Official 2023 Ticket Lottery Results Thread
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100 Pacer said:3days said:There's an easy way to see how platinum seats have impacted our seat locations: Indiana.
As opposed to all other shows on this tour, the seats project from the stage in a more straight forward manner. There's much less room for argument about which seats are actually best. Start closest to the stage, and move backward. Whereas, in an arena you could argue that floor seats are best, or that seats on the sides are best. You could argue that balcony seats are better than lower level seats if the balcony section is closer to the stage. Noblesville simplifies the matter. Start front and work back.
Take membership numbers into consideration, and divide the seats into quarters or thirds. There will always be variables and unknowns, but I think it paints a picture.
Tens of thousands? Not likely. The last credible information I heard was 60 - 70k active 10c members. A third of ALL active members put in for Indiana seats? Not likely. I'd be surprised if 10k did.
It stands to reason that lots of folks with high membership numbers woul've put in for GA/Res. Therefore, lots of people who are 300xxx and higher should have also won seating. Old-timers and newbies alike should have representation in the Ruoff seats.0 -
3days said:100 Pacer said:3days said:There's an easy way to see how platinum seats have impacted our seat locations: Indiana.
As opposed to all other shows on this tour, the seats project from the stage in a more straight forward manner. There's much less room for argument about which seats are actually best. Start closest to the stage, and move backward. Whereas, in an arena you could argue that floor seats are best, or that seats on the sides are best. You could argue that balcony seats are better than lower level seats if the balcony section is closer to the stage. Noblesville simplifies the matter. Start front and work back.
Take membership numbers into consideration, and divide the seats into quarters or thirds. There will always be variables and unknowns, but I think it paints a picture.
Tens of thousands? Not likely. The last credible information I heard was 60 - 70k active 10c members. A third of ALL active members put in for Indiana seats? Not likely. I'd be surprised if 10k did.
It stands to reason that lots of folks with high membership numbers woul've put in for GA/Res. Therefore, lots of people who are 300xxx and higher should have also won seating. Old-timers and newbies alike should have representation in the Ruoff seats.0 -
3days said:100 Pacer said:3days said:There's an easy way to see how platinum seats have impacted our seat locations: Indiana.
As opposed to all other shows on this tour, the seats project from the stage in a more straight forward manner. There's much less room for argument about which seats are actually best. Start closest to the stage, and move backward. Whereas, in an arena you could argue that floor seats are best, or that seats on the sides are best. You could argue that balcony seats are better than lower level seats if the balcony section is closer to the stage. Noblesville simplifies the matter. Start front and work back.
Take membership numbers into consideration, and divide the seats into quarters or thirds. There will always be variables and unknowns, but I think it paints a picture.
Tens of thousands? Not likely. The last credible information I heard was 60 - 70k active 10c members. A third of ALL active members put in for Indiana seats? Not likely. I'd be surprised if 10k did.
It stands to reason that lots of folks with high membership numbers woul've put in for GA/Res. Therefore, lots of people who are 300xxx and higher should have also won seating. Old-timers and newbies alike should have representation in the Ruoff seats.Noblesville will be filled with a variety of 10C numbers but with fewer seats overall your representation is skewed. More accurate sample size would be comparing arenas at play with priors where Premium was also a factor.To quote the 10C from Newsletter #8: "Please understand we have a lot of members and it is very hard to please everybody. If you are one of those unhappy people...please call 1-900-IDN-TCAR."
"Me knowing the truth, I can not concur."
1996: Toronto - 1998: Chicago, Montreal, Barrie - 2000: Montreal, Toronto - 2002: Seattle X2 (Key Arena) - 2003: Cleveland, Buffalo, Toronto, Montreal, Seattle (Benaroya Hall) - 2004: Reading, Toledo, Grand Rapids - 2005: Kitchener, London, Hamilton, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Quebec City - 2006: Toronto X2, Albany, Hartford, Grand Rapids, Cleveland - 2007: Chicago (Vic Theatre) - 2008: NYC X2, Hartford, Mansfield X2 - 2009: Toronto, Chicago X2, Seattle X2, Philadelphia X4 - 2010: Columbus, Noblesville, Cleveland, Buffalo, Hartford - 2011: Montreal, Toronto X2, Ottawa, Hamilton - 2012: Missoula - 2013: London, Chicago, Buffalo, Hartford - 2014: Detroit, Moline - 2015: NYC (Global Citizen Festival) - 2016: Greenville, Toronto X2, Chicago 1 - 2017: Brooklyn (RRHOF Induction) - 2018: Chicago 1, Boston 1 - 2022: Fresno, Ottawa, Hamilton, Toronto, NYC, Camden - 2023: St. Paul X2, Austin X2 - 2024: Vancouver X2, Portland, Sacramento, Missoula, Noblesville, Philadelphia X2, Baltimore - 2025: Hollywood X2, Atlanta 2, Nashville X2, Pittsburgh X20 -
SHZA said:pjalli said:marcPJfan said:I’d email the 10c. No way they don’t make this right.0
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100 Pacer said:3days said:100 Pacer said:3days said:There's an easy way to see how platinum seats have impacted our seat locations: Indiana.
