in 76. i really didn't know what to expect in a live show at all, but it wasn't what I got. Peggy O was just perfect...one of those atypical rock song, with atypical lyrics, played in atypical manner, and it all just fit.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 6 months
Permalink

Mailed my MO from Key West with a return envelope going to NY. I have not received an email message. No pink slip or rejection and the MO's are not cashed. They are Western Union MO's. I appreciate the updates people are sending.
user picture

Member for

12 years 10 months
Permalink

I love listening to the April '78 run of Peggy-Os and hearing how Jerry approached his solos so completely differently from night to night. tfonts, I've been watching Stubhub for a week and here are my thoughts: the supply went up a couple hundred per night and then remained pretty steady since then, although it looks like some Fridays have sold or been pulled (we're talking a dozen or so). It's hard to know because I'm sure scalpers hold back tickets and use algorithms to dictate how many to put out at what price. Specifically, I'm watching two things on prices just to keep it simple. I'm looking at Friday low-end, which has dropped from above $500 for every listing to 29 listings now available below $500. Not a huge drop ($50-100) but consistent each day. Second, I'm looking at GA because it has a larger ticket pool of identical tickets. I can say that I haven't seen a single 3-day pit pass or GA floor sell. The available numbers are exactly the same. The prices have come down a lot ($1,000-1,500) but it may just be that they were way too high to start with. I shudder to think what will happen when jittery fans cave and overpay because they see a $50 price drop or some other compulsive behavior starts the buying. The other GA single night tickets are coming down as well. I don't know what it all means but it's interesting to observe. I'll probably post occasional updates unless people get sick of it. Cheers.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 8 months
Permalink

mailed in on the 20th with USPS money orders. requested 4 tics on the 4th and 4 tickets on the 5th. No returned $-orders and no email. Paid $6.10 at the post office today to see if the orders have been cashed. When I get word I'll give another update.
user picture

