Official 2023 Ticket Lottery Results Thread
Comments
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 2000, 2003mattcoz said:
 Hmm, I don't remember that. What years would that have been?mace1229 said:Some of those day of tickets shows had a combination of seniority + getting there early.
 I know at least a couple tours they issued you in blocks based on seniority, and then gave out seat assignments within that block based on when you arrived.
 I didn't care for that. I don't like to feel like I need to get there early. Its why I love the assigned seats at movies now. You can show up halfway through the previews and still have good seats!.0
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 😂😂😂 I guess I’ll be in the 300’sLoujoe said:10c is currently reviewing these threads to assign seats based on complainiorityjesus greets me looks just like me ....0
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            I hate when I don't check a thread for 24 hours and there's 70 posts. So then I assume something important happened.0
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 I love how weird and creative this is getting.SomethingCreative said:
 Good luck, I’ll be naked and greased up and my finger nails all grown outRoleModelsinBlood31 said:
 I’d find the smallest chode and clean his clock right off the bat. Drop him so he slides down the stairs I’m front of everyone. Like prison. Set the tone so people know what’s coming if they F with meAvocado78 said:At this point, there's only 1 way to do this fairly: Let all the reserved seating folks in at once, and let everyone just fight for your seats. It would be tremendous theater because merch stands would also be open at same time, meaning folks would need to choose what to do first.2003 - Houston, Dallas, San Antonio | 2006 - Bridge School, Las Vegas, San Fran(x3) | 2008 - EV Santa Cruz, Berkeley, MSG 2
 2010 - Bridge School | 2012 - EV Austin | 2013 - Dallas | 2018 - Rome | 2022 - Oakland Night 10
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 Heck if I was in on this I'd be mad too. Hope all get close to what they expected.josevolution said:
 😂😂😂 I guess I’ll be in the 300’sLoujoe said:10c is currently reviewing these threads to assign seats based on complainiority0
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 Aerosmith isn’t a valid comp…period.RatherStarved said:
 You are probably posting this to make the case that PJ represents excellent value. Which they do. However, the Aerosmith pricing is actually more fair. If you’re in the nosebleeds or behind the stage you don’t pay as much as someone in the best seats in the house. At the very least I would like to see PJ introduce two price points. Something simple like add $20 to the price of lowers and subtract $20 from uppers, or some similar numbers that would leave total revenue the same. That way if someone gets dumped into an upper in the draw at least it buys a couple of beers for their misfortune.PJINFLA said:For a frame of reference Aerosmith pricing plus fees for farewell tour in Louisville.
  Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seatsPensacola, FL - 3-9-1994 Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seatsPensacola, FL - 3-9-1994
 New Orleans, LA - 9-17-1995
 New Orleans, LA - 8-14-2000
 Lexington, KY - 4-26-2016
 Nashville, TN - 6-9-2016 (TMR)
 Bonnaroo - 6-11-2016
 Chicago, IL - 8-18-2018 & 8-20-2018
 Asbury Park, NJ - 9-18-2021
 Ohana Fest - 9-26-2021
 Ohana Fest Encore - 10-1-2021 & 10-2-20210
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 The problem with that tiered pricing is I would imagine the bad seats would stay the same price, and the good seats would go up.BK221359 said:
 Aerosmith isn’t a valid comp…period.RatherStarved said:
 You are probably posting this to make the case that PJ represents excellent value. Which they do. However, the Aerosmith pricing is actually more fair. If you’re in the nosebleeds or behind the stage you don’t pay as much as someone in the best seats in the house. At the very least I would like to see PJ introduce two price points. Something simple like add $20 to the price of lowers and subtract $20 from uppers, or some similar numbers that would leave total revenue the same. That way if someone gets dumped into an upper in the draw at least it buys a couple of beers for their misfortune.PJINFLA said:For a frame of reference Aerosmith pricing plus fees for farewell tour in Louisville.
  Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats
 So with that in mind, I'm happy with the single price.
