It sounded like the perfect pairing: Richard Dreyfuss up on stage discussing his career and the making of "Jaws" before the lights dimmed and the movie played on the screen behind him. Instead, Dreyfuss used his time on stage at the Cabot Theatre in Beverly Saturday night to spew hatred at both women and transgender people he just wouldn't stop and people began to walk out, even if they had paid up to $125 for a ticket. Read more.
It’s still their responsibility.
How is it any more their responsibility than the ticket buyers’?
Yes, the theater needs to vet their guests, but how can you say a small team of organizers is on the hook while a whole crowd of people shouldn’t have known better based on what Dreyfuss’ public persona is and has been?
Uh… It just is.
If folks want to sell venue tickets to ticket buyers over and over again, they need to provide an occasional refund when the speaker goes way off course from the expected.
That sounds like what happened here.
It’s not particularly fair to the venue, but it’s the cultural expectation, here.
It’s also practical economics.
The venue can better afford 20 refunds than it can afford 20 customers out in the community saying “I don’t go there, anymore.”
Also, issuing the refund is a good faith evidence that, should the vendor ever invite that speaker again, they’ve done their due diligence with that speaker, on expectations.