Member for

15 years 8 months
Permalink

Hey everyone - like a few folks I've seen on this thread, I've been a member of the forum for a few years, but it wasn't until now I felt like I had a reason to post. I wanted to share a little of my experience along the journey. First, I want to say I've really appreciated the information and stories I've read throughout the past two months - thank you. I'm not a seasoned Deadhead, but rather a seasoned Phish head. I understand that brings up various thoughts and feelings, and I respect that. I began listening the the Dead well before Phish - records of my dad's and stealing his studio tapes (late 80s/early 90s). My summer jobs in college had me hanging out with many Deadheads and I remember very much when Jerry died and how sad my more seasoned friends were and how sad I was that I would never see a band I was starting to enjoy and relate to. Awkward in the bar scene as I came of age, it was Dead cover bands that helped me feel comfortable and learn to let go, dance, hear the music, and not worry about what others thought. I started going to Phish shows in '96 and was completely blown away. Throughout the years, I always felt somewhat inferior that I didn't go on tour or live the life that accompanied the music that I loved. I was focused on a career and believed that one day I would have the opportunity to travel and experience life beyond a weekend. Those years passed and the state of the world took grasp and I enjoyed being a weekend warrior with Phish and then bands like moe. and Umphrey's McGee after Phish went on hiatus. But, it was always the Dead that was the grounding thread and constant comfort in my life. Cover bands, bootlegs, and the occasional times I was able to see JGB, Phil/Trey, Phil & Friends, Ratdog, and Further. The Dead was there as the unifying music with folks of all ages at bars, town fairs, parties, and concerts on the green (I live in Vermont). The Dead was there as the soundtrack to planting my gardens and planning my marriage. The Dead was there for cooking and loving and road trips - both psychedelic and to visit family. And the Dead was there when Phish came back and the scene got too harsh and something I could not handle anymore. To me, when there was nothing left to play and no more party left to be had, it was the Grateful Dead that brought calm, perspective, and peace. It's been over four years since my husband and I went to any big shows and we're very content living in the mountains, working hard by day, and stewarding our land when not plugging through to make ends meet. A few years ago we discovered a gentle, old school festival in New Hampshire - Jerry Jam - and we have been quite content spending time with or Grateful Dead family there (I just turned 39). When Fare Thee Well was announced, we had already been saving money and planning our first vacation since getting married in 2011 - interestingly during July 4th weekend. That night, we decided to buy plane tickets and switch our vacation plans to going for a CID package. I remembered the past 20 years of always waiting for that time when we could travel, and how that didn't really turn out the way I thought when I made those decisions many years ago to focus on a career and not tours and travel. We looked at each other and said, "we need this, otherwise, why have we been working so hard and waiting for the right time to do more than a semi- local show or a sate park camping trip?" So we booked the plane and had no idea these shows would be such a crazy demand. We didn't do mail order because we didn't think we would have a problem getting a CID travel package. Were we wrong! Needless to say, we didn't get CID, even with multiple computers, browsers, etc. And we didn't get TM either. But we had made the decision to go. Luckily, I have a cousin in Chicago, so we coordinated a place to stay and moved out of the mindset of a hotel/vip vacation and into how to get tickets. We purchased two 3-day passes side stage, 100 section on Ebay for just a little under what a CID travel package would cost. I understand that is crazy to many, but to us, we had already been planning for a certain level of cost, so we went for it. We feel comfortable with the purchase and have had good communication with the seller, who, like a few different sellers we have come across on Ebay, are heads, but are selling to cover other costs. I know that is awful to many folks on this board, but to us, it felt like the safest thing to do and we just have to trust the tickets will get mailed to us in mid-June. I wanted to not only share my story and experience because I felt like sharing and connecting, but also because through this experience we have learned that Ticketmaster will not transfer tickets from one account to another, even though many sellers are saying they will do that. It is not an option with these shows and our seller has shared all of the correspondence with TM. So, as folks start to look at scalping options and Ebay, please be forewarned, this is not an option. If you purchase through Ebay, the only guarantee that you will get the tickets is researching the seller and trusting they will mail you the tickets in June in time for your departure. Many of the Ebay packages say they will transfer the tickets via TM, but it can't be done for these shows. I have looked for other info on this on the web and through Phantasy Tour threads and have found nothing, so I felt like it would be useful to share. Yes, we are paying well more than face, and I understand there are many judgements with that, but it was less than what we are seeing on TiqIQ, Stubhub, etc. and it was the decision we made. I wish everyone the very best in their quests for tickets and journey through life and the music. Much Love and Light from Vermont...
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

11 years 5 months
Permalink

Yeah that one was never on my radar since I was never a big fan of the 80's...granted Brent was amazing and really got the dead sound, but Jerry seemed to be in and out depending on the degree of his habit at that stage...that said, Althea was another that just grabs you and is haunting...two perfect songs, Jer was always magnificent and Hunter, well Hunter is and always was one of the best poets/lyricists to ever grace this fine planet...amazing how both were such kindred spirits and kind souls to the core...I see interviews with Hunter and I think, god that guy is so humble and thoughtful about those he loves...truly what the dead embodied.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 6 months
Permalink

I here you I am in the same boat brother my faith in friends got me scammed at 400 last night i am still holding out faith that I can make it to the show to represent my pops. Good man hooked me on jerry when I was young. I'm to young for the dead shows they ca,e tomdenver when was in high school but I was Metallica then. Have a great show peace I call it the Toledo Ohio feast Craigslist sucks
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 7 months
Permalink

50 Days to get my pinky for the 50. Shitballs
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 6 months
Permalink

There's not much you can do if you live across the country. The expense of the trip mandates that you have to look at the scalper market differently. You have a friend to stay with which will reduce your cost. I'm in a hotel. I'll be $5000 into it without even ticket cost. Like you, it's not sensible to wait til two weeks before the shows to buy tickets. First and foremost, you have to get a ticket otherwise a) the expense to be in Chicago is all wasted and b) you won't see the show. Secondary to that is getting a cheap ticket and that just plays out differently if you are local versus from afar.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 6 months
Permalink

