I just posted this in the Tour Rumor mega thread, but figured I would here too, just in case.
SOLD prices on StubHub for the MSG show so far.
Absolute madness.
And those posts are speculative inventory from those sellers. Those people that “bought” can get their order cancelled when the seller doesn’t get the tix.
Same thing done for super bowl tickets all the time
So how are they getting around this policy?
Fan-To-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange For fans who are unable to use their tickets, Pearl Jam and Ticketmaster will offer North America’s first Fan-to-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange, which will allow fans to resell their tickets for the price they paid (including all fees). The Fan-to-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange will launch on February 18, 2020. There will be no additional fees charged to Exchange users for buying or selling tickets on the Exchange.
NYC tickets are transferable
That's a shame. So the reduced odds for getting an MSG ticket are partly due to the ticket brokers(scalpers) competing with us(The real fans)!
Possibly but they’re probably only going to be transferable via TM. I don’t think any ticket sold on StubHub will actually be a successful sale.
A scalper can sell a ticket on stubhub and then transfer the ticket through ticketmaster to the buyer.
I just posted this in the Tour Rumor mega thread, but figured I would here too, just in case.
SOLD prices on StubHub for the MSG show so far.
Absolute madness.
And those posts are speculative inventory from those sellers. Those people that “bought” can get their order cancelled when the seller doesn’t get the tix.
Same thing done for super bowl tickets all the time
So how are they getting around this policy?
Fan-To-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange For fans who are unable to use their tickets, Pearl Jam and Ticketmaster will offer North America’s first Fan-to-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange, which will allow fans to resell their tickets for the price they paid (including all fees). The Fan-to-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange will launch on February 18, 2020. There will be no additional fees charged to Exchange users for buying or selling tickets on the Exchange.
NYC tickets are transferable
That's a shame. So the reduced odds for getting an MSG ticket are partly due to the ticket brokers(scalpers) competing with us(The real fans)!
Possibly but they’re probably only going to be transferable via TM. I don’t think any ticket sold on StubHub will actually be a successful sale.
A scalper can sell a ticket on stubhub and then transfer the ticket through ticketmaster to the buyer.
Can I ask how? Any ticket I have ever bought or sold on StubHub I have never had direct contact with the other party and it’s all been done via StubHub. I’m not saying you’re wrong at all I just didn’t know this was possible.
I'm in Colorado (the other state listed as having that law), and never heard of that law before. But never been in a situation where I needed to. I guess I could see the argument looking out for the little guy, it would suck to have some family or medical emergency and not be able to attend and have no way to sell your tickets. But wouldn't it just make more sense to only allow transfer at face value or something?
I just posted this in the Tour Rumor mega thread, but figured I would here too, just in case.
SOLD prices on StubHub for the MSG show so far.
Absolute madness.
And those posts are speculative inventory from those sellers. Those people that “bought” can get their order cancelled when the seller doesn’t get the tix.
Same thing done for super bowl tickets all the time
So how are they getting around this policy?
Fan-To-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange For fans who are unable to use their tickets, Pearl Jam and Ticketmaster will offer North America’s first Fan-to-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange, which will allow fans to resell their tickets for the price they paid (including all fees). The Fan-to-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange will launch on February 18, 2020. There will be no additional fees charged to Exchange users for buying or selling tickets on the Exchange.
NYC tickets are transferable
That's a shame. So the reduced odds for getting an MSG ticket are partly due to the ticket brokers(scalpers) competing with us(The real fans)!
Possibly but they’re probably only going to be transferable via TM. I don’t think any ticket sold on StubHub will actually be a successful sale.
A scalper can sell a ticket on stubhub and then transfer the ticket through ticketmaster to the buyer.
Can I ask how? Any ticket I have ever bought or sold on StubHub I have never had direct contact with the other party and it’s all been done via StubHub. I’m not saying you’re wrong at all I just didn’t know this was possible.
I have sold tickets on StubHub like this. I get an email from StubHub with the email address of the person I need to transfer tickets to.
I just posted this in the Tour Rumor mega thread, but figured I would here too, just in case.
SOLD prices on StubHub for the MSG show so far.
Absolute madness.
And those posts are speculative inventory from those sellers. Those people that “bought” can get their order cancelled when the seller doesn’t get the tix.
Same thing done for super bowl tickets all the time
So how are they getting around this policy?
