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Parents
steamed over hot 'Hannah Montana' concerts Thursday, October 04, 2007 Fans are so desperate for seats
to her 54-date tour, kicking off later this month, that venues have sold out
in as little as four minutes and scalpers are getting four to five times the
face value — creating a torrent of complaints from frustrated parents. “We
knew it was hot, but we had no idea it was this crazy,” said Debra Rathwell, senior vice president of AEG Live, which is
handling her tour. “It’s like the Beatles.” About 12,000 seats for the One ticket for the show in Miley, daughter of country music singer Billy
Ray Cyrus, plays high school student Miley Stewart, who lives a secret double life as a famous
pop star, Hannah Montana. Her show reaches 5 million viewers a week. The sold-out “Best of Both
Worlds Tour,” which begins Oct. 18, follows the release of her double album,
“Hannah Montana 2/Meet Miley Cyrus,” which has
already sold more than 1 million copies since its release in June. The first
album sold more than 2 million copies. Paige Nace,
35, hoped to take her daughter to see Miley at the
Arena at “I think that’s it’s pretty cool she is coming here,” said Arianna Nace, 9. “I want to get
up on stage and sing with her. Most likely every girl I know likes Hannah.” But in 4 minutes, tickets to
the November show were gone. Nace said tickets were
being resold for inflated prices on Internet sites like Craigslist
and eBay Inc.’s ticket-reselling subsidiary StubHub. “All the ticket brokers and
scalpers are trying to sell them for $100-200 a piece,” Nace
said. “If they would have been face value, I would have gladly gotten them.” The tour promoter capped prices
at $65 and put a four-ticket maximum on each transaction. However, the
average ticket for the Hannah Montana tour was being resold for $214. That
beats the average resale price for Timberlake ($182), Beyonce
($193), or The Police ($209). “Hannah Montana has essentially
exposed a lot of frustration the average, uninformed ticket buyer has,” said
Sean Pate, a spokesman for the San Francisco-based StubHub.
“There is so much demand that ticket sellers are pricing on the high side.
It’s almost unreasonable.” As technology changes and more
venues start selling tickets online, scalpers are no longer those shady
looking guys holding up tickets outside the arena. Most states have no
restrictions on reselling tickets, even for a big profit. Ray Waddell, Billboard’s
touring writer, says scalpers use automated computer programs that buy
tickets quickly or tie up ticket phone lines with repeated calls. “It’s
really getting out of control,” Waddell said. Pate encourages Hannah Montana
fans to sit tight. “The prices that you see now
are not the prices that are going to hold,” Pate said. “Parents need to set a
price that they are comfortable with and watch the market on a daily basis.” “I feel like they are ripping
off children,” Nace said. “I’m sure there are
parents out there would pay that much. But the rest of us shouldn’t be
penalized for that.” SURVEY
Should Miley Cyrus Do More to
Control the Price of Her Concert Tickets?
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