Music Downloads = Expensive Concerts? 698
melonman writes "According to an article at BBC News, $250 tickets for the latest Madonna tour are the fault of P2P file sharing. 'Before the advent of illegal downloads, artists had an incentive to underprice their concerts, because bigger audiences translated into higher record sales, Professor Krueger argues. But now, he says, the link between the two products has been severed, meaning that artists and their managers need to make more money from concerts and feel less constrained in setting ticket prices.' And it seems David Bowie agrees. Is 'the fans always get fleeced' the rock industry's equivalent to Moore's Law?"
If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:5, Insightful)
If you were Madonna and her management, would you rather sell:
10,000 tickets at $250 each, totalling $2,500,000
or sell:
20,000 tickets at $100 each, totalling $1,000,000 ?
In Madonna's case, she'll likely sell out at the hire price anyway and pocket $5,000,000.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:3, Funny)
The subsequent decrease in demand for concert tickets will be due to P2P too. Not the high prices. I'm sure they've got another professor that will completely agree. So it must be true.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:5, Insightful)
Either way, the article misses the point. Most artists see a very small percentage of revenues from record sales and rely on concerts to make their money.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:3, Insightful)
Other merchandising doesn't count for this argument unless you can "share" it by P2P.
The argument is flawed at best.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:5, Insightful)
Concert seats are a fixed supply, so traditional economics apply. The point where the demand drops off is the proper price point. If that's $100, $200, $300, it doesn't matter. Basic economics.
But these rules don't apply to music downloads, where the supply is infinite. THERE, the idea is to sell for as little as possible to cover your costs, and profit based on quantity.
This DOES tie back to the concert sales, but not like they're claiming. The more copies of your song there are floating around, the more people are going to hear it, and maybe want to see you perform live. That translates into HIGHER demand for those scarce concert tickets, which drives the price up.
Subsidising the concert ticket prices with CD sales just skews the model. Let 'em charge what they can get, and the market will sort it all out.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:5, Insightful)
I remember some people complaining about the ticket prices for the Eagles "Hell Freezes Over" tour - which for golden circle were at least as high as these madonna ones (some went in excess of $750 for some shows, IIRC).
That was in 1994.
Concertgoers have been getting fleeced by some (though not all!) big-name acts for a lot longer than P2P has been around.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:5, Insightful)
*I* sure as hell wouldn't pay $250 to sit in a hockey arena and watch a Madonna Concert. For that matter, I wouldn't pay that much to see a music act I really liked.
But my solution to that is to not go to such concerts. Instead of paying $200+ to see the Rolling Stones when they came to Minnesota last year, I spent about $50 to see The White Stripes instead. (And, from all reports, I saw the better show.)
There's no such thing as an "unfair" price for entertainment. It's not like the people that can't afford to go to Madonna's concert are being denied health care or something.
If seeing that elderly skank wiggle her ass while singing through a vocoder is worth $250 to you, then more power to you. Go. Enjoy the show.
If it's not, and you really like Madonna, then stay home and jerk off to the cover of your old vinyl copy of the "Like a Virgin" LP. You'll probably get just as much out of the experience.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:4, Funny)
True. But at the concert, someone else cleans up the mess.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:5, Insightful)
What does an artist owe to the fans? Nothing.
Yeah, a "big name" got big because a shitload of people were willing to spend money on their records and t-shirts, but those people got records and t-shirts that they were happy with out of the deal. Fair exchange.
The fact that you bought all of U2's old stuff (even "October") does not buy you the right to dictate the artistic direction they choose to go next.
Likewise, the fact that you wore fishnet crop-tops in High School and know the words to "Express Yourself" by heart does not endow you in the inalienable right to get in to Madonna's concert for fifty bucks when others are willing to pay five times that for the same seat.
The fair way to set any price is supply and demand. There's a finite supply of Madonna tickets, and plenty of demand. If she sold the tickets for $50, scalpers would buy them all up and sell them for $250 on eBay. Fans would pay the same to get in, but Madonna's business venture would get less of it.