 It almost seems like its not about the actual cost, just some people are upset they paid the same price for nosebleeds as someone in row 1 based on principle.Post edited by mace1229 on0
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 I’ll stay in back…..I’m frightened now.RoleModelsinBlood31 said:
 Weird. But impressive. Let’s team up.SomethingCreative said:
 Good luck, I’ll be naked and greased up and my finger nails all grown outRoleModelsinBlood31 said:
 I’d find the smallest chode and clean his clock right off the bat. Drop him so he slides down the stairs I’m front of everyone. Like prison. Set the tone so people know what’s coming if they F with meAvocado78 said:At this point, there's only 1 way to do this fairly: Let all the reserved seating folks in at once, and let everyone just fight for your seats. It would be tremendous theater because merch stands would also be open at same time, meaning folks would need to choose what to do first.I am lost, I'm no guide, but I'm by your side06.27.98 Alpine Valley
 10.08.00 Alpine Valley
 09.23.02 Chicago
 06.18.03 Chicago | 06.21.03 Alpine Valley
 10.03.04 Grand Rapids
 10.05.05 Chicago
 05.16.06 Chicago | 05.17.06 Chicago | 06.29.06 Milwaukee
 08.02.07 Chicago | 08.05.07 Chicago
 08.23.09 Chicago | 08.24.09 Chicago
 05.07.10 Noblesville | 05.09.10 Cleveland
 09.03.11 Alpine Valley | 09.04.11 Alpine Valley
 07.19.13 Chicago
 10.17.14 Moline
 08.20.16 Chicago
 08.18.18 Chicago
 09.18.22 St. Louis
 09.05.23 Chicago0
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 I don't have a problem with the way PJ sets the pricing. however i feel bad for the poor fuckers that end up in the 300 section at the United Center.mace1229 said:
 The problem with that tiered pricing is I would imagine the bad seats would stay the same price, and the good seats would go up.BK221359 said:
 Aerosmith isn’t a valid comp…period.RatherStarved said:
 You are probably posting this to make the case that PJ represents excellent value. Which they do. However, the Aerosmith pricing is actually more fair. If you’re in the nosebleeds or behind the stage you don’t pay as much as someone in the best seats in the house. At the very least I would like to see PJ introduce two price points. Something simple like add $20 to the price of lowers and subtract $20 from uppers, or some similar numbers that would leave total revenue the same. That way if someone gets dumped into an upper in the draw at least it buys a couple of beers for their misfortune.PJINFLA said:For a frame of reference Aerosmith pricing plus fees for farewell tour in Louisville.
  Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats
 So with that in mind, I'm happy with the single price.
 It almost seems like its not about the actual cost, just some people are upset they paid the same price for nosebleeds as someone in row 1 based on principle.livefootsteps.org/user/?usr=446 1995- New Orleans, LA : New Orleans, LA 1996- Charleston, SC 1998- Atlanta, GA: Birmingham, AL: Greenville, SC: Knoxville, TN 2000- Atlanta, GA: New Orleans, LA: Memphis, TN: Nashville, TN 2003- Raleigh, NC: Charlotte, NC: Atlanta, GA 2004- Asheville, NC (hometown show) 2006- Cincinnati, OH 2008- Columbia, SC 2009- Chicago, IL x 2 / Ed Vedder- Atlanta, GA x 2 2010- Bristow, VA 2011- Alpine Valley, WI (PJ20) x 2 / Ed Vedder- Chicago, IL 2012- Atlanta, GA 2013- Charlotte, NC 2014- Cincinnati, OH 2015- New York, NY 2016- Greenville, SC: Hampton, VA:: Columbia, SC: Raleigh, NC : Lexington, KY: Philly, PA 2: (Wrigley) Chicago, IL x 2 (holy shit): Temple of the Dog- Philly, PA 2017- ED VED- Louisville, KY 2018- Chicago, IL x2, Boston, MA x2 2020- Nashville, TN 2022- Smashville 2023- Austin, TX x2 2024- Baltimore 0
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 Why am I always discriminated against?PJINFLA said:For a frame of reference Aerosmith pricing plus fees for farewell tour in Louisville.
  Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats
 That's what the asking prices will be at first, and some poor saps will actually pay that. But once they realize they aren't going to sell out at those prices, they'll drop the prices. Look at the Billy Joel/Stevie Nicks stadium tour. For some of those dates, they're completely sold out of 200 and 300 level upper deck seats, because those were cheaper. Meanwhile, they've sold almost none of the lower level and field seats because they're way overpriced...even after 3 price drops already.
 That's the beauty of "dynamic pricing." They can charge whatever the hell they want at any time. There's been times when I've bought tickets at $139 the day they went on sale, only to have seats in the same section and row drop down to as low as $29 the week of the show.Post edited by aisleseats on0
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 I had that happen to me with Eric Clapton tickets last year. Spent roughly $150 on a ticket the day they went on sale. By the week of the show, tickets in my same section were down to $75.aisleseats said:
 Why am I always discriminated against?PJINFLA said:For a frame of reference Aerosmith pricing plus fees for farewell tour in Louisville.
  Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats
 That's what the asking prices will be at first, and some poor saps will actually pay that. But once they realize they aren't going to sell out at those prices, they'll drop the prices. Look at the Billy Joel/Stevie Knicks stadium tour. For some of those dates, they're completely sold out of 200 and 300 level upper deck seats, because those were cheaper. Meanwhile, they've sold almost none of the lower level and field seats because they're way overpriced...even after 3 price drops already.
 That's the beauty of "dynamic pricing." They can charge whatever the hell they want at any time. There's been times when I've bought tickets at $139 the day they went on sale, only to have seats in the same section and row drop down to as low as $29 the week of the show."I got memories, I got shit"0
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 I don't. The place will sell out. I see it as they paid $162 for a $162 seat. Those lucky ones up from paid $162 for a $400 seat. Don't feel bad because someone else got a better deal.lolobugg said:
 I don't have a problem with the way PJ sets the pricing. however i feel bad for the poor fuckers that end up in the 300 section at the United Center.mace1229 said:
 The problem with that tiered pricing is I would imagine the bad seats would stay the same price, and the good seats would go up.BK221359 said:
 Aerosmith isn’t a valid comp…period.RatherStarved said:
 You are probably posting this to make the case that PJ represents excellent value. Which they do. However, the Aerosmith pricing is actually more fair. If you’re in the nosebleeds or behind the stage you don’t pay as much as someone in the best seats in the house. At the very least I would like to see PJ introduce two price points. Something simple like add $20 to the price of lowers and subtract $20 from uppers, or some similar numbers that would leave total revenue the same. That way if someone gets dumped into an upper in the draw at least it buys a couple of beers for their misfortune.PJINFLA said:For a frame of reference Aerosmith pricing plus fees for farewell tour in Louisville.
  Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats
 So with that in mind, I'm happy with the single price.
 It almost seems like its not about the actual cost, just some people are upset they paid the same price for nosebleeds as someone in row 1 based on principle.0
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 i don't feel guilty at all. i got the best deal in the reserved house. i earned it by being in this fan club for 30 years without letting my membership lapse.mace1229 said:
 I don't. The place will sell out. I see it as they paid $162 for a $162 seat. Those lucky ones up from paid $162 for a $400 seat. Don't feel bad because someone else got a better deal.lolobugg said:
 I don't have a problem with the way PJ sets the pricing. however i feel bad for the poor fuckers that end up in the 300 section at the United Center.mace1229 said:
 The problem with that tiered pricing is I would imagine the bad seats would stay the same price, and the good seats would go up.BK221359 said:
 Aerosmith isn’t a valid comp…period.RatherStarved said:
 You are probably posting this to make the case that PJ represents excellent value. Which they do. However, the Aerosmith pricing is actually more fair. If you’re in the nosebleeds or behind the stage you don’t pay as much as someone in the best seats in the house. At the very least I would like to see PJ introduce two price points. Something simple like add $20 to the price of lowers and subtract $20 from uppers, or some similar numbers that would leave total revenue the same. That way if someone gets dumped into an upper in the draw at least it buys a couple of beers for their misfortune.PJINFLA said:For a frame of reference Aerosmith pricing plus fees for farewell tour in Louisville.
  Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats
 So with that in mind, I'm happy with the single price.