As opposed to all other shows on this tour, the seats project from the stage in a more straight forward manner. There's much less room for argument about which seats are actually best. Start closest to the stage, and move backward. Whereas, in an arena you could argue that floor seats are best, or that seats on the sides are best. You could argue that balcony seats are better than lower level seats if the balcony section is closer to the stage. Noblesville simplifies the matter. Start front and work back.
Take membership numbers into consideration, and divide the seats into quarters or thirds. There will always be variables and unknowns, but I think it paints a picture.
Tens of thousands? Not likely. The last credible information I heard was 60 - 70k active 10c members. A third of ALL active members put in for Indiana seats? Not likely. I'd be surprised if 10k did.
It stands to reason that lots of folks with high membership numbers woul've put in for GA/Res. Therefore, lots of people who are 300xxx and higher should have also won seating. Old-timers and newbies alike should have representation in the Ruoff seats.Noblesville will be filled with a variety of 10C numbers but with fewer seats overall your representation is skewed. More accurate sample size would be comparing arenas at play with priors where Premium was also a factor.
That being said, I still doubt that tens of thousands of 10c members submitted for Indiana seats. If the number requesting was 30,000, that would mean that less than 1/3 of us won Indiana seats... which doesn't look congruent to the anecdotal stuff. Awful lot of people claiming victory with such poor odds.
Skewed? Who's to say. The seats could be an almost perfectly varied representation. The problem with arenas is that it's much harder to determine which seats are better.
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pjalli said:SHZA said:pjalli said:marcPJfan said:I’d email the 10c. No way they don’t make this right.Post edited by SHZA on0
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3days said:100 Pacer said:3days said:100 Pacer said:3days said:There's an easy way to see how platinum seats have impacted our seat locations: Indiana.
As opposed to all other shows on this tour, the seats project from the stage in a more straight forward manner. There's much less room for argument about which seats are actually best. Start closest to the stage, and move backward. Whereas, in an arena you could argue that floor seats are best, or that seats on the sides are best. You could argue that balcony seats are better than lower level seats if the balcony section is closer to the stage. Noblesville simplifies the matter. Start front and work back.
Take membership numbers into consideration, and divide the seats into quarters or thirds. There will always be variables and unknowns, but I think it paints a picture.
Tens of thousands? Not likely. The last credible information I heard was 60 - 70k active 10c members. A third of ALL active members put in for Indiana seats? Not likely. I'd be surprised if 10k did.
It stands to reason that lots of folks with high membership numbers woul've put in for GA/Res. Therefore, lots of people who are 300xxx and higher should have also won seating. Old-timers and newbies alike should have representation in the Ruoff seats.Noblesville will be filled with a variety of 10C numbers but with fewer seats overall your representation is skewed. More accurate sample size would be comparing arenas at play with priors where Premium was also a factor.
That being said, I still doubt that tens of thousands of 10c members submitted for Indiana seats. If the number requesting was 30,000, that would mean that less than 1/3 of us won Indiana seats... which doesn't look congruent to the anecdotal stuff. Awful lot of people claiming victory with such poor odds.
Skewed? Who's to say. The seats could be an almost perfectly varied representation. The problem with arenas is that it's much harder to determine which seats are better.To quote the 10C from Newsletter #8: "Please understand we have a lot of members and it is very hard to please everybody. If you are one of those unhappy people...please call 1-900-IDN-TCAR."
"Me knowing the truth, I can not concur."