Economics 101.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:4, Insightful)
But Bono and Madonna never asked for your loytalty. They are not friends of yours. They are just people who recorded music in the hopes that other people would like it enough to buy it.
The CEO of Target is where he is because I (along with a lot of other people) buy clothes in his store. That doesn't make him somebody that should be expected to "respect" me in any way whatsoever. If he wanted to turn Target into a chain of boutiques which only sold $300 jeans, that would be entirely up to him. I wouldn't feel "betrayed", or like the jeans I bought there in the past any less... I'd just look for another store to buy new jeans from.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:3, Insightful)
If Target started selling $300 jeans, and people were buying it, they certainly wouldn't need me and my 3-pair-of-$20-jeans-per-year.
Same with U2 making millions off their silly "Zoo TV" tour back in the 90's. Fans of "War" and "Boy" really didn't matter to them anymore.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:5, Insightful)
It depends. Are you loyal enough sell your house pay whatever is asked? Are you loyal enough to quit your job and follow Madonna wherever she goes?Or does loyalty go out the window when enough money gets involved?
Loyalty (Score:4, Insightful)
We are talking business here. No freaking charity, no loyalty. Money first, faith last.
Why Americans are so unhappy about their two greatest inventions - show business and entertainment industry???
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:3, Insightful)
Basically it works like this, there are a limited number of concert tickets available. Madonna can underprice these tickets in an effort to placate fans that don't have a basic grasp of economics, but that doesn't necessarily mean that these fans will actually be able to get into the show. Worse, it basically guarantees that a great deal of the profit that *could* be made on a concert goes not to the artist in question, but to scalpers on Ebay.
Seriously, when was the last time that you actually got your
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:3, Insightful)
In the 80s and early 90s, it was fairly commonplace for pop acts to sell concert seats at a loss, since album sales were so profitable for the company, and the band made a killing on merchandise.
These days, most record labels are money-losing divi
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:5, Funny)
Well, if that 5 is a typo and you meant to type a 1, then congratulations, you've succeeded.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:3, Insightful)
So this is really about sour grapes on his part because people don't like his new stuff, they only want the old stuff. He just wants to blame P2P for his lost abilities.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:5, Interesting)
The argument I hear when I complain about this is that "he must get fed up of playing his old stuff". My response is: I don't give a fuck what he's "fed up of". I paid $60 to hear the stuff I like - his old stuff. David Bowie *knows* this and decided to play his new shit that's just awful.
I also went to see Bjork one time... It was in Seattle, at "the pier". She wasn't allowed to run her fireworks because we were standing on wood over water, so she got all sulky and did a short show without an encore. Who doesn't do an encore?! So the whole audience stood there like idiots chanting "encore encore". 10 minutes passed... We all looked at each other and slowly walked out, annoyed.
In short, fuck concerts, especially those of the old artists who don't enjoy them, don't care what the audience (the fucking CUSTOMER!) want, and are only doing it to finance their latest castle/porsche combo. Fuck 'em.
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:3, Interesting)
At this point in my life it's not the price of the ticket that prevents me from going, it's the lack of entertainment value. I live 2 miles from a major venue and I only go there to take my kids to the circus.
Exception: I might be willing to pay $250 for a Pink Floyd concert. Their Division-Bell-promoting conc
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:If Madonna prices it, they will buy... (Score:3, Insightful)
thats fine... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:thats fine... (Score:2)
This is exactly what should happen. (Score:5, Insightful)
This is how the record industry, wait, music industry should be. The digital music is the advert to get you to go to the live gigs Where they make their money.
People complain endlessly about the lack of things for teenagers to do, and a gigging culture would benefit that endlessly.
This would have the benefit of solving most of our problems with "pop" today. You can't sing live? You can't make any money. On the plus side you can rapidly cut down on the people and skills you need to smooth you recorded sounds waves into something presentable, in your "adverts."
Music will not die. You can kill a record industry, but you cant kill a music industry. It's whether people except that maybe being a successful musician shouldn't mean that you earn more money than a brain surgeon.