I've been watching mostly Sunday and 3 day. Numbers of 3 day have been holding and prices more or less the same since the start of the week. Looks to me like additional tix have been added to Sunday, but most if not all have been in the GA field section. There doesn't appear to be any sales in the GA field. There are small movements down in GA field prices, but overall they haven't really come down. Low was around $1300. There are a couple at $1100 and $1200 now, but the rest are still holding at $1300+. The low for Sunday has dropped but not by much and that's all been in the worst sections. I've been watching some of the better sections specifically and they haven't moved in price and there haven't been additonal tickets added. Those sections had some sales. So, it makes sense. Prices holding in those sections with small movements down in sections with no sales.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 6 months
Permalink

How did you get scammed for $400? Please elaborate.
user picture

Member for

16 years 11 months
Permalink

Don't be suprised if something big happens in SF Bay Area later this year after Chicago.
user picture

Member for

16 years 5 months
Permalink

Good post, Sam3b - appreciate the knowledge. I too have been watching like a hawk, daily. Asides from available tickets, I'm watching tickets sold and for 300 level seats with a stage view, there are pairs and pairs selling in the $1,750-$1,950 range. As I posted earlier, some are TM tix, and some are the commemorative MO tix - neither of which are physically in anyone's hands. I for one do not think these shows will follow any of the usual or customary secondary market trends regarding prices. I say this because of: 1.) the unprecedented uniqueness of a single venue, 3-show 50th anniversary celebration, 2.) the legacy of a multi-generational fan base, and, 3.) the purchasing power of the buyer (there are many, many deadheads TODAY that can and WILL pay to see the boys one last time - times 3 shows). I would welcome other thoughts on this. Though ticketless for now, I have air and hotel booked and I'm not about to cancel either.
user picture

Member for

14 years 8 months
Permalink

bariumoxygen lawrencium lithium oxygen carbon potassium sulfur just release some freakin' GD. 6/10/73 1/6/78 1/7/78 1/11/78 9/20/70 Well, come on! I'm so happy, 'cause today i found my friends they're in my head I'm so trippy, but that's okay, cause so are you We've broken our mirrors (mirror shatters) Sunday morning is everyday for all I care And I'm not scared Light my candles in a daze Cause I've found God yeah yeah yeah yeah I'm so happy but that's okay I shaved my head And I'm not sad And just maybe I'm to blame for all I've heard But I'm not sure I'm so excited, I can't wait to meet you there (in Chicago for FTW) But I don't care (I'm not going, and am glad I ain't playing this ticket nonsense game) I'm so corny but that's okay My will is good I like 'em, I'm not gonna crack I miss 'em, I'm not gonna crack I love 'em, I'm not gonna crack I spilled you; one man gathers
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

It was mentioned here yesterday I think that TM tix are not transferable....not sure how, but what's your take on this...I know CID VIP packages can not be scalped, because the potential scalpee or buyer must produce a copy of the original purchasers drivers license or other picture ID as well as original credit card used for purchase and a letter authorizing the transfer. CID tix will not be available til 10 am CST on July 3rd.....for pick up in Chicago.
user picture

Member for

9 years 6 months
Permalink

There are a lot of happy people over on the facebook limbo page in the last 48 hours. Those of you in limbo, keep the faith!
user picture

Member for

16 years 5 months
Permalink

Hey now rgergelis: I've never heard of a TM ticket not being transferrable. TM even has an option now on their web site that let's you do so. Worst case, the ticket owner can print a hard copy and FedEx to the buyer. CID I distinctly remember offers an "out" on their package and a transfer. Not sure of the specifics but the CID package owner has to personally contact them and provide all the details. I wouldn't think CID cares of tranfer pricing (i.e. uplift scalp) but rather the new CID package owner. My two cents...
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

