Ticket woes continue to plague fans as final Taylor Swift concerts take place

Singaporean Wendy Tan attended the Taylor Swift concert on March 4, after a seller was willing to part with a VIP 4 ticket, originally priced at $528, for around $200. PHOTO: WENDY TAN

SINGAPORE – As American superstar Taylor Swift performs her final The Eras Tour concerts at the National Stadium this week, ticket woes faced by fans have not abated.

After her opening show on March 2, a user on TikTok claimed that concert organiser and promoter AEG Presents added extra seats to the top-tier VIP 1 sections on subsequent nights, but at more than 70 per cent cheaper.

VIP 1 seats are priced at $1,228 each, and include a box containing exclusive merchandise, such as a special set of four Taylor Swift prints, laminate and matching lanyard, a commemorative tote bag, souvenir concert ticket, collectible pin, sticker and postcard.

However, the extra seats are priced as Category 1 seats, at $348 each, and do not come with the VIP merchandise.

Naturally, several existing VIP 1 ticketholders are feeling upset.

The caption of a TikTok photo slideshow uploaded on March 5 by @leonardlowe5 read: “They (the organisers) are adding more Category 1 seats in front of VIP 1, nearer to the barricade. Which means VIP 1 (patrons) are paying $900 more, but not getting better seats. The VIP box alone (is not) worth that much. We bought it because we want to be as close as possible to Taylor.”

The user, who tagged a number of media outlets in his caption, added: “I have been trying ways to contact (them) to seek a fair resolution, but the organisers are not replying. Please help us out.”

Other TikTok commenters shared similar opinions. One wrote that “we dropped $900 more and they get better views”, while another who is attending the March 8 show lamented that it was unfair, adding: “I don’t know if I can take it that they paid much lesser but will get better seats.”

AEG Presents has not replied to queries from The Straits Times on the matter.

However, among the terms and conditions on tickets purchased by fans, it states: “Promoter may add, withdraw, reschedule or substitute artists or players (where applicable) or vary advertised programmes, prices, event times, venue, seating arrangement or audience capacity.”

Aside from these grouses, some Swifties who could not get tickets to the concerts here have continued to face unpleasant experiences with scammers and scalpers.

On March 7, the police said in a statement that at least 1,241 victims have fallen prey to e-commerce scams involving concert tickets since January. A majority of the cases involved tickets to Swift’s concerts.

Singaporean fan @cruel.blue uploaded a video on TikTok detailing how she entered the National Stadium on March 4 using a ticket which her friend bought from a reseller on online marketplace Viagogo. She discovered she had been scammed when two other people had the same seat as her.

She was subsequently escorted out of the venue by security.

Similarly, Thai influencer Chopluem Thammapunya took to Instagram to express her dismay at being cheated.

She had flown to Singapore to attend the March 3 show with a ticket that she purchased from a vendor, but was left in tears when she was barred from entering the venue as someone else had gone in using a ticket bearing the same number as hers.

And then there are the shady scalpers who are still reselling tickets at exorbitant prices.

Ms Wendy Tan told ST how she had several run-ins with such characters in the past week, before she finally managed to buy a ticket to the March 4 show at below retail price.

A full-time caregiver, she was on the grounds of the National Stadium from March 2 to 4 – when Swift’s first three concerts took place – carrying a placard which indicated she wanted to buy tickets to the concert.

On March 3, she said she encountered a man on-site who offered to sell her a Category 9 ticket, originally priced at $88, for $500. Even at 8.30pm, when the concert was already mid-way, he was not willing to sell the restricted view ticket to her for $50. Instead, he wanted $100 for it.

Ms Tan recalled: “I decided not to buy it, as it was very opportunistic of him.”

On March 4, she said she crossed paths with a tourist, a Russian woman in her 20s, who was offered a Category 9 ticket for €300 (S$437). “I persuaded her not to buy it,” said Ms Tan.

Ms Tan eventually managed to procure tickets for both of them. The first ticket she found was from a seller who was willing to let it go at the original price.

“I let the Russian woman have this ticket first, as she had only one evening in transit in Singapore. Around 15 minutes later, I managed to find a second seller willing to part with a VIP 4 ticket, originally priced at $528, for all the cash I had, which was nearly $200.”

Ms Tan said: “We resisted buying from the scalpers, and looked out for each other. I am glad that things worked out well. But it is really despicable how scalpers victimise fans who have spent so much on flights and hotel stays to catch their idols on stage.”

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