The powerhouses try to tell us that if piracy kills them that will be the end of music full stop. And that would be a Bad Thing. But it wouldn't be the end, and a world with free music and constantly gigging artists, could even be better.
Re:Not Everybody Goes To Live Shows (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess thats about right too. But I argued about creating a gig culture, not that one already exists. How many people playing on the radio ever play near you. I'm not saying they should, or could, play gig's everywhere - but I do believe it should be there primary vocation - not going on tv to push themselves.
Most bands will never make it as a profitable venture. I'd like to know exactly how all of this digital
Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
And the problem with that is
Why should the artist get the lion's share of the money? What about the people that wrote the music, wrote the lyrics, recorded and mixed the tracks, corrected the artist's singing flaws during editing, the people who created the cover art, the people who advertise and market the album, etc. etc. etc.? Why should the self-absorbed drug addict who shows up 2 hours late and puts in a couple days' worth of work singing the songs that were written for him/her be awarded a disproportionate amount of the money? Just because its their picture on the cover?
Haven't you learned anything from INXS? American Idol? Talented singers are a dime a dozen, and totally interchangeable. Why should the people who actually STUDIED a craft (sound engineers, marketing agents, talent scouts, cover artists, songwriters, etc.) get shafted out of a fair salary, so that the egomaniacal "artist" can bling themselves out like some sort of movie star?
They're not curing cancer. They're just singing some songs. Since when does that entitle them to millions and millions of dollars?
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
ugh. i just love more and more punk, indie and whatnot scene...
you know, the one where band members THEMSELVES (gasp !) write music & lyrics (that, suprisingly actually mean something besides "baby, oh yeah, lalala") ?
the one where recordings are made in small studios and artist flaws are not digitally eliminated for months ?
the one where band members themselves draw/create album art ?
the one where most advertising is by word of mouth, concerting and such ?
yes, such a mechanism does not earn billions for big studios and everybody around them, but isn't that something most people are happy with ?
yes, artists don't get millions (or an _impression_ that they are getting them...), but it's funny that in that case people go to concerts for a very low fee ($2) and get recordings from artists directly or with very little resellers. even if they already have full doscography in their computers and then some more.
they don't pay for these albums because they are unable to get to the music other way - they do so because they really like the music, the atmosphere in concerts and attitude by the band/artist.
now, i need to see one band in latvia again, as previous time i was not clear enough to buy all their cds
no, really, ignore music stores. if you are interested in local artists, most of them sell their recordings themselves. if they are from another country, usually you can order throufh internet or wait for a gig nearby. and that will result in a good music, happy artists - and happy you. yeah, and world peace, of course.
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Gosh, in the good old days, the popular bands all wrote their own music and performed it live. You're either trolling, or one of these young whipper-snappers that doesn't know what real music is. Why should some jackass writer get revenue for life+70 years for spending 20 minutes writing some lyrics? I agree with you too - why should someone who does 20 takes in a studio followed by a lot of editing be given that same benefit for their "talent"? Same goes for studio musicians.
If someone claims to have talent, let them make a living performing. Oh right, that's what the article says is happening...
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Because they're working on speculation. They don't get paid unless the music sells.
What about the people that wrote the music, wrote the lyrics,
They are just as much "the artists" as the musicians and singers.
recorded and mixed the tracks,
They are paid a salary.
corrected the artist's singing flaws during editing,
They are paid a salary.
the people who created the cover art,
They are paid a salary.
the people who advertise and market the album, etc. etc. et
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Insightful)
Then the article gave the break-down of where their CD sales went. It went to the label, the distributors, the RIAA, the marketers, the recording studios, and so on. In the end, each band member made about 40 grand. We're talking supers
Precisely. (Score:2, Insightful)
Additionally, high-end acts (supergroups, mega pop stars, etc) have always had insane pricing on their appearances anyhow.
So I don't see how something like this is a humongous surprise to anyone with enough neurons to form a synapse.
In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
"We hate to do it, 'cause the fans really have enjoyed the other key signatures. But we can't afford black keys on our pianos anymore. Sorry. It's 'cause of piracy. So really it's the listeners' fault."