Fan-To-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange For fans who are unable to use their tickets, Pearl Jam and Ticketmaster will offer North America’s first Fan-to-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange, which will allow fans to resell their tickets for the price they paid (including all fees). The Fan-to-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange will launch on February 18, 2020. There will be no additional fees charged to Exchange users for buying or selling tickets on the Exchange.
NYC tickets are transferable
That's a shame. So the reduced odds for getting an MSG ticket are partly due to the ticket brokers(scalpers) competing with us(The real fans)!
Possibly but they’re probably only going to be transferable via TM. I don’t think any ticket sold on StubHub will actually be a successful sale.
A scalper can sell a ticket on stubhub and then transfer the ticket through ticketmaster to the buyer.
Can I ask how? Any ticket I have ever bought or sold on StubHub I have never had direct contact with the other party and it’s all been done via StubHub. I’m not saying you’re wrong at all I just didn’t know this was possible.
I have sold tickets on StubHub like this. I get an email from StubHub with the email address of the person I need to transfer tickets to.
Correct. I had tickets to the last Mumford tour. I believe they too had a close circuit way of transferring tickets to other fans except for NY. Tickets were mobile entry and when I couldn't make the MSG show I just transferred to my sister.
I just posted this in the Tour Rumor mega thread, but figured I would here too, just in case.
SOLD prices on StubHub for the MSG show so far.
Absolute madness.
And those posts are speculative inventory from those sellers. Those people that “bought” can get their order cancelled when the seller doesn’t get the tix.
Same thing done for super bowl tickets all the time
So how are they getting around this policy?
Fan-To-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange For fans who are unable to use their tickets, Pearl Jam and Ticketmaster will offer North America’s first Fan-to-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange, which will allow fans to resell their tickets for the price they paid (including all fees). The Fan-to-Fan Face Value Ticket Exchange will launch on February 18, 2020. There will be no additional fees charged to Exchange users for buying or selling tickets on the Exchange.
NYC tickets are transferable
That's a shame. So the reduced odds for getting an MSG ticket are partly due to the ticket brokers(scalpers) competing with us(The real fans)!
Possibly but they’re probably only going to be transferable via TM. I don’t think any ticket sold on StubHub will actually be a successful sale.
A scalper can sell a ticket on stubhub and then transfer the ticket through ticketmaster to the buyer.
Can I ask how? Any ticket I have ever bought or sold on StubHub I have never had direct contact with the other party and it’s all been done via StubHub. I’m not saying you’re wrong at all I just didn’t know this was possible.
I have sold tickets on StubHub like this. I get an email from StubHub with the email address of the person I need to transfer tickets to.
Correct. I had tickets to the last Mumford tour. I believe they too had a close circuit way of transferring tickets to other fans except for NY. Tickets were mobile entry and when I couldn't make the MSG show I just transferred to my sister.
Good to know, thanks. I didn’t doubt it I just don’t have the experience.
Reading through this thread it sounds like many don't know how the odds work. I understand it like this.... if 10C has 10,000 seats for a show and 5k put it as their first choice, 5k put it as their second and 5k put it as their third choice the lotto will end up with the following results. Everyone who put it as first will get it. Everyone who put it as second will get it. No one who put it as third will get it. But the odds are displayed as 67% since there are 10k seats and 15k requests for them.
Priority is the biggest factor. But it looks like even MSG has a very good shot if it is your first pick.
This guy gets it. I don't understand why so many people are confused by the odds. A 99% means that basically they have not met demand for their allotted tickets yet so no matter the ranking you'll most likely get it. At 11%, it is saying there are many more requests (among all the entries) than tickets.
Then as they draw winners, show by show, starting with the First Priority pool, they will fill those orders. If after first priority is full, say 200 of the 10000 tickets remain, your odds are then about 2%, and they'll go through the second priority requests.
I am standing by my hypothesis that these are tickets that were allocated to TM for the Verified Fan and General sale that will never see the light of day are being leaked to 3rd parties so that they can post them and then split the profits.
It just makes too much sense for that not to be what it is.
It's what happens anytime the market price for something is higher than the MSRP.
Eventually the retailer is like 'Fuck this. I'm bypassing the official channels and selling these for what they are actually worth.'
'I know I was born and I know that I'll die, the in between is mine.'
I am standing by my hypothesis that these are tickets that were allocated to TM for the Verified Fan and General sale that will never see the light of day are being leaked to 3rd parties so that they can post them and then split the profits.
