One of the wildest stories you may read today ⬇️
A couple accidentally showed up to a game with tickets to the next night's game
So they bought 2 more tickets and ended up catching Willy Adames' home run ball
Then they came back the next night with their original tickets, sitting nearly in the exact same spot as the night before ...
Then Adames hit another home run and they caught it AGAIN 🤯
@argules@susanslusser You don't speak for me I am here specifically for these stats/insights and to help validate my speculation from the stadium today.
“Tell him to enter the password he knows is correct. Inform him it is incorrect. Invite him to reset it. Watch as he enters the password he believed it to be all along. Then tell him he cannot use it… because it is his current password.”
@Ticket_Help2022 If you cannot differentiate between a not-available-for-purchase security credential that gets you backstage and a marketed, ticketed VIP pass that gets you an elevated experience I do not know what to tell you.
@Ticket_Help2022 For a social justice account you are very gas-lighty. And if your position is that secondary markets should also allow for contraband to be sold, you are not likely to find a lot of support.
@Ticket_Help2022 I am sorry they got scammed. That really sucks. But your assignment that somehow a more functional secondary marketplace would've helped them is incorrect as they would never have been able to buy that sort of pass there in the first place.
@Ticket_Help2022 I agree that having a secure secondary platform is important, but this is a street justice situation. You are naive to think the festival does not know about the buying and selling of passes.
@Ticket_Help2022 These are not tickets they are credentials. There are restrictions and responsibilities associated. They are meant for people working who require access to do their jobs. They should never be bought or sold, and if any appear on any marketplace they are immediately deactivated.