Friday, January 27, 2012

Springsteen tickets go on sale today: Game on.


I’m not exactly an athlete, but today is opening day of the one sport that I’m a pro at.

Yes.

Springsteen tickets go on sale today.

Game on.

To the non-competitive fans out there, I know it doesn’t sound like much of an athletic activity, but trust me, it requires months of preparation, mental agility, cat-like reflexes, and the patience of a Buddhist monk.

If you’re smart like I am, you’re in constant training. There’s no off-season when you’re serious about getting Bruce tickets.

The preparation starts with location and a credit card. For any given tour, there are certain cities that are likely to get concerts. It’s important to anticipate which of these are within a reasonable driving distance (a twelve-hour radius is acceptable on your own, more if you have a second driver going with you), and to make sure that you’ve bought enough stuff with your credit card to rack up the mileage points to enable you to travel to the shows outside of that reasonable radius. I recommend charging all concert tickets on mileage credit cards, because then your tickets work toward your travel goals as well. This stage of the training process can take years, but if you’re an chronic shopper like I am, you can make training fun.

Next, you need to take up yoga. This is the part that’s hard for me. I’m not a patient person. If I’m going to work out, I want to run and lift heavy things. (Yes, like running toward sales and carrying shopping bags loaded with shoes. Shut up. I work out for real. Jerks.)


You see, to deal with Ticketmaster, you need yoga. Because Ticketmaster is the single most evil corporation in the history of the world. It’s a little-known fact that it has been around for hundreds of years, since LONG before you were able to buy tickets online, or by phone, or even in a kiosk (which was before my ticket-buying time). I actually have a theory that Ticketmaster was single-handedly responsible for the Kennedy assassination, the Holocaust, the assassination of Archduke Ferdinand (which started World War I), the Indonesian tsunami, George W. Bush, and the Microsoft corporation.


Seriously. The root of all modern evil.

And it’s apparently an unbreakable monopoly since the Live Nation merger, so there’s no way around dealing with them.

But you need yoga because it’s imperative that you are able to keep calm when dealing with Ticketmaster, even when you get the dreaded error message that tells you that there’s a problem processing your order when you pulled the exact seats that you wanted (GA, in my case—if it’s not the pit, it’s not perfect!), and you get thrown back into the queue, then told there are no tickets available.



Normally, when this happens, I turn into the Incredible Hulk. Literally. I turn green, sprout massive muscles, and run around smashing everything in my path yelling, “SARA MAD!” But with yoga’s meditation techniques, I’ve been able to control my anger to the point where I only turn slightly green, grow muscles that don’t destroy my clothes, and am able to grit my teeth, tell Ticketmaster to go do something that isn’t anatomically possible for it to do to itself, and keep hitting refresh, hoping that that tickets that an error message screwed someone else out of will pop back up for me to buy.


Trust me, without yoga, the cost of repairing the swath of destruction wreaked by Ticketmaster rage far exceeded the exorbitant Ticketmaster fees. And that’s saying something.


You also need to be prepared to type in the randomly generated “codes” that Ticketmaster provides to ensure that you’re human. And which are also the primary source of amusement for Ticketmaster employees other than causing system errors after giving you great tickets. One time the randomly-generated code said, “Nice try, loser,” right before saying there were no tickets available. Another time it said “No Bruce for you.” And another one said “ham sandwich.” (Okay, that one MIGHT have been random. Or it could have been a subtle jab at me because I’m Jewish and onto Ticketmaster about orchestrating the Holocaust.) But the more practice you have at reading and rapidly typing in those infuriating codes, the better your ticket chances are.


In order to get tickets to multiple shows (and let’s face it, I’m going to be at multiple shows on this tour), you sometimes need to perfect the art of being in multiple places at once. Tickets for both Philadelphia shows go on sale at the same time tomorrow (from ComcastTix, which is like Ticketmaster but with a less reliable website. Fail.). If you buy for one show, the second one will be sold out by the time you finish your purchase. I recommend cloning yourself and training your clone to buy tickets. However, I’m on a teacher’s salary and since it apparently costs $50,000 to clone a dog (and since cloning people isn’t legal… yet… muahahaha), that option is out for me. So if you can’t afford a clone, or have issues with playing God, you need a partner. I, for example, will be forced to rely on a less trained helper (my dad) to get tickets for the other Philly night. Pray for me. (Just kidding, daddy! I have faith in your abilities! But please try hard!)

And it’s wise to remember that buying tickets is a marathon, not a sprint. Because I’m not JUST planning to go to shows in New Jersey, which go on sale today. Oh no. I’m getting up early on a Saturday to buy my tickets for the DC and Philly shows tomorrow.


But even once I get my tickets, it’s not time to rest yet. It’s just time to start training to buy my tickets for the second US leg of the tour, which hasn’t even been announced yet.

And time to start training for pit survival--If you don’t condition your legs and bladder, that’s an uncomfortable experience. Worth every second of it, but uncomfortable all the same.


Good luck fellow tramps!

Let the ticket-buying begin!

14 comments:

  1. I'm so unhappy that SO far the tour is not heading anywhere close to Dallas. Good luck on getting tickets to multiple shows (he said bitterly!)

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  2. Two words - 'Ticket Drops'. Bruce shows are never really sold out until the start of the show. I have gotten GREAT seats in the days leading up to a show, or even the morning of. If I don't get all the shows I want this week, I am not going to worry. Also, have faith in ticket angels. They DO exist!

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  3. I've had some great luck with drops on the day of the show! But it's nice to not have to worry about if you'll get tickets or not! :-)

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  4. Don't forget - F5 is your friend (at least on a PC - I haven't figured out a one-key Mac equivalent yet).

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    1. What does F5 do? (Afraid I sound really ignorant..)
      Judi Z

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    2. Not ignorant at all - it refreshes the screen in Internet Explorer, so at about 10 seconds to go you can just start hitting that key for the screen to refresh.

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  5. F5? I don't know that trick! What's it do??? 39 minutes and counting! (And I'm at school so I'm on a PC)

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  6. F5 = refresh. (You can also do Ctrl-R, but that requires too much dexterity). I start about 9:59:30. But, i've heard rumors about TM blocking people for refreshing too much. have to live dangerously, right?

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  7. Lol I also keep another window open with the time.gov to watch for the EXACT right time :-)

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  8. Yes - forgot to mention that! Time.gov is the new 410-844-1212 (or, for us old guys, TI4-1212 - the old phone number for the correct time).

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  9. @Dan- I tried searching one too many times for Foo Fighters show and got locked out for 24 hours.

    I'm sitting here waiting for this "15 minutes" to be up... even though it's been 25 minutes. I'm sure it'll just tell me there's nothing! Booo.

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  10. Followed your link from BTX. Loved your blog entry today. You nailed it. As one who has seen many of the Bruce local shows over the years, the ticket acquisition process has really become anxiety-ridden. You would think that with all the fees that Ticketmaster assesses, they would put that money back into their business to support their systems. But, hey, what do I know.

    Good luck tomorrow!

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  11. I decided I can't wait for the 2nd leg of the tour. My lovely bride and I are driving from Dallas to Cleveland for the 4/17 show. We are going to build a vacation around the trip including a stop at the Bourbon tour in Kentucky.

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  12. you can also open TM on iphone ipad at the same time if you got both so you can buy 3 shows at the same time maybe next iphone Siri will be able to buy tkts for us lol

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