Fan-club access to tickets being sold on Internet
Stephanie Kendrid could have paid $29.99 to join Kelly Clarkson's fan club and gain special access to concert tickets. Instead, she placed an ad on Craigslist and paid $4 for the "presale" password she needed, nabbing a pair of standing-room seats.
For the past few years, many musicians have been rewarding dues-paying fan-club members with access to presale passwords to purchase tickets before they are released to the general public. Now these codes, which can increase your chances of landing prime seats, are being sold on specialized Web sites and even eBay and Craigslist.
For many fans, buying passwords online -- for anywhere from a few dollars to more than $20 -- is an easy way to game the system and get good seats without having to pay to join a club. Sometimes, fans even exchange the codes free among themselves.
Sidestepping the fan clubs, says Kendrid, a 31-year-old accountant in Los Angeles, is "a great way to beat the system that is ultimately trying to stiff us more and more with each new trick they can think of to get more money out of us."
A site called UltimatePresales.com sells memberships to gain access to presale passwords for several artists, such as Bon Jovi, the Killers and Beyonce. A one-day pass for access to codes costs $5.99; a one-year pass costs $349.99, according to the Web site.
This practice irks fan-club managers, who want to ensure that only fan-club members benefit from the codes. But there appears to be little they can do to stop the practice, short of expelling members they catch selling the passwords and revoking tickets bought using someone else's code.
A variety of individuals -- both novices and professionals -- are behind the sale of these codes online, says Larry Peryer, president of UltraStar Entertainment LLC in Brooklyn, N.Y., which manages presale ticketing for artists such as the Rolling Stones, the Police and Sting.
It may be a fan-club member trying to make money on the side. Or it may be a team of professionals employing an army of collaborators to join multiple fan clubs to gain access to several codes. These professionals may use the codes to buy prime tickets to resell, or may put the codes up for sale on sites such as eBay, Peryer says.
UltraStar checks its fan-club membership databases to look for red flags, such as people who join several of the fan clubs that it manages or use presale codes to purchase tickets for venues all across the country. Members caught selling their presale codes will be kicked out, Peryer says -- and any tickets bought with a sold password may be revoked.
Besides imposing penalties such as these, the fan clubs have few other options. Gary Adler, the legal counsel for the National Association of Ticket Brokers, says that he believes that no law exists that prohibits the sale or purchase of these codes.
UltraStar routinely patrols the Web to find which sites are selling their passwords, but this can be tricky, Peryer says, because sometimes the sale of codes occurs in quick frenzies on sites like Craigslist, and then the sellers disappear. "It's a game of Whac-a-Mole," he says.
Ticket vendors like Ticketmaster and Tickets.com have begun to crack down on the practice, but only when it is requested by the artist or the venue.
When presale passwords started being used a few years ago, the codes were the same for everybody and could easily be passed on. Now, to ensure that presale codes go to fan-club members only, many artists require unique passwords that Ticketmaster can trace back to the purchaser, and with the help of the fan club, trace back to the fan-club member.
Some artists request extra security measures for their presale passwords. For a recent Rolling Stones concert, any person who ordered tickets with a presale password had to pick up the tickets at the venue and present identification that proved fan-club membership, says David Goldberg, an executive vice president at Ticketmaster. To gain admission to the concert, buyers had to wear wristbands that couldn't easily be removed.
For most of its concerts, the band Nine Inch Nails now prints fan-club members' names on their tickets, says Nathan Hubbard, chief executive of Musictoday, a subsidiary of LiveNation Inc. that manages fan clubs. During the concert, those members use a separate entrance where they have to present their tickets, identification and fan-club membership cards.
To penalize members who sell their passwords, many fan clubs terminate memberships and revoke tickets. Last year, tickets for shows in New York and St. Paul, Minn., that were allocated for members of Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers' fan club were either resold or acquired by scalpers in violation of the club's user policy. As a result, 800 tickets were canceled for Petty's show in New York, and around 500 tickets were canceled for his concert in St. Paul, according to the artist's Web site.