Please use RIAA radar [magnetbox.com] to avoid giving these tools another cent, ever.
Re:Huh? (Score:2)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
The rapid selling out of concerts is evidence that the tickets were actually priced far below what the market would bear. In further evidence of this, scalpers generally could sell tickets for costs 2x or greater the face value. Hence, why I said "maybe yes". The scalpers were actually the ones selling the tickets at whatever the market would bear.
As the article points out, the goal of touring used to be as much (or perhaps more) about promotion as money making. You needed to tour to support an album. I can remember many concert t-shirts with a "sold-out" logo accross them. I think it used to be important to the promoters that a concert sold-out, even if it meant a loss of ticket revenue.
I think that the concert promoters have since realized that they are better served by raising ticket prices to whatever the market will bear. Essentially they are grabbing for themselves that extra money that used to go to scalpers.
or... (Score:2, Insightful)
Seriously. $250 per ticket? Whatever happened to "making music for the purpose of making music?"
Re:or... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:or... (Score:3, Interesting)
Had to have existed in the first place for something to have happened to it.
$250 for ANY concert ticket (I don't give a damn if it's front row) is ridiculous. I seriously hope no one pays for this. I just don't understand how artists and record labels and agents are getting the idea that raising the prices of their respective products will combat piracy or ease the "negative effects" piracy is having on their sales (for now, let's just ignore all the p
Re:or... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:or... (Score:2)
With an album called "Meterial Girl", I don't think that has ever been in question. ;-)
People still do it. They're called indie musicians, and they're not neatly as rich. Some people actually turn a profit while making music for the same of it, because it resonates with people.
Madonna has been part of the super, mega hyped level of acts with huge levels of product
Madonna was quoted as saying.. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Madonna was quoted as saying.. (Score:2)
"(...) and to steer consumers toward such legal download sites as Pressplay, MusicNet and Rhapsody"
What about iTunes? I guess these people don't like Apple all that much.
Re:Madonna was quoted as saying.. (Score:3, Funny)
Right.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Oh, and by price of a barrel of oil, I mean CEO salaries and bonuses.
mmmmm executive greed mmmmmmmm
Re:Right.... (Score:3, Funny)
And then there is, of course, good old fashioned greed.
Re:Right.... (Score:3, Funny)
(What? It's no more absurd than some of the other insanity we hear from this group.)
Re:Right.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Not really (Score:2)
Brain dead BBS writer? (Score:5, Interesting)
Let's see: these are artists who have made millions upon millions, so the need to tour is just about zero. So they jack the price up.
Conclusion: illegal file downloaders cost live performance goers piles of cash. Um, yeah. Perhaps a better read is money hungry artists will fleece anyone they can for their new multimillion dollar home. Perhaps royalties *are* down on has been artists because of a combination of lower recording sales and their own stale presence on the market. So all they have is to repackage themselves doing classics live.
That doesn't really support the conclusion very well. Then they go interviewing people who bought scalper tickets to a sporting event to somehow prop up the story? Please.
Article is incomplete: (Score:5, Insightful)
When Robert Plummer states that artists need to charge more for their concerts to make up for sagging records sales due to file sharing, he conveniently leaves out the important fact that it is only the most popular artists that actually see a decline. As David Blackburn of Harvard illustrated in his paper, On-Line Piracy and Recorded Music Sales [harvard.edu] (PDF warning), the record sales of relatively unknown artists benefit from the exposure P2P file sharing gives them.
So, if the big names want to charge outrageous sums for their concerts, let them. As of now, the tatic seems to be working, but as the situation develops, I think they'll wind up pricing themselves right out of the market.
