Tired of inflated ticket prices, recording artist Yungblud is launching his own affordable music festival.

Bludfest takes place on Aug. 11 in the iconic Milton Keynes Bowl, which in the past has hosted the likes of David Bowie and Green Day in Buckinghamshire, England, northwest of London.

Yungblud, whose real name is Dom Harrison, thinks that currently festivals are “unrepresentative of people” — so he’s fixing the price point of Bludfest at 49.50 pounds (around $63).

And he hopes to expand it out of the U.K. if it goes according to plan, taking the concept to different regions across the globe.

  • @[email protected]
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    529 months ago

    Here’s the core unresolvable issue with concert tickets… there is a lot of demand and venues have limited space. If you allow open ticket bidding the prices will be insane - but if you don’t then people will work around the system. If someone offered you 30k for an eras ticket you’d be an idiot not to take that deal… and those rich folks might just hire people to make sure they get one of the first tickets anyways.

    I don’t know if there’s any solution to this problem that doesn’t feel shitty but one salve is not obsessing over global celebrity, there are, in every corner of the world, interesting local bands that cost nothing more than the price of a beer to see. Three billion people won’t see Taylor Swift in her lifetime no matter what she does - her live, in person, performances are a limited resource.

    • @AstridWipenaugh
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      279 months ago

      Smaller venues with smaller names is where it’s at!

      • @jeffw
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        139 months ago

        That’s fine until your favorite band goes to too small of a venue and you can’t get a ticket

        • @[email protected]OP
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          29 months ago

          That often has more to do with the promoter not limiting ticket sales per person/credit card than anything else.

    • @[email protected]
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      79 months ago

      Same thing with brands. Do you know how much it costs to make a shirt or pair of pants? It’s a few dollars for a quality item. There’s no “clothes shortage” that would keep prices high. People want brands so they pay extra for them.

    • @ALilOff
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      69 months ago

      The only work around I can think of at 2am, is that tickets were ineligible for sale as to have access to original email presented/ID used for purchase.

      This method would be very difficult to enforce as majority of people wouldn’t agree to it as it’s very aggressive unless it’s a 21+ show (in the US) where you have to show ID for entry.

      • @diviledabit
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        89 months ago

        This is exactly what Ed Sheeran does.

      • @Rambomst
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        29 months ago

        Tickets could be sold in person at the venue or at least a portion of them.

        • @charles
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          99 months ago

          This is how it used to be and scalpers would line up as early as needed while the common person would be out of luck.

          • @Rambomst
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            9 months ago

            You would at least have a chance and could line up as well rather than competing with bots that can purchase tickets faster than any human.

            • @[email protected]
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              29 months ago

              I’d be fine with that but then I remember how people can be and I think this would lead to riots at the door.

      • @[email protected]
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        -19 months ago

        That deals with scalping - but a rich person can still game the system by contacting out buying the tickets.