mrzeigler
.. but I'm not wrong
Stumbled across this PensGear Penguins Authentics listing that offers paper tickets to this month's Jagr game after the fact for $264.
Anyone know anything about this? I’m trying to wrap my head around the idea here.
Were these tickets printed before the game or after (or on demand)? Were those seats occupied by paying customers?
The website wouldn't let me add more than 29 tickets to my cart, so it doesn’t appear that the team is willing to sell 18,178+ of them if there’s demand. So I’m curious what logic they used to define this product and limit its quantity. Are these just the occasional single seats that go unsold?
If these seats were unsold – which I think is the best-case scenario -- is it ethical for a team to print a ticket and then claim it is an “authentic” ticket to that specific game? While the seat exists regardless of if there’s a butt in it, I’d argue that a ticket doesn’t exist until a customer places an order for it. If these are being printed on demand after the fact, should they be considered to be authentic tickets if the purchaser never had an opportunity (sans time machine) to use them to attend the event?
Obviously, if the seats were sold to customers via digital tickets, then their “authentic” claim becomes even more dubious.
I'm not big into memorabilia, but I have saved all of my old ticket stubs, and I'm curious what the more hard-core collectors think about this sort of thing.
Hypothetical question: If a venue has 20,000 seats but only 6,000 people attend a game that featured a historic performance, does the memorabilia market expect there to be a maximum of 6,000 tickets available or 20,000?
Anyone know anything about this? I’m trying to wrap my head around the idea here.
Were these tickets printed before the game or after (or on demand)? Were those seats occupied by paying customers?
The website wouldn't let me add more than 29 tickets to my cart, so it doesn’t appear that the team is willing to sell 18,178+ of them if there’s demand. So I’m curious what logic they used to define this product and limit its quantity. Are these just the occasional single seats that go unsold?
If these seats were unsold – which I think is the best-case scenario -- is it ethical for a team to print a ticket and then claim it is an “authentic” ticket to that specific game? While the seat exists regardless of if there’s a butt in it, I’d argue that a ticket doesn’t exist until a customer places an order for it. If these are being printed on demand after the fact, should they be considered to be authentic tickets if the purchaser never had an opportunity (sans time machine) to use them to attend the event?
Obviously, if the seats were sold to customers via digital tickets, then their “authentic” claim becomes even more dubious.
I'm not big into memorabilia, but I have saved all of my old ticket stubs, and I'm curious what the more hard-core collectors think about this sort of thing.
Hypothetical question: If a venue has 20,000 seats but only 6,000 people attend a game that featured a historic performance, does the memorabilia market expect there to be a maximum of 6,000 tickets available or 20,000?