I just got done with CID and transfer even within a nuclear family is no easy process...if my boy goes instead of me he needs my drivers license, my credit card and a signed letter authorizing his use of the select package purchased by me....the letter is the easy part, but what scalper is gonna give up his/her license and original credit card for the sake of profit? Again, I did read on one of these sub forums about the special nature of this event and that TM seats may not be transferable, I was at a Springsteen gig in Cleveland and in addition to the TM ticket had to have my credit card swiped....all in all some scary shit, considering the risk of identity theft. Oh well, back to the grindstone....Peace....
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

11 years 5 months
Permalink

So what I am hearing is that there are lot of scalpers out there that got scalped and unless a kind soul brings you in with them, you as a ticket purchaser are f'd...now that raises the question of people who purchase from resellers - a good example are the tickets that Roadking sold here. They were purchased from a reseller (like stubhub - but not stubhub) with a view, BEFORE the TM sale, so they were decent seats for a semi-decent price. (aside: Roadking IS a head and sold the tix to another person on this site for what he paid for them - still above face value, but he did not sell them for the $1200+ they are going for online when he sold them; as I have said before, solid dude) I wonder how that all works - because I seriously doubt the venues would make issues for a reseller. Also as an aside, I also suspect that if that IS indeed the case (a credit card needed to swipe that the reseller has entered) that Roadking would walk the dude he sold to in...
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

That's what I'm doing with my son in Chicago, will sign for the CID tix and get him and his lady in the venue....Still don't see how even TM tix are being sold...if they're not in hand, it's a faith thing, I have no faith in scalpers at all.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

All I can share is my experience....I bought one, want to pass the tix to my son and his better half, tix not in hand til 7/3 to be picked up in Chicago by me....or him with my license, my credit card and my letter authorizing the transfer of ownership....that's what I was told...
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 6 months
Permalink

Did you call and speak to someone? I read they can change name at their "discretion". Still, that would not comfort me spending $6,600 not knowing.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

13 years 7 months
Permalink

Check your pm
user picture

Member for

12 years 8 months
Permalink

SSIA. Anyone fitting that description, or who knows of any of 'the usual suspects' send em on over. ;) Joke of the day: Had an old yellow dog with no nose once. (Fill in the blank) :p See ya behind the SBD. Look for the guy wearing the tye-dye, w a beard & ponytail. Ya can't miss him...
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 6 months
Permalink

I don't think it will be "normal" either. I happened to get seats in 350 via TM. IMO, not the absolute worst, but darn close. I'm in though and I probably won't even be in the seat especially if behind the stage is real crappy. If GA field hit $500, I would buy them (probably tons of people would) and ditch the 350 seats. I got to think there are a bunch of people like me with seats behind the stage that are looking for the same. I bet there are many people on stubhub trying to sell their side or behind the stage seat to finance a decent one. If so, that would mean the number of tix on stubhub doesn't represent the true number of tix available. It would be lower. I really don't think any of the good seats are going to drop much below 5x face if that. Crappy seats are moving toward 5x. I could see those moving down to say ~3x. Lot of people not going to spend for travel, etc and sit behind the stage. Plus no one really knows what the stage layout will be.
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 7 months
Permalink

I hear there are tapers tickets available! who would have thought
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

11 years 5 months
Permalink

No way - where are those listed? (I'm not a taper and didn't request taper's tix cuz well - those should be for tapers!) If that is the case, then I am totally letting this current turtle head that is poking out fill my britches..THAT is bullshit. That is sacred ground...
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 7 months
Permalink

If you had tickets for all three nights, wanted to give a miracle to someone on this board or a friend. Which one would you give?
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 7 months
Permalink

I was just poking fun at know one saying they sent in for tapers tickets and got denied
user picture
Default Avatar

Member for

9 years 7 months
Permalink

I was just poking fun at know one saying they sent in for tapers tickets and got denied
user picture

Member for

9 years 7 months
Permalink

Where are those listed, I mailed for taper knowing I didn't have much chance, hard to believe anyone would MO for one and sell it