Dusty Ayres
Commodore
One of the reasons why the concert industry is in such dire straits:
Buying Backstage: Tommy and Gina who?
When did VIP go from Very Important Person to Very Important Purchase?
I guess Tommy and Gina had to settle for a tailgating BBQ in the Giant Stadium parking lot at this year’s Bon Jovi shows. Either that or settle for a glimpse at their “Livin’ on a Prayer” buddies from last row, high above the opposite end zone of the football field. Because that’s all a working-class couple will be able to shell out today.
Oh yeah. I should have started my blog today by saying a big “allegedly” to all that follows. Okay, let’s move on.
Who hasn’t been disheartened at the triple digit concert ticket prices in recent years? And the ever-rising cost of merch at the venues has been mind-boggling. VIP Packages seem to be the latest thing in helping musicians make a profit in this day-and-age where songs are purchased on an as-needed basis from laptop computers one at a time instead of albums on a whole at in-the-flesh record stores. Concert ticket sales are slow to say the least, and the old gimmics of making cash in the music industry have run dry.
Enter the VIP mentality. I mean, these new VIP Packages are meant to — according to their business-pushing associates — keep ‘true’ fans in the first few rows so they won’t have to pay outrageous scalper fees. Well, hate to break it to you. The VIP packages are already re-selling at marked-up prices and scalper fees on the internet. One “sold out” available bevy of VIP Packages to an upcoming band’s show (with a retail price of $1,850) was bidding at $8k and rising a few days ago on the internet.
Rewind to bring us all up-to-speed. I wasn’t fully aware of this new money-making angle until last week. I read a Facebook post promoting the choice of two VIP Packages for their artist. Cute pictures of the singer looking like a cardboard cut-out with the same pout on his face in the same spot, on the same tour bus, with interchangeable fans tucked by his side. He’s an okay fella, posed like this for the 25 years I’ve known him. I clicked on the link to see what this VIP was all about. Saw that this “pose” cost each fan $600 bucks a pop. Picking my jaw up from the floor, I called a friend whose response to me was that this was cheap. Six hundred dollars for a ticket to the show, a souvenir bandanna and a pose in the tour bus?
Buying Backstage: Tommy and Gina who?