Taylor Swift ticket debacle: senators grill Ticketmaster over firm’s mishandling of sales

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Washington DC
Monday, Jan 30, 2023
WASHINGTON – The Taylor Swift ticket debacle took center stage during a Senate hearing Tuesday, which examined the lack of competition within the ticketing industry and grilled Ticketmaster executive following the company’s mishandling of the music superstar’s concert tickets.
Swift fans were furious after Ticketmaster canceled its November general public ticket sale for Swift’s highly anticipated new tour. Several days of turbulence during the verified fan presale resulted in hundreds of thousands of snubbed fans who never got tickets.
Joe Berchtold, the president and CFO of Ticketmaster’s parent company Live Nation Entertainment, defended his company, testifying that “industrial-scale ticket scalping” and an unprecedented number of bots were responsible for the large-scale problems.
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More:Taylor Swift Ticketmaster debacle ramps up federal concerns, fans about tour tickets
“In hindsight, there are several things we could have done better,” Berchtold said. “And let me be clear, Ticketmaster accepts its responsibility as being the first line in defense against bots in our industry.”
Swift was not at the hearing.
Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., the chairwoman of the Judiciary Subcommittee on Competition Policy, Antitrust and Consumer Rights, previously criticized the company in a letter to the company’s President and CEO Michael Rapino.
Klobuchar was especially critical of Rapino, who assured lawmakers during a 2009 hearing that he was “confident” the merger would result in an “easy-access, one-stop platform” to deliver tickets.
“It appears that your confidence was misplaced,” Klobuchar wrote.
Criticism of Ticketmaster’s ticket-selling practices and lack of competition is not new. But it reached a crescendo last year after the mishandling of Swift’s upcoming Eras tour. The snafu resulted in major delays and errors in queues to purchase tickets.
Other music star fans and musicians, including Bruce Springsteen, Foo Fighters and Garth Brooks, have long criticized Ticketmaster’s practices. Among the biggest gripes: dynamic pricing, which adjusts pricing based on consumer demand, resulting in some fans being unable to purchase tickets.
The company’s monopoly in the entertainment industry has faced immense scrutiny dating back to its merger with Live Nation Entertainment in 2010, which eliminated Live Nation as its competitor.
Prior to the merger, Live Nation controlled 16.5% of the ticketing market, which cut into Ticketmaster’s previous 82.9% share of the ticketing market and left them with 66.4%, according to the Justice Department’s amended complaint over the merger.
Swift issued a scathing statement following Ticketmaster’s cancellation of future ticket sales, highlighting that she specifically asked the company if they could handle the demand for tickets to her shows.
“I’m not going to make excuses for anyone because we asked them, multiple times if they could handle this kind of demand and we were assured they could,” Swift stated. “It’s truly amazing that 2.4 million people got tickets, but it really pisses me off that a lot of them feel like they went through several bear attacks to get them.”