BULLSHIT!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
The prices are due to the public's willingness to pay $250 to see Madonna. The public is either stupid are has more money than sense. None of it has anything to do with P2P. If the public refused to pay $250 by simply not going to any of her shows, you'd see her tickets going for $50 in no time.
but but (Score:2)
Nothing New... (Score:2)
People still go to concerts? (Score:2)
They forget who makes them what they are! (Score:2)
Without us, these stars would be working in a drive through at Taco Bell. The best to handle this is by not buying their overpriced music and not attending their shows. Their arrogant selfish people who feel that making millions isn't enough?!?! Gimme a break! I haven't bought a CD in over 10 years and have no plans to do so in the future.
http://religiousfreaks.com/ [religiousfreaks.com]Conclusion correct, reasoning flawed (Score:2, Insightful)
*sigh* is this prof on the take? (Score:2)
With CD sales the artists (with some exceptions) generally get such a small portion of the take. There's countless stories of musicians/bands with number 1 singles/albums and are broke (and not necessarily from living in excess) at the time their album is number 1.
You obviously go on the road
Concerts are where the money is... (Score:2)
Artists have always complained how little money is left over from record sales after the blood-sucking record companies extract all of the various contractual fees.
Finally, the Music Industry Gets it (Score:3, Insightful)
Bits can be copied. DRM will never work. So instead of praying for better DRM, let the music be free and serve as an *advertisement* for your concerts!
I've seen ticket prices as high as $400, $500 and up for seats to shows and that's fine. It's called supply and demand. Fans can't copy a concert seat, so they pay the going price.
Of course, all that being said, I think that the RIAA is wrong when they say that CD sales are down as a result of P2P. CD sales are down because the music sucks.
Total BS (Score:2)
I call BS! (Score:2, Interesting)
The artists they name in the article have made a good record in decade.
Bowie has advised his fellow performers: "You'd better be prepared for doing a lot of touring, because that's really the only unique situation that's going to be left."
Seems to me Bowie is saying play more shows not raise the prices so high nobody will show up.
Coorelation != Causation (Score:2)
- All home prices go up because some people do home improvements
- The minimum wage keeps increasing because the baby boomers are getting older
- The average lifespan of a human keeps increasing because we're evolving into a superhuman race of mutant beings, of which the Q continuum fears greatly.
free downloads = popularity (Score:2)
Bowie agrees? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Bowie agrees? How about Prince? (Score:4, Interesting)
Bowie's a god and all, but his live performances have always been less than stellar.
BBH
Maybe if people didn't care so much about music (Score:2)
Sigh.
Is this really that bad a thing? (Score:2)
But if it is true, is it really so bad? Some will pay $250 a person to see Madonna play. OK, fine, it's their money and they can do what they like with it.
Meanwhile, we have access to P2P software that lets us sample all sorts of new music. Then I can spend my own money (and probably significantly less than $250) on seeing A Given Independent Band.
Over time, maybe fewer people will go an
inverse that.. (Score:2)
The upside is more people will go to bars and see new bands for cheap instead of going to see big label riaa pushed artists.
A simple calculation (Score:2)
If the cost of the ticket will buy more than half of a given artist's major releases, than I won't think of going.
Specific example from recently.
Depesh Mode is coming to Kansas City next month. Tickets are around $100 per person for the cheapest seats.
At $15 per disk I can buy 6 1/2 of their major releases since their start = no sale.
When you have to spend $200 for a night out with your SO, unless it's "extra special"
Rhode Island Aeronautical Academy (Score:2)
Professor Krueger of Rhode Island Aeronautical Academy. Their athletic teams jerseys read "RIAA" for short.
I believe their mascot is the Shark.We need concert management! (Score:2, Funny)
Logic Error (Score:5, Funny)
Well if you put it that way, of course it'll be true. This is a common mistake with the assignment operator. What you meant to say was "Music Downloads == Expensive Concerts?" This will test to see if the statement is true, then return.
In what language? (Score:3, Informative)
In Pascal and Maple, = is a comparison operator and := is an assignment operator. In the BASIC languages, = is a comparison operator in all contexts except LET contexts.
Re:Logic Error (Score:3, Funny)
Well if you put it that way, of course it'll be true. This is a common mistake with the assignment operator. What you meant to say was "Music Downloads == Expensive Concerts?" This will test to see if the statement is true, then return.
I'm not sure if that '?' is syntactically correct. Unless you remapped it to mean ';' using a global replace or something....