1996: Toronto - 1998: Chicago, Montreal, Barrie - 2000: Montreal, Toronto - 2002: Seattle X2 (Key Arena) - 2003: Cleveland, Buffalo, Toronto, Montreal, Seattle (Benaroya Hall) - 2004: Reading, Toledo, Grand Rapids - 2005: Kitchener, London, Hamilton, Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Quebec City - 2006: Toronto X2, Albany, Hartford, Grand Rapids, Cleveland - 2007: Chicago (Vic Theatre) - 2008: NYC X2, Hartford, Mansfield X2 - 2009: Toronto, Chicago X2, Seattle X2, Philadelphia X4 - 2010: Columbus, Noblesville, Cleveland, Buffalo, Hartford - 2011: Montreal, Toronto X2, Ottawa, Hamilton - 2012: Missoula - 2013: London, Chicago, Buffalo, Hartford - 2014: Detroit, Moline - 2015: NYC (Global Citizen Festival) - 2016: Greenville, Toronto X2, Chicago 1 - 2017: Brooklyn (RRHOF Induction) - 2018: Chicago 1, Boston 1 - 2022: Fresno, Ottawa, Hamilton, Toronto, NYC, Camden - 2023: St. Paul X2, Austin X2 - 2024: Vancouver X2, Portland, Sacramento, Missoula, Noblesville, Philadelphia X2, Baltimore - 2025: Hollywood X2, Atlanta 2, Nashville X2, Pittsburgh X20 -
100 Pacer said:3days said:100 Pacer said:3days said:100 Pacer said:3days said:There's an easy way to see how platinum seats have impacted our seat locations: Indiana.
As opposed to all other shows on this tour, the seats project from the stage in a more straight forward manner. There's much less room for argument about which seats are actually best. Start closest to the stage, and move backward. Whereas, in an arena you could argue that floor seats are best, or that seats on the sides are best. You could argue that balcony seats are better than lower level seats if the balcony section is closer to the stage. Noblesville simplifies the matter. Start front and work back.
Take membership numbers into consideration, and divide the seats into quarters or thirds. There will always be variables and unknowns, but I think it paints a picture.
Tens of thousands? Not likely. The last credible information I heard was 60 - 70k active 10c members. A third of ALL active members put in for Indiana seats? Not likely. I'd be surprised if 10k did.
It stands to reason that lots of folks with high membership numbers woul've put in for GA/Res. Therefore, lots of people who are 300xxx and higher should have also won seating. Old-timers and newbies alike should have representation in the Ruoff seats.Noblesville will be filled with a variety of 10C numbers but with fewer seats overall your representation is skewed. More accurate sample size would be comparing arenas at play with priors where Premium was also a factor.
That being said, I still doubt that tens of thousands of 10c members submitted for Indiana seats. If the number requesting was 30,000, that would mean that less than 1/3 of us won Indiana seats... which doesn't look congruent to the anecdotal stuff. Awful lot of people claiming victory with such poor odds.
Skewed? Who's to say. The seats could be an almost perfectly varied representation. The problem with arenas is that it's much harder to determine which seats are better.
But I'd also ask questions like: Did all parties enter correctly? Did all parties mark both or one option for reserved seats? Did any of the aforementioned win GA? Were all 18 completely shut out from Indiana, or did any win lawn? Was anyone asked to resubmit? If so, was there credit card declined (as mine was once).
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Sorry, duplicate postPost edited by 3days on0
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flanosmasseur said:100 Pacer said:3days said:There's an easy way to see how platinum seats have impacted our seat locations: Indiana.
As opposed to all other shows on this tour, the seats project from the stage in a more straight forward manner. There's much less room for argument about which seats are actually best. Start closest to the stage, and move backward. Whereas, in an arena you could argue that floor seats are best, or that seats on the sides are best. You could argue that balcony seats are better than lower level seats if the balcony section is closer to the stage. Noblesville simplifies the matter. Start front and work back.
Take membership numbers into consideration, and divide the seats into quarters or thirds. There will always be variables and unknowns, but I think it paints a picture.Thank you for the comment @100 Pacer I've been sitting here fuming since Friday:I knew with my high number I wasn't going to get A/B/C or even F for that matter...so I felt good about the first draw. But now, more than likely, I won't be able to see Stone or Boom. I've seen DMB there several times in A/B/C but have been in their FC for 20+ years. Your comment just reiterated the fact that I should be happy I got anything at all.(Indy Priority 1, only show requested)First draw - Sec H, Row S, Seats 15&16Second draw - Sec H, Row W, Seats 46&47...about as far right as you can get532XXXPost edited by mookieb14 on0 -
SHZA said:pjalli said:SHZA said:pjalli said:marcPJfan said:I’d email the 10c. No way they don’t make this right.Post edited by pjalli on0
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Post edited by pjalli on0
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Sorry duplicate0
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mookieb14 said:flanosmasseur said:100 Pacer said:3days said:There's an easy way to see how platinum seats have impacted our seat locations: Indiana.