It just makes too much sense for that not to be what it is.
It's what happens anytime the market price for something is higher than the MSRP.
Eventually the retailer is like 'Fuck this. I'm bypassing the official channels and selling these for what they are actually worth.'
Sure but "naked short selling" on StubHub is also a well known issue.
I am standing by my hypothesis that these are tickets that were allocated to TM for the Verified Fan and General sale that will never see the light of day are being leaked to 3rd parties so that they can post them and then split the profits.
It just makes too much sense for that not to be what it is.
It's what happens anytime the market price for something is higher than the MSRP.
Eventually the retailer is like 'Fuck this. I'm bypassing the official channels and selling these for what they are actually worth.'
Sure but "naked short selling" on StubHub is also a well known issue.
Agreed.
'I know I was born and I know that I'll die, the in between is mine.'
Reading through this thread it sounds like many don't know how the odds work. I understand it like this.... if 10C has 10,000 seats for a show and 5k put it as their first choice, 5k put it as their second and 5k put it as their third choice the lotto will end up with the following results. Everyone who put it as first will get it. Everyone who put it as second will get it. No one who put it as third will get it. But the odds are displayed as 67% since there are 10k seats and 15k requests for them.
Priority is the biggest factor. But it looks like even MSG has a very good shot if it is your first pick.
This guy gets it. I don't understand why so many people are confused by the odds. A 99% means that basically they have not met demand for their allotted tickets yet so no matter the ranking you'll most likely get it. At 11%, it is saying there are many more requests (among all the entries) than tickets.
Then as they draw winners, show by show, starting with the First Priority pool, they will fill those orders. If after first priority is full, say 200 of the 10000 tickets remain, your odds are then about 2%, and they'll go through the second priority requests.
Because anything below 99% is, according to your description, not actually odds for any one person (because of the ranking system). That's not to say the % is meaningless, just that it doesn't meaningfully represent odds for any specific case.
I'm inclined to believe you're right about what the number represents, but I don't think many people here are "confused" about the odds. Rather, we think they are useless beyond the most broad sense of demand.
Reading through this thread it sounds like many don't know how the odds work. I understand it like this.... if 10C has 10,000 seats for a show and 5k put it as their first choice, 5k put it as their second and 5k put it as their third choice the lotto will end up with the following results. Everyone who put it as first will get it. Everyone who put it as second will get it. No one who put it as third will get it. But the odds are displayed as 67% since there are 10k seats and 15k requests for them.
Priority is the biggest factor. But it looks like even MSG has a very good shot if it is your first pick.
This guy gets it. I don't understand why so many people are confused by the odds. A 99% means that basically they have not met demand for their allotted tickets yet so no matter the ranking you'll most likely get it. At 11%, it is saying there are many more requests (among all the entries) than tickets.
Then as they draw winners, show by show, starting with the First Priority pool, they will fill those orders. If after first priority is full, say 200 of the 10000 tickets remain, your odds are then about 2%, and they'll go through the second priority requests.
cut the numbers in half has this doesn't count for the 5K asking for a pair. 5K put first choice at 10K of tickets. they all get. no one after would
Marquee 91 Wetlands 91 CBGB 91 Roseland 91 and many, many more
I am standing by my hypothesis that these are tickets that were allocated to TM for the Verified Fan and General sale that will never see the light of day are being leaked to 3rd parties so that they can post them and then split the profits.
It just makes too much sense for that not to be what it is.
It's what happens anytime the market price for something is higher than the MSRP.
Eventually the retailer is like 'Fuck this. I'm bypassing the official channels and selling these for what they are actually worth.'
that's why I put NO FAITH in the Verified Fan sale and think the only way to really be sure you get in is through 10C
I really don't think the odds are accurate anymore (if I am understanding the selection process correctly) because of the "best available" option. I hope I'm very wrong, but I'm worried that the 99% is way wrong and will get people's hopes up.
I really don't think the odds are accurate anymore (if I am understanding the selection process correctly) because of the "best available" option. I hope I'm very wrong, but I'm worried that the 99% is way wrong and will get people's hopes up.
They update twice a day. Doubt the computer is wrong
I really don't think the odds are accurate anymore (if I am understanding the selection process correctly) because of the "best available" option. I hope I'm very wrong, but I'm worried that the 99% is way wrong and will get people's hopes up.