Is that all? (Score:3, Funny)
Concerts have historically been the artist's main (Score:4, Insightful)
There's really no change here.
It's been reported time and time again, that file-sharing has had very little or NO impact on music sales. Do a search withing
I stand by my own opinion that the majority of music file sharers are the same type of folks who used to sit by the radio with cassette-recorder and recorded music off the air. They were NEVER going to buy the premium product, unless they absolutely loved the music.
There seems to be fewer high quality albums - ie, albums with more than one or two tracks actually worth listening to. Is it any wonder that sales have been declining?
Now, let's add in those people who are still holding a grudge with the music industry over their CD price fixing and their attempts at forcing price changes on the legitimate online music sales.
Does the term "Shooting one's self in the foot" come to mind? Or would "blowing one's own head off" be more appropriate?
Bullshit, this has been going on before napster (Score:3, Insightful)
They're just old and don't want to tour as much.
What boggles me is that anyone would pay that much to see fading performers.
One girl I date long ago was a huge Paul Simon fan. So I got her tickets for her birthday. They were at least $100 a piece. She want a shirt? 30 bucks for some sweat shop labored fucking shirt.
Not hardly (Score:2)
No, it's a side effect of conspicuous consumption. Quite frankly, people who spend $250 on a concert ticket are going to have no problem shelling out $15 for a CD - they might not be able to make rent, but music's important.
China Leads the Way (Score:2)
The gist was that CDs in China are so pirated, recorded music is considered nothing more than advertising and a cost of doing business for both the artists and studios. With the street price on a CD somewhere around $1, the money is made on live performances -- what can NOT be truely duplicated -- and endorsements.
The article was exploring the directions that the U.
Artists and managers and record companies and RIAA (Score:2)
$250? (Score:2)
Right effect, wrong cause (Score:2)
I smell subsidy! (Score:2)
Grateful Dead (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't like Madonna, but I'm thrilled (Score:3, Informative)
The ticket cost me $13 online. The parking will probably cost more than that
I am very excited.
They ask what they can get (Score:3, Insightful)
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
At $250 I better get laid by Madonna @ the concert (Score:3, Funny)
Save Your Money: go to bars! (Score:4, Interesting)
I go to about one or two live music shows per week (mostly local bands) and a $5 cover is about right. Last night I splurged and saw a famous touring band, and even that was only $20. And guess who had more fun: me drunkenly banging my head within arm's reach of Exodus shouting "Last Act! Of Defiance!", or someone peering at Madonna through binoculars.
Whose fault? (Score:3, Funny)
They could replace all that money with some talent and still put on shows.
Bullshit (Score:4, Insightful)
This is just plain FUD from the record industry and their puppets, like Madonna.
Most musicians make money with concerts, because the share they have in record sales is awfully low. Everytime you buy a CD, you're not paying for the valuable work of the musician, most of the money goes directly inside the gaping throat of the record industry. We feed them loads of money and they create plastic, lab-made stars to fill the airwaves with.
In my dream world, real artists will start to sell or give away their music direcly in the Internet, and make money from shows. They're not making big money selling records, anyway, so what's the problem? This would be a great incentive to make shows more interesting and worthwhile going to. I personally think nothing beats a live show.
Plastic-made pop stars and record companies can just go fuck themselves and maybe we could start giving good artists more opportunities.
The delta (Score:2)
I gave up on concerts years ago. Everyone just stands and screams, so the volume is cranked to the point where you either wear earplugs or suffer hearing damage. The folks near you are either drunk, high, peeing at their seat, throwing up or all of the above, and generally rate a 9.5 on the Asshole Scale.
Whee. :-\
Re:Overpaying is overpaying... (Score:2)
A song or album to listen to is copy-able and share-able hence the pleasure and price ratio is quite flexible and subject to people calling it overpriced.
A live concert in some venue is a moment in time. No amount of video taping/filming will capture the full moment. They've put a price on it and if people will pay the money to go see them, all the power to them. But at least you know that market forces will
This seat... (Score:2, Funny)