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by jorisw 2 days ago
What incentive would Oasis have to help bring down the prices for their own shows anyway?
5 comments

Having seen shows with super-premium prices at the front, with half the place being non-reactive to the show because people paying extra are not actually huge fans but huge wallets, yeah you need to put down prices and get those front tickets to fans if you want to have nice shows
> Having seen shows with super-premium prices at the front, with half the place being non-reactive to the show because people paying extra are not actually huge fans but huge wallets, yeah you need to put down prices and get those front tickets to fans if you want to have nice shows

Probably depends on the band. An older "legacy" band like Oasis may not (my speculation) be affected by that, because it will have a lot of wealthy, older fans that both like the band and can pay super-premium prices.

What you talk about probably applies more to newer, hotter bands where the enthusiasm is with younger and/or poorer people.

You're basically describing my idea of hell.
Idk about Oasis specifically, but there have been multiple examples of other bands fighting to keep the concert tickets affordable for their fans. Nirvana did that for example.

And even if you explicitly want to charge as much as possible from your fans, why claim that you have no influence over the price?

> but there have been multiple examples of other bands fighting to keep the concert tickets affordable for their fans. Nirvana did that for example.

Tickets price landscape radically changed in the last 30 years. They incremented between 3x to 5x (or even more) in that lapse of time, depending on the artist and venue, and accrued inflation doesn't explain it (quick search says that in the last 30 years in the Eurozone inflation grew ~85% and in the US ~110%)

Here is an interview with MTV where Nirvana are doing the maths of how much money they earn from ticket sales to their shows: https://youtube.com/shorts/anI0NT-_DRQ?si=abX0sy_C-XzxCIjG
I remember Oasis. They're the ones who literally pissed on the audience here back in the 90s.

The idea that they care if their fans live or die really comes down to whether they could get sponsors on board or not.

Can't find any evidence of this urination incident, got a link?
Mea culpa: upon waking up and being challenged, I realized that I had conflated the Shannon Hoon story and the [very real] Oasis "piss bomb" story into one.

If I'm really and truly honest, I still remember this happening quite clearly so consider this my own personal Mandela Effect moment.

However, there's an unforgiveable gap between fans throwing urine bottles around and my claim [that I very clearly remember Liam as the brother who pissed on an audience at Molson Park but can't prove it and now look like a dumbass] so I do sincerely apologize.

I think the word 'literally' has gone the way of the emdash
The em-dash has a fairly specific use. It's just that some people have decided that it indicates AI and can't resist trumpeting that supposed insight at every opportunity.
Well, they have some horror stories about them, so it's plausible, I just didn't find any evidence they specifically urinated on the audience.
literally has had two meanings for decades, maybe centuries

1) Literally Literally

2) Figuratively

It's semantic bleaching

Not sure why you're downvoted. People have literally been using literally both ways for at at least 25 years by my own observational record.

You know, "I could literally eat a horse." in which it is clearly understood that the speaker is not claiming that they could physically fit a horse inside their stomache.

Except in this case e.g. Shannon Hoon of Blind Melon actually did literally piss on the audience, so using the word literally to mean "not literally" is confusing because it's not obviously some exaggeration (and considering the timelines, the original comment may have been referring to a literal event but confusing who did it).
Literally literally didn't mean literally even when it meant literally and not figuratively

https://www.merriam-webster.com/grammar/very-actually-and-ot...

They don’t have control over the margins. They could set the MSRP as low as they want - the customer will still pay the same amount.
Presumably the don't want only old rich people and empty seats. Otherwise you could self-scalp all the tickets at the highest price possible, maximisung revenue for a single gig but making it so unfun/bad press that you come off worse.
I think a majority of old rich people is pretty much unavoidable at a return tour.
Why does Hacker News hate us old people so much? Of course, I usually only see old acts (the B52s / Devo show was great!) and most of the audiences for those are 60+ years old, like me. Next week, I'm seeing Steve Forbert!