Those who are saying that the displayed odds are not actually reflective of your particular chances for a given show (since they don't account for priorities) are correct. However, I think the one think the one thing you CAN definitively tell from the displayed odds is that if it says 99%, that means anyone who chose that option (regardless of priority level) is going to get tickets. I suppose there is an outside chance that the odds actually ARE 99% and 1% of the entries really will not get drawn, but by and large 99% seems to denote "there are more tickets available for this option than there are total lottery entries for it."
The presale is officially closed, right? So excited to see if I’m GA or Reserved for Hamilton. Happy with either
7/19/13 - Wrigley Field, Chicago, IL
10/11/13 - Pittsburgh, PA
10/12/13 - Buffalo, NY
10/16/2014 - Detroit, MI 5/10/2016 - Toronto, ON 3/24/2020 - Hamilton, ON 9/7/2023 - Chicago, IL
7/19/13 - Wrigley Field, Chicago, IL
10/11/13 - Pittsburgh, PA
10/12/13 - Buffalo, NY
10/16/2014 - Detroit, MI 5/10/2016 - Toronto, ON 3/24/2020 - Hamilton, ON 9/7/2023 - Chicago, IL
Reading through this thread it sounds like many don't know how the odds work. I understand it like this.... if 10C has 10,000 seats for a show and 5k put it as their first choice, 5k put it as their second and 5k put it as their third choice the lotto will end up with the following results. Everyone who put it as first will get it. Everyone who put it as second will get it. No one who put it as third will get it. But the odds are displayed as 67% since there are 10k seats and 15k requests for them.
Priority is the biggest factor. But it looks like even MSG has a very good shot if it is your first pick.
This guy gets it. I don't understand why so many people are confused by the odds. A 99% means that basically they have not met demand for their allotted tickets yet so no matter the ranking you'll most likely get it. At 11%, it is saying there are many more requests (among all the entries) than tickets.
Then as they draw winners, show by show, starting with the First Priority pool, they will fill those orders. If after first priority is full, say 200 of the 10000 tickets remain, your odds are then about 2%, and they'll go through the second priority requests.
So if there are 99% odds for any show, everyone would get tickets even if it was their 5th choice? I am assuming that any request rank is added to the pool and helps decide the odds.
Reading through this thread it sounds like many don't know how the odds work. I understand it like this.... if 10C has 10,000 seats for a show and 5k put it as their first choice, 5k put it as their second and 5k put it as their third choice the lotto will end up with the following results. Everyone who put it as first will get it. Everyone who put it as second will get it. No one who put it as third will get it. But the odds are displayed as 67% since there are 10k seats and 15k requests for them.
Priority is the biggest factor. But it looks like even MSG has a very good shot if it is your first pick.
This guy gets it. I don't understand why so many people are confused by the odds. A 99% means that basically they have not met demand for their allotted tickets yet so no matter the ranking you'll most likely get it. At 11%, it is saying there are many more requests (among all the entries) than tickets.
Then as they draw winners, show by show, starting with the First Priority pool, they will fill those orders. If after first priority is full, say 200 of the 10000 tickets remain, your odds are then about 2%, and they'll go through the second priority requests.
So if there are 99% odds for any show, everyone would get tickets even if it was their 5th choice? I am assuming that any request rank is added to the pool and helps decide the odds.
Correct. The odds represent a WORST case scenario. Not best. Let's say there are 500 pairs of tickets:
Choice 1: 100 people Choice 2: 100 people Choice 3: 100 people Choice 4: 100 people Choice 5: 100 people
Reading through this thread it sounds like many don't know how the odds work. I understand it like this.... if 10C has 10,000 seats for a show and 5k put it as their first choice, 5k put it as their second and 5k put it as their third choice the lotto will end up with the following results. Everyone who put it as first will get it. Everyone who put it as second will get it. No one who put it as third will get it. But the odds are displayed as 67% since there are 10k seats and 15k requests for them.
Priority is the biggest factor. But it looks like even MSG has a very good shot if it is your first pick.
This guy gets it. I don't understand why so many people are confused by the odds. A 99% means that basically they have not met demand for their allotted tickets yet so no matter the ranking you'll most likely get it. At 11%, it is saying there are many more requests (among all the entries) than tickets.
Then as they draw winners, show by show, starting with the First Priority pool, they will fill those orders. If after first priority is full, say 200 of the 10000 tickets remain, your odds are then about 2%, and they'll go through the second priority requests.
