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  2. Vivid Seats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vivid_Seats

    Vivid Seats is a middleman between ticket buyers and sellers, taking a 10% commission once tickets have sold [16] and additionally charging buyers service fees (circa 20–40% [17]) and shipping charges.

  3. Explainer-Why U.S. concert tickets are so expensive - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/explainer-why-u-concert-tickets...

    Fees paid to attend a live concert in the U.S. far exceed fees in comparable parts of the world, the complaint notes. One 2018 report from the Government Accountability Office estimated those fees ...

  4. Grant Park Music Festival - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grant_Park_Music_Festival

    The Grant Park Music Festival (formerly the Grant Park Concerts) is a ten-week classical music concert series held annually in Chicago, Illinois, United States. [1] It features the Grant Park Symphony Orchestra and Grant Park Chorus along with guest performers and conductors, and is one of the only free outdoor classical-music concert series in ...

  5. Ticketmaster - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ticketmaster

    The fees from ticket sales can account for a large percentage of overall ticket costs and have received scrutiny from regulators, customers, and musicians. The company has also faced scrutiny from the United States Department of Justice for retaliation against venues violating its 2010 10-year consent decree from the Live Nation merger, which ...

  6. Concert ticket prices are expensive. How surging prices for ...

    www.aol.com/entertainment/concert-ticket-prices...

    Lonnell Williams, for example, paid $400 for a Stockholm ticket that would have cost him nearly $1,500 in Atlanta. As he told Today in May 2023, the entire European trip — including hotel ...

  7. Huntington Bank Pavilion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Huntington_Bank_Pavilion

    The Chicago Park District receives roughly $250,000 from the venue (through sponsorship deals) and $1 from every ticket sold during concert season. [5] The venue opened June 24, 2005, with a concert by American band Earth, Wind & Fire. [6] After the COVID-19 pandemic, the venue implemented a new bag policy at their events.

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