Planning to come from the UK to Burning Man 2017 but the tickets from 2016 confuse me. Why are some tickets $900 and others are $390?
Any help is very much appreciated
I'm with you on that.BBadger wrote:I'd be happy enough if they just make the "face value" of the tickets consistent for every ticket sold short of comp'ed or low-income tickets. The premium you pay for presale or Leonardo (or whatever the hell special tickets) they sell should be specifically for the privilege of easier access and getting them early. After all, that value is consumed and useless after the general sale begins. What really rubbed me the wrong way was enabling people to buy the presale tickets and also soak up general sale tickets with the idea that they could just sell off their previous tickets. The presale/premium tickets should not be a hedge against not getting a ticket in the general sale any more than a general sale ticket being a hedge for getting a low-income ticket.
The point would be that the ticket cost $390 and the presale art donation cost some amount more. No one should be able to claim that the ticket is actually worth $990 simply because that's what they paid, as it gets you zero more value than any other $390 ticket.Ratty wrote:Are you saying to sell them all at the same price or just print the same price on all of them. (Regardless of how much they cost.) If they print them with the lower price on everything there could be MORE scalping. The unsavory sellers would all claim that they bought them for the higher price.
In essence, to my way of thinking at least, the cost of the ticket is $390.00 and any amount paid over that is a donation to support the arts and the event. So, selling the ticket is OK, but trying to renege on the amount they "gave/contributed" as a donation should not be condoned. Let them sell their ticket at the regular price and take a tax write-off for the charitable contribution portion.Ratty wrote:Are you saying to sell them all at the same price or just print the same price on all of them. (Regardless of how much they cost.) If they print them with the lower price on everything there could be MORE scalping. The unsavory sellers would all claim that they bought them for the higher price.
Well, that's the thing about art.... it's worth is determined solely by what someone is willing to pay for it. I've gotten regular price tickets, I've gotten conclave tickets. I haven't been able to afford the early sales tickets, but if I could, it definitely would be worth it to me. Why? well, I am career military, have a wife, two kids, two dogs, and it's a multi-day drive from where I live to the Playa. A burn takes up pretty much half of my annual leave time, and with deployments, training and family logistics nightmares, I have to plan it as far in advance as I can. The security of having guaranteed tickets early would totally be worth it to me if I had the money.maladroit wrote:The point would be that the ticket cost $390 and the presale art donation cost some amount more. No one should be able to claim that the ticket is actually worth $990 simply because that's what they paid, as it gets you zero more value than any other $390 ticket.Ratty wrote:Are you saying to sell them all at the same price or just print the same price on all of them. (Regardless of how much they cost.) If they print them with the lower price on everything there could be MORE scalping. The unsavory sellers would all claim that they bought them for the higher price.
The problem is that you're not distinguishing between the value of the actual ticket, and the value of the access to that ticket. The premium paid for presale tickets is really for guaranteed access. After that access has been "consumed" by obtaining the ticket, the value of the ticket itself -- as an object that gets you into the Burning Man event -- is exactly the same as any other purchased ticket.happydragon wrote:Well, that's the thing about art.... it's worth is determined solely by what someone is willing to pay for it. I've gotten regular price tickets, I've gotten conclave tickets. I haven't been able to afford the early sales tickets, but if I could, it definitely would be worth it to me. Why? well, I am career military, have a wife, two kids, two dogs, and it's a multi-day drive from where I live to the Playa. A burn takes up pretty much half of my annual leave time, and with deployments, training and family logistics nightmares, I have to plan it as far in advance as I can. The security of having guaranteed tickets early would totally be worth it to me if I had the money.
It's poetryRatty wrote:Now . . . . . . poster. That's Ratty..........R-A-T-T-Y Thanks in advance.
Copy and Paste.June Cleaver wrote:Last year I tried to log in and get tickets at the pre sale. I was given a 20 digit alph-numeric login or password.
I couldn't tell on my cell screen if the letter l was an L or if it was a number 1. Turns out the l (L's) were actually the number 1.
The clock was ticking and I was freaking out. I tried 8 different combinations and finally entered.
Damn! I hope this year, they can use a numeral 1 that looks like a 1 and a capital L instead of lower case ..l.
Best of luck on tickets!! ♡ excited already.
Where's the challenge in that? This is supposed to be stressful, right? Personally I would never attempt to order my ticket from a phone. Too much potential (as stated previously) for things to go wrong.Elderberry wrote:Copy and Paste.June Cleaver wrote:Last year I tried to log in and get tickets at the pre sale. I was given a 20 digit alph-numeric login or password.
I couldn't tell on my cell screen if the letter l was an L or if it was a number 1. Turns out the l (L's) were actually the number 1.
The clock was ticking and I was freaking out. I tried 8 different combinations and finally entered.
Damn! I hope this year, they can use a numeral 1 that looks like a 1 and a capital L instead of lower case ..l.
Best of luck on tickets!! ♡ excited already.
Hey, I appreciate the input and feedback. It was my first burn, had never encountered the issue previously. Thinking back It was the ticketfly that wouldn't somehow allow the cut and paste.FlyingMonkey wrote:Where's the challenge in that? This is supposed to be stressful, right? Personally I would never attempt to order my ticket from a phone. Too much potential (as stated previously) for things to go wrong.Elderberry wrote:Copy and Paste.June Cleaver wrote:Last year I tried to log in and get tickets at the pre sale. I was given a 20 digit alph-numeric login or password.
I couldn't tell on my cell screen if the letter l was an L or if it was a number 1. Turns out the l (L's) were actually the number 1.
The clock was ticking and I was freaking out. I tried 8 different combinations and finally entered.
Damn! I hope this year, they can use a numeral 1 that looks like a 1 and a capital L instead of lower case ..l.
Best of luck on tickets!! ♡ excited already.
......I mean.....I think EVERYONE should try to buy their tickets on their phones. Their probably faster & easier to use.....
Totally Agree.BBadger wrote: What really rubbed me the wrong way was enabling people to buy the presale tickets and also soak up general sale tickets with the idea that they could just sell off their previous tickets. The presale/premium tickets should not be a hedge against not getting a ticket in the general sale any more than a general sale ticket being a hedge for getting a low-income ticket.