So if there are 99% odds for any show, everyone would get tickets even if it was their 5th choice? I am assuming that any request rank is added to the pool and helps decide the odds.
Correct. The odds represent a WORST case scenario. Not best. Let's say there are 500 pairs of tickets:
Choice 1: 100 people Choice 2: 100 people Choice 3: 100 people Choice 4: 100 people Choice 5: 100 people
The odds will be 99% (100% really...).
Cool. This helps me decide what to do with Oakland. I'm counting on most people picking Saturday as their first choice and Sunday 2nd, as I did. Then we are all (mostly) in the same boat for GA or decent seats for both shows. Of course if I want a much better chance at GA for Sunday, I could pick that as my first choice and Saturday as my second. However if I do this, I am pretty much guaranteeing that I don't get GA for Saturday and probably bad seats for Saturday since my request won't even be looked at until all Saturday 1st choice orders are filled. I really don't want crappy seats for either show, so I feel I am gambling a bit that one of the days will yield GA and the other good seats.
I really don't think the odds are accurate anymore (if I am understanding the selection process correctly) because of the "best available" option. I hope I'm very wrong, but I'm worried that the 99% is way wrong and will get people's hopes up.
They update twice a day. Doubt the computer is wrong
That's not what I mean, at all. The question is where were the "best available" people allocated for purposes of the odds? Based on the numbers, I think they were allocated to the GA pot. That means that once GA is sold out, the remaining "best available" people will spill over into the "reserved" pot and that will drastically change the "reserved" odds. Again, I hope I'm wrong. I just don't see how for a majority of the shows they could have more reserved tickets than were requested by both the "reserved" entries and the "best available" entries. That is what would be needed to have 99% odds.
I am standing by my hypothesis that these are tickets that were allocated to TM for the Verified Fan and General sale that will never see the light of day are being leaked to 3rd parties so that they can post them and then split the profits.
It just makes too much sense for that not to be what it is.
It's what happens anytime the market price for something is higher than the MSRP.
Eventually the retailer is like 'Fuck this. I'm bypassing the official channels and selling these for what they are actually worth.'
that's why I put NO FAITH in the Verified Fan sale and think the only way to really be sure you get in is through 10C
Having been through Verified Fan for other concerts - it's a shitshow. Pray 10C comes through. My request is in.
Reading through this thread it sounds like many don't know how the odds work. I understand it like this.... if 10C has 10,000 seats for a show and 5k put it as their first choice, 5k put it as their second and 5k put it as their third choice the lotto will end up with the following results. Everyone who put it as first will get it. Everyone who put it as second will get it. No one who put it as third will get it. But the odds are displayed as 67% since there are 10k seats and 15k requests for them.
Priority is the biggest factor. But it looks like even MSG has a very good shot if it is your first pick.
This guy gets it. I don't understand why so many people are confused by the odds. A 99% means that basically they have not met demand for their allotted tickets yet so no matter the ranking you'll most likely get it. At 11%, it is saying there are many more requests (among all the entries) than tickets.
Then as they draw winners, show by show, starting with the First Priority pool, they will fill those orders. If after first priority is full, say 200 of the 10000 tickets remain, your odds are then about 2%, and they'll go through the second priority requests.
So if there are 99% odds for any show, everyone would get tickets even if it was their 5th choice? I am assuming that any request rank is added to the pool and helps decide the odds.
Correct. The odds represent a WORST case scenario. Not best. Let's say there are 500 pairs of tickets:
Choice 1: 100 people Choice 2: 100 people Choice 3: 100 people Choice 4: 100 people Choice 5: 100 people
The odds will be 99% (100% really...).
Do you *know* this is the case? Or do you surmise it's the case?
I once lost an 82% odds as a first priority. I guess that show must have had a lot of people choosing it first. I couldn’t believe it when it happened. There is nothing automatic.