 It almost seems like its not about the actual cost, just some people are upset they paid the same price for nosebleeds as someone in row 1 based on principle.livefootsteps.org/user/?usr=446 1995- New Orleans, LA : New Orleans, LA 1996- Charleston, SC 1998- Atlanta, GA: Birmingham, AL: Greenville, SC: Knoxville, TN 2000- Atlanta, GA: New Orleans, LA: Memphis, TN: Nashville, TN 2003- Raleigh, NC: Charlotte, NC: Atlanta, GA 2004- Asheville, NC (hometown show) 2006- Cincinnati, OH 2008- Columbia, SC 2009- Chicago, IL x 2 / Ed Vedder- Atlanta, GA x 2 2010- Bristow, VA 2011- Alpine Valley, WI (PJ20) x 2 / Ed Vedder- Chicago, IL 2012- Atlanta, GA 2013- Charlotte, NC 2014- Cincinnati, OH 2015- New York, NY 2016- Greenville, SC: Hampton, VA:: Columbia, SC: Raleigh, NC : Lexington, KY: Philly, PA 2: (Wrigley) Chicago, IL x 2 (holy shit): Temple of the Dog- Philly, PA 2017- ED VED- Louisville, KY 2018- Chicago, IL x2, Boston, MA x2 2020- Nashville, TN 2022- Smashville 2023- Austin, TX x2 2024- Baltimore 0
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 You're correct. The place will sell out. And those nosebleeds could have been sold in the public (VF) sale rather than via the 10C lottery. That is where there is a mixed bag of opinions. For some, they see this as a win because it puts more tickets into the hands of 10C members, albeit at the price of being in the nosebleeds, which never happened in previous tours. For others, they see the 300 level as garbage seats that they did not expect to get via the 10C lottery, as it has never happened in the past. No one is right or wrong. It is a fair reaction either way. And yes, I read and understood fully that "ten club has reserved more seats than past tours which means that some seats will be further away and higher up than past tours."mace1229 said:
 I don't. The place will sell out. I see it as they paid $162 for a $162 seat. Those lucky ones up from paid $162 for a $400 seat. Don't feel bad because someone else got a better deal.lolobugg said:
 I don't have a problem with the way PJ sets the pricing. however i feel bad for the poor fuckers that end up in the 300 section at the United Center.mace1229 said:
 The problem with that tiered pricing is I would imagine the bad seats would stay the same price, and the good seats would go up.BK221359 said:
 Aerosmith isn’t a valid comp…period.RatherStarved said:
 You are probably posting this to make the case that PJ represents excellent value. Which they do. However, the Aerosmith pricing is actually more fair. If you’re in the nosebleeds or behind the stage you don’t pay as much as someone in the best seats in the house. At the very least I would like to see PJ introduce two price points. Something simple like add $20 to the price of lowers and subtract $20 from uppers, or some similar numbers that would leave total revenue the same. That way if someone gets dumped into an upper in the draw at least it buys a couple of beers for their misfortune.PJINFLA said:For a frame of reference Aerosmith pricing plus fees for farewell tour in Louisville.
  Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats
 So with that in mind, I'm happy with the single price.
 It almost seems like its not about the actual cost, just some people are upset they paid the same price for nosebleeds as someone in row 1 based on principle.
 0
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            Just watch what you ask for with the pricing you might just get it. Then when you win your lottery selection you’re gonna pay a possibly outrageous price. Then I’m sure we will have a 100 page thread complaining about prices. I feel like this is still more of a seating placement argument and not winning first priority over second priority. Keep prices the same, correct the seating/priority mistake and keep the complaints to just “member for a 100 years how can I get shut out”. Prices are fine. Just my opinion, nothing to see here, carry on.0
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 I was thinking maybe they could do something like that, but then they would probably need to split up the reserved choice to lower and upper, like they did with rear/side. Making this more complicated is probably not a great idea considering they can't handle it the way it is now, heh.RatherStarved said:
 You are probably posting this to make the case that PJ represents excellent value. Which they do. However, the Aerosmith pricing is actually more fair. If you’re in the nosebleeds or behind the stage you don’t pay as much as someone in the best seats in the house. At the very least I would like to see PJ introduce two price points. Something simple like add $20 to the price of lowers and subtract $20 from uppers, or some similar numbers that would leave total revenue the same. That way if someone gets dumped into an upper in the draw at least it buys a couple of beers for their misfortune.PJINFLA said:For a frame of reference Aerosmith pricing plus fees for farewell tour in Louisville.
  Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats
 1998: East Troy 2000: East Troy, Rosemont 2003: Champaign 2006: Chicago (UC), Milwaukee 2007: Chicago (Lolla) 2009: Chicago (UC), Chicago (UC) 2010: Noblesville 2011: East Troy (PJ20), East Troy (PJ20) 2013: Chicago (WF), Seattle 2014: St. Louis 2016: Chicago (WF), Chicago (WF) 2018: Chicago (WF), Chicago (WF) 2022: St. Louis 2023: Chicago (UC), Chicago (UC) 2024: Chicago (WF), Chicago (WF)2025: Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh0
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 The ugliness of "dynamic pricing" is when you click on a ticket for one price and then when it gets in your cart it's like $50 more. That happened over and over when I got tickets to Muse.aisleseats said:
 Why am I always discriminated against?PJINFLA said:For a frame of reference Aerosmith pricing plus fees for farewell tour in Louisville.
  Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats
 That's what the asking prices will be at first, and some poor saps will actually pay that. But once they realize they aren't going to sell out at those prices, they'll drop the prices. Look at the Billy Joel/Stevie Nicks stadium tour. For some of those dates, they're completely sold out of 200 and 300 level upper deck seats, because those were cheaper. Meanwhile, they've sold almost none of the lower level and field seats because they're way overpriced...even after 3 price drops already.
 That's the beauty of "dynamic pricing." They can charge whatever the hell they want at any time. There's been times when I've bought tickets at $139 the day they went on sale, only to have seats in the same section and row drop down to as low as $29 the week of the show.
 1998: East Troy 2000: East Troy, Rosemont 2003: Champaign 2006: Chicago (UC), Milwaukee 2007: Chicago (Lolla) 2009: Chicago (UC), Chicago (UC) 2010: Noblesville 2011: East Troy (PJ20), East Troy (PJ20) 2013: Chicago (WF), Seattle 2014: St. Louis 2016: Chicago (WF), Chicago (WF) 2018: Chicago (WF), Chicago (WF) 2022: St. Louis 2023: Chicago (UC), Chicago (UC) 2024: Chicago (WF), Chicago (WF)2025: Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh0
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 My thoughts exactly. Those complaining about prices all being the same for nosebleeds and floor don't realize to adjust accordingly they won't sell the 300s for less, they will sell the 100 and 200s for a lot more. Who wins in this scenario? Not the fans, that's for sure.symptomsfade said:Just watch what you ask for with the pricing you might just get it. Then when you win your lottery selection you’re gonna pay a possibly outrageous price. Then I’m sure we will have a 100 page thread complaining about prices. I feel like this is still more of a seating placement argument and not winning first priority over second priority. Keep prices the same, correct the seating/priority mistake and keep the complaints to just “member for a 100 years how can I get shut out”. Prices are fine. Just my opinion, nothing to see here, carry on.0
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 It's jacked up...and just shows the total control TM has over an already monopolized system.mattcoz said:
 The ugliness of "dynamic pricing" is when you click on a ticket for one price and then when it gets in your cart it's like $50 more. That happened over and over when I got tickets to Muse.aisleseats said:
 Why am I always discriminated against?PJINFLA said:For a frame of reference Aerosmith pricing plus fees for farewell tour in Louisville.
  Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats Also dynamic pricing and price bump for aisle seats
 That's what the asking prices will be at first, and some poor saps will actually pay that. But once they realize they aren't going to sell out at those prices, they'll drop the prices. Look at the Billy Joel/Stevie Nicks stadium tour. For some of those dates, they're completely sold out of 200 and 300 level upper deck seats, because those were cheaper. Meanwhile, they've sold almost none of the lower level and field seats because they're way overpriced...even after 3 price drops already.
 That's the beauty of "dynamic pricing." They can charge whatever the hell they want at any time. There's been times when I've bought tickets at $139 the day they went on sale, only to have seats in the same section and row drop down to as low as $29 the week of the show.
 I remember multiple times trying to buy tickets and getting the "someone else beat you to it" message. Then you come across three tickets in a row and it won't let you buy two of them so it doesn't leave a seat "stranded." Even though the people that were buying singles or odd numbers of seats fucked you over by leaving that third seat.Remember the Thomas Nine !! (10/02/2018)
 The Golden Age is 2 months away. And guess what….. you’re gonna love it! (teskeinc 11.19.24)
 1998: Noblesville; 2003: Noblesville; 2009: EV Nashville, Chicago, Chicago
 2010: St Louis, Columbus, Noblesville; 2011: EV Chicago, East Troy, East Troy
 2013: London ON, Wrigley; 2014: Cincy, St Louis, Moline (NO CODE)
 2016: Lexington, Wrigley #1; 2018: Wrigley, Wrigley, Boston, Boston
 2020: Oakland, Oakland: 2021: EV Ohana, Ohana, Ohana, Ohana
 2022: Oakland, Oakland, Nashville, Louisville; 2023: Chicago, Chicago, Noblesville
 2024: Noblesville, Wrigley, Wrigley, Ohana, Ohana; 2025: Pitt1, Pitt20
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            Ah pricing. I got presale access to Aerosmith today through my season tix. The cheapest nosebleed tix were $175. Avg looked like $400. I'm more than cool with $165.0
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