So this is more of a HEAVY SIGH than a rant. Recently the show Hamilton has opened with a touring company in Los Angeles. I never made it happen to travel to New York to see the original with Lin-Manuel Miranda, or his replacement.
I would love to see the show, really really love to see it. But the ticket prices…:eek::eek::eek::eek::eek:
For weekend performances, in decent seats, top end tickets are pricing in around $1,500 - $2,000 each.
For
Fuck
Sake
Ok ok, I get that it’s the “hottest ticket in town!” I get that there is the cheap ticket lottery for performances where you can stand around with 1,000 other hopefuls in the hot sun hoping for a last minute ticket. Oh, sorry, try again tomorrow? (not gonna happen) But Jeezus on a stick, if I do end up getting to see it, it’ll be me, and my spouse, and gotta take the kids. And honey bunny ain’t gonna go for the back row of the balcony. So even at say $800 a ticket we’re looking at ~$2,500. That’s OK, we’ll put off paying for tuition, or getting that used car. 'Cause we’ll be seeing Hamilton! Y’know with all that diversity casting!
Who ARE all these hundreds of millionaires filling the seats every show?
Hamilton is a scam. It’s just a vehicle for rich progressives and Hollywood liberals to virtue signal.
Are they then going to give $2000 to a charity or a homeless or womans shelter? No. They’re going to ring up their rich liberal friends and brag about how they spent $2000 to POC in a play. And how awesome and what a good liberal they are for doing so.
It’s a scam? You mean it’s not really a play? :eek:
Based on this statement, I’m going to assume you’ve never spent so much as five dollars on yourself, ever. Because that’s five dollars that could have gone to the poor, right?
Liberals are the worst. They should all be shot out of a cannon and set on fire and fed to a pack of ravenous wolves and then put under house arrest in a flophouse motel in rural Nebraska with no Wi-Fi. I’m so glad we have President Trump now because he’s a bona fide genius unlike Obama who had an IQ of 24 and could only speak in grunts and hiccups. Trump is going to build the wall and bring jobs back and bomb us into world peace and best of all exterminate all the evil progressives and liberals before Christmas because #MAGA.
Now see, that’s all very charming of you, and as Chris Hardwick would say, “Points!”
But really, this whole lottery falderol just ain’t gonna work in my life. So I piss into that pot every week until December, when the show closes? Then I still don’t see the show. And my family doesn’t get the nice night out and dinner and all that.
I got 4 tickets at the presale (AmEx) for about $200 per seat. I honestly had no idea it was a “liberal” thing. Hamilton was no liberal, as I recall (but I haven’t seen the play yet). That leaves me $1,800 per seat to donate to a charity. Done and done.
Those are Ticketmaster resale tickets. The tickets went on sale in **April **and the price range was $85-$195 with premium seats at $650. (Did you really think they would still have cheap tickets left 4 months after they went on sale?) Scalpers bought up lots of those then and are now trying to resell them for $$$. That doesn’t mean they will actually go for thousands, they may very well end up being unsold. They also may get priced lower as it gets closer to showtime. I just looked on Ticketmaster and saw one center Orchestra for tonight for $400.
Have you also looked on StubHub? They have many tickets available starting around $200.
So your ire is really with scalpers, not with the show.
Really? When they went on sale for SF, I thought I heard they were going of $750 a pop. Maybe we just got more of the green stuff than those SoCal bitches!!!
Here you go. $186 gets you seat with an obstructed view. $800 for a decent seat.
On Saturday, December 30th of this year, tickets are $274 to $2574. So it’s possible to see it for much less than the top prices you quote. You say that “. . . honey bunny ain’t gonna go for the back row of the balcony . . .” Perhaps the problem then is that she has an inflated view of what you can afford.