I fixed that for you.
Later
I fixed that for you.
This is the most interesting point in this thread. Crowds were mostly good in 2015 but the prices hadn’t been escalated quite as much back then.Johnny Lunchbucket wrote: ↑Mon Oct 07, 2024 4:31 pmBut I do wonder if a crowd of $500-a-seat fans can bring the same energy as the $30-a-seat Tuesday Night fans
I'm on your side. So what's the solution? If the Mets gave away the playoff tickets for free, the lucky ticketholders would, in turn, scalp their tickets for the hundreds and hundreds of dollars that the market is willing to pay for. Not all of the ticketholders. Some would hold on to their tickets even if you offered them all the money in the world. But that's besides the point. The point being that if you didn't get a free ticket, you'd have to pay the same superhigh prices to buy a ticket.rchurch314 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 07, 2024 3:51 pmwell the point is that's a lot, a lot more than it was pretty recently, and we don't want to spend that much but want to go.batmagadanleadoff wrote: ↑Mon Oct 07, 2024 12:46 pm I have no idea what the fuss or sour grapes are all about with the ticket prices. If I owned a pizzeria, and customers were willing to pay me $50.00 for one slice of pizza, I'd be charging $50.00 for a slice of pizza in a heartbeat. Isn't that how everything works? Or is everybody supposed to be able to own a Rolls Royce?
What the hell are youse whining about? When people stop paying those prices, those prices will come down.
Newsflash! It also costs a heck of lot more money to sit two rows behind home plate at field level than it does to sit in left field, 475 feet away and 60 feet higher than home plate. Duh.
They were really offering them for $90? That's a lot more doable at least.Gwreck wrote: ↑Mon Oct 07, 2024 5:06 pmThe postseason tickets the Mets offered/made available via my ticket plan are 50-65% cheaper than what they are offering to the general public.rchurch314 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 07, 2024 3:51 pmI don't think the plan holders get that significant of a discount either.
I’ll admit that my tickets are in a slightly better location than the outer sections of the upper deck and thus I can’t tell you what the season/plan holder price on those were.rchurch314 wrote: ↑Tue Oct 08, 2024 9:52 pmThey were really offering them for $90? That's a lot more doable at least.Gwreck wrote: ↑Mon Oct 07, 2024 5:06 pmThe postseason tickets the Mets offered/made available via my ticket plan are 50-65% cheaper than what they are offering to the general public.rchurch314 wrote: ↑Mon Oct 07, 2024 3:51 pmI don't think the plan holders get that significant of a discount either.
The issue is not so clear-cut and there are very good arguments to be made on both sides. Some states have no scalping laws whatsoever and a ticket owner in those states is free to do whatever the hell he wants to do with his ticket. There are no Federal laws directly regulating the resale of tickets.Edgy MD wrote: ↑Tue Oct 08, 2024 4:02 pm New York, not so long ago, had laws prohibiting charging more than 10% above face value for resold tickets.
I imagine the laws became largely unenforceable in the Internet age, but I'm not sure where the notion of scalping being an unseemly and exploitative practice went. I guess I can put it beside commercials for hard alcohol, advertising on uniforms, and gambling in the box of things MLB would seemingly never allow themselves to be associated with, that they now embrace wholeheartedly.
MLB partnering with re-sale places like StubHub erased all that.
But how is that an argument for or against ticket scalping?MFS62 wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 2:34 pm The person selling that Mickey Mantle card he got for 50 cents for, say, $100,000 (A conservative guess) would have to pay up to 20% long term capital gains tax on the difference ($99,999.50).
I'm not sure what the tax considerations are for reselling tickets (possibly at short term rates).
I don't know, but somewhere along the line, someone decided some markets needed controls, the public had an interest in keeping gouging from becoming too exploitative, and departments of consumer and regulatory affairs were born. Also, the original owner of a commodity — the Mets perhaps — had a right to set resale conditions on commodities such as tickets. With the purchase, you implicitly agreed to abide by certain resale conditions.batmagadanleadoff wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 2:00 pmWhy shouldn't a ticket-holder be able to scalp his ticket to his heart's delight?
That's some scam, now that I think about it. They'd make more money because they wouldn't have to share the profits from the "scalped" tickets with the rest of the league.batmagadanleadoff wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 2:55 pm I always imagined that the Wilpons were secretly scalping unsold Mets tickets on Stubhub and the like for their own personal gain through secret accounts and trusted family members acting as shills.
lol, put down the tin foil, the wilpons, and the cohens, and roughly every other MLB owner is doing pretty much the same thing and they don't need to bother with illicit accounts or anything like that. they simply chunk and block sections and sell them in different presales, promotions, etc and then use the dynamic pricing module of their ticket service to $$$$$$$$$$ up the artificial scarcity.batmagadanleadoff wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 3:07 pmThat's some scam, now that I think about it. They'd make more money because they wouldn't have to share the profits from the "scalped" tickets with the rest of the league.batmagadanleadoff wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 2:55 pm I always imagined that the Wilpons were secretly scalping unsold Mets tickets on Stubhub and the like for their own personal gain through secret accounts and trusted family members acting as shills.
rchurch314 wrote: ↑Fri Oct 11, 2024 6:48 pmlol, put down the tin foil, the wilpons, and the cohens, and roughly every other MLB owner is doing pretty much the same thing and they don't need to bother with illicit accounts or anything like that. they simply chunk and block sections and sell them in different presales, promotions, etc and then use the dynamic pricing module of their ticket service to $$$$$$$$$$ up the artificial scarcity.batmagadanleadoff wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 3:07 pmThat's some scam, now that I think about it. They'd make more money because they wouldn't have to share the profits from the "scalped" tickets with the rest of the league.batmagadanleadoff wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2024 2:55 pm I always imagined that the Wilpons were secretly scalping unsold Mets tickets on Stubhub and the like for their own personal gain through secret accounts and trusted family members acting as shills.
If this is a secondary market ticket what would you expect