As opposed to all other shows on this tour, the seats project from the stage in a more straight forward manner. There's much less room for argument about which seats are actually best. Start closest to the stage, and move backward. Whereas, in an arena you could argue that floor seats are best, or that seats on the sides are best. You could argue that balcony seats are better than lower level seats if the balcony section is closer to the stage. Noblesville simplifies the matter. Start front and work back.
Take membership numbers into consideration, and divide the seats into quarters or thirds. There will always be variables and unknowns, but I think it paints a picture.Thank you for the comment @100 Pacer I've been sitting here fuming since Friday:I knew with my high number I wasn't going to get A/B/C or even F for that matter...so I felt good about the first draw. But now, more than likely, I won't be able to see Stone or Boom. I've seen DMB there several times in A/B/C but have been in their FC for 20+ years. Your comment just reiterated the fact that I should be happy I got anything at all.(Indy Priority 1, only show requested)First draw - Sec H, Row S, Seats 15&16Second draw - Sec H, Row W, Seats 46&47...about as far right as you can get532XXXFound: Soundgarden Hyde Park DVD (Thank you for the gift!)
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-sale0 -
SHZA said:pjalli said:SHZA said:pjalli said:marcPJfan said:I’d email the 10c. No way they don’t make this right.0
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given2fly23 said:mookieb14 said:flanosmasseur said:100 Pacer said:3days said:There's an easy way to see how platinum seats have impacted our seat locations: Indiana.
As opposed to all other shows on this tour, the seats project from the stage in a more straight forward manner. There's much less room for argument about which seats are actually best. Start closest to the stage, and move backward. Whereas, in an arena you could argue that floor seats are best, or that seats on the sides are best. You could argue that balcony seats are better than lower level seats if the balcony section is closer to the stage. Noblesville simplifies the matter. Start front and work back.
Take membership numbers into consideration, and divide the seats into quarters or thirds. There will always be variables and unknowns, but I think it paints a picture.Thank you for the comment @100 Pacer I've been sitting here fuming since Friday:I knew with my high number I wasn't going to get A/B/C or even F for that matter...so I felt good about the first draw. But now, more than likely, I won't be able to see Stone or Boom. I've seen DMB there several times in A/B/C but have been in their FC for 20+ years. Your comment just reiterated the fact that I should be happy I got anything at all.(Indy Priority 1, only show requested)First draw - Sec H, Row S, Seats 15&16Second draw - Sec H, Row W, Seats 46&47...about as far right as you can get532XXX0 -
given2fly23 said:mookieb14 said:flanosmasseur said:100 Pacer said:3days said:There's an easy way to see how platinum seats have impacted our seat locations: Indiana.
As opposed to all other shows on this tour, the seats project from the stage in a more straight forward manner. There's much less room for argument about which seats are actually best. Start closest to the stage, and move backward. Whereas, in an arena you could argue that floor seats are best, or that seats on the sides are best. You could argue that balcony seats are better than lower level seats if the balcony section is closer to the stage. Noblesville simplifies the matter. Start front and work back.
Take membership numbers into consideration, and divide the seats into quarters or thirds. There will always be variables and unknowns, but I think it paints a picture.Thank you for the comment @100 Pacer I've been sitting here fuming since Friday:I knew with my high number I wasn't going to get A/B/C or even F for that matter...so I felt good about the first draw. But now, more than likely, I won't be able to see Stone or Boom. I've seen DMB there several times in A/B/C but have been in their FC for 20+ years. Your comment just reiterated the fact that I should be happy I got anything at all.(Indy Priority 1, only show requested)First draw - Sec H, Row S, Seats 15&16Second draw - Sec H, Row W, Seats 46&47...about as far right as you can get532XXX0 -
I requested Indy Reserved only and didn’t get them.0
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pjl44 said:SHZA said:pjalli said:SHZA said:pjalli said:marcPJfan said:I’d email the 10c. No way they don’t make this right.Post edited by SHZA on0
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Member #5XXXXXSlightly better seats in theory but happy to be in the building for 3 shows this run.Indy: Was Sec F Row BB Now SEC E Row R
Chi N1: Was 313 Row 11 Now 305 Row 1
Chi N2: Was 308 Row 14 Now 333 Row 150
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