Parrotheads pounce on Atlantic City Buffett tickets
Source: ticketblogger.blogspot.com
That was a bit too quick for Tom Logue, of Galloway Township, who went to Boardwalk Hall on Saturday afternoon to get a bright-red wristband, the official sign that he had a spot in the line that would form outside the hall shortly before the prized tickets went on sale at 10 a.m. Monday.
Logue kept his wristband on all weekend — the price of keeping his spot — then headed back to the box office about half an hour before the windows opened. A lottery-style drawing that morning by hall employees assigned him a position about midway in the line of 132 hopefuls who hit the hall Friday and Saturday for their Buffett wristbands, Logue says. But by 10:06 a.m., fans were coming out saying the ticket pickings were slim and pricey.
When he got to the front at 10:10, he says, the best he could do was two seats at the top price — $226 apiece. Logue, who was hoping for something closer to the starting price of $66, had to pass on that and walk out empty-handed.
“It was an exercise in futility, which has happened to me before,â€? Logue says. “They should have something to give the average person a ticket.â€?
But Boardwalk Hall officials say their box office works from the same pool of tickets that Ticketmaster’s Web site and telephone centers draw on, meaning that the person with the wristband at Boardwalk Hall has no better chance to get tickets than the person sitting at home on the computer or the phone — or both.Then there are some who cover even more bases in search for tickets.
“Everyone standing there was speed-dialing on their cell phones,â€? says Logue, who heard the couple in front of him in line scoring six tickets — each — with their phones.
Greg Tesone, Boardwalk Hall’s assistant general manager, says that in this age of online and phone sales, “The trend of trying at the box office for an event (like this) … is kind of dying off.â€?
Still, the hall will keep its Boardwalk-front box office, he says, and the staff does what it can to make life convenient for people who use it. For example, instead of forcing them to line up for days for tickets to a big concert, the hall hands out those wristbands reserving a place in line when tickets start selling. Plus instead of using a first-come, first-served policy for people who get the wristbands, the hall prefers its lottery system — it puts everybody with a wristband in the same pool, and then draws spots for the actual ticket line an hour or so before the tickets go on sale.
But Tesone acknowledges both of those line-discouraging policies are also more convenient for the city and the hall, neither of which wants people camping out on the Boardwalk for days, holding their precious spots in a line to see Buffett or Bruce Springsteen or the Rolling Stones.
“We’re probably a little more sensitive to that than (Philadelphia’s) Wachovia Center,â€? which can line people up in an otherwise-empty parking lot before hot tickets go on sale, Tesone says.
On Monday, Boardwalk Hall itself sold more than 400 tickets — out of a pool of 13,000 or so the hall will hold for Buffett’s first Atlantic City concert, by Tesone’s figures.
He has two suggestions for people who seriously want tickets for any show anywhere: Don’t necessarily ask for the maximum number of seats, whether the limit is six or eight or whatever, because the computers may answer that there aren’t six or eight tickets left — whereas two or four could well be available.
Also, Tesone says, the computers are programmed to sell seats in a pre-determined order of quality in that price range: The ticket you’re offered is the best available under that system. But any time you ask to check another location, he adds, you can lose your chance to buy the original ticket — or any, if they’re selling quickly enough — as soon as the computer screen clears.
Still, there is one real advantage to going to Boardwalk Hall for an event there — the ticket is cheaper than it is online. On Monday morning, people who bought a $226 Buffett ticket in person saved the $23.05 “convenience chargeâ€? that Ticketmaster was adding to seats online.
That didn’t help Logue, the local non-buyer, but in the end, he was philosophical about his morning.
“We’ll just have to go to the tailgate party before the show, over at the Beach Bar at Trump Plaza,â€? he said.