PJ: 2013: London (ON); Buffalo; 2014: Cincinnati; 2016: Sunrise, Miami, Toronto 1-2, Wrigley 2; 2018: London (UK) 1, Milan, Padova, Sea 2, Wrigley 1-2, Fenway 1-2; 2021: SHN, Ohana, Ohana Encore 1-2; 2022: LA 1-2, Phx, Oak 1-2, Fresno, Copenhagen, Hyde Park 1-2; Quebec, Ottawa, Hamilton, Toronto; MSG, Camden, Nashville, Louisville, St. Louis, OKC; 2023: St. Paul 1-2, Chicago 1-2; Fort Worth 2; Austin 1-2; 2024: Vancouver 1-2, LV 1-2, LA 1-2, Napa, Barcelona 1-2
EV Solo: 2017 Louisville and Franklin, 2018 Ohana, 2019 Innings Fest, Berlin, Düsseldorf, Dublin and Ohana; 2021 Ohana Friday (from beach) and Saturday; 2022 Earthlings Newark; 2023 Innings Fest and Benoraya 1-2.
Gutted: London 2 2018, Sacramento 2022, Noblesville 2023
Reading through this thread it sounds like many don't know how the odds work. I understand it like this.... if 10C has 10,000 seats for a show and 5k put it as their first choice, 5k put it as their second and 5k put it as their third choice the lotto will end up with the following results. Everyone who put it as first will get it. Everyone who put it as second will get it. No one who put it as third will get it. But the odds are displayed as 67% since there are 10k seats and 15k requests for them.
Priority is the biggest factor. But it looks like even MSG has a very good shot if it is your first pick.
This guy gets it. I don't understand why so many people are confused by the odds. A 99% means that basically they have not met demand for their allotted tickets yet so no matter the ranking you'll most likely get it. At 11%, it is saying there are many more requests (among all the entries) than tickets.
Then as they draw winners, show by show, starting with the First Priority pool, they will fill those orders. If after first priority is full, say 200 of the 10000 tickets remain, your odds are then about 2%, and they'll go through the second priority requests.
So if there are 99% odds for any show, everyone would get tickets even if it was their 5th choice? I am assuming that any request rank is added to the pool and helps decide the odds.
Correct. The odds represent a WORST case scenario. Not best. Let's say there are 500 pairs of tickets:
Choice 1: 100 people Choice 2: 100 people Choice 3: 100 people Choice 4: 100 people Choice 5: 100 people
The odds will be 99% (100% really...).
Do you *know* this is the case? Or do you surmise it's the case?
I would say "surmise" since I have no inside knowledge.
Comments
I guess I could see the argument looking out for the little guy, it would suck to have some family or medical emergency and not be able to attend and have no way to sell your tickets. But wouldn't it just make more sense to only allow transfer at face value or something?
Correct. I had tickets to the last Mumford tour. I believe they too had a close circuit way of transferring tickets to other fans except for NY. Tickets were mobile entry and when I couldn't make the MSG show I just transferred to my sister.
Then as they draw winners, show by show, starting with the First Priority pool, they will fill those orders. If after first priority is full, say 200 of the 10000 tickets remain, your odds are then about 2%, and they'll go through the second priority requests.
It just makes too much sense for that not to be what it is.
It's what happens anytime the market price for something is higher than the MSRP.
Eventually the retailer is like 'Fuck this. I'm bypassing the official channels and selling these for what they are actually worth.'
Who is wrong and who’s right
I'm inclined to believe you're right about what the number represents, but I don't think many people here are "confused" about the odds. Rather, we think they are useless beyond the most broad sense of demand.
Wetlands 91
CBGB 91
Roseland 91
and many, many more
Posters for Sale: http://community.pearljam.com/discussion/117469/posters-for-sale
T-Shirts for Sale: http://community.pearljam.com/discussion/149289/pj-t-shirt-trade-or-sale
10/11/13 - Pittsburgh, PA
10/12/13 - Buffalo, NY
10/16/2014 - Detroit, MI
5/10/2016 - Toronto, ON
3/24/2020 - Hamilton, ON
9/7/2023 - Chicago, IL
10/11/13 - Pittsburgh, PA
10/12/13 - Buffalo, NY
10/16/2014 - Detroit, MI
5/10/2016 - Toronto, ON
3/24/2020 - Hamilton, ON
9/7/2023 - Chicago, IL
Choice 1: 100 people
Choice 2: 100 people
Choice 3: 100 people
Choice 4: 100 people
Choice 5: 100 people
The odds will be 99% (100% really...).
Posters for Sale: http://community.pearljam.com/discussion/117469/posters-for-sale
T-Shirts for Sale: http://community.pearljam.com/discussion/149289/pj-t-shirt-trade-or-sale
Gutted: London 2 2018, Sacramento 2022, Noblesville 2023