Tickets for Adele's July concerts at Xcel Energy Center sold out in minutes Thursday, and, inevitably, there was widespread griping by fans who got shut out. As usual, resellers (aka scalpers) received the brunt of the criticism, despite in reality obtaining only a tiny fraction of available inventory.
Xcel had only about 30,000 tickets to sell between the two shows. Tens of thousands more people than that wanted to buy tickets. If you are looking for the true culprits responsible for you missing the show, look no further than your fellow fans. If they didn't like Adele so darn much — just as you do — it would have been easier to get tickets.
You could also blame Adele and her management for not booking enough shows to satisfy demand. Garth Brooks played 11 concerts (including two shows some nights) in Minneapolis last year to ensure that everyone who wanted to see him had the opportunity. Perhaps the incredibly popular Adele could take a page from his playbook.
Jay Gabbert, Plymouth
TIMBERWOLVES TICKETS
Flash Seats system is a change I've come to appreciate
As a loyal Minnesota Timberwolves season-ticket holder for 10-plus years, I read the Dec. 17 commentary "Bah, humbug! to Wolves' new ticket policy" and felt the desire to reply with my experience. I was very much opposed to the concept of Flash Seats when I first learned of it. The whole idea of not having an actual ticket seemed silly to me. I voiced my frustrations to Wolves management, who invited me to their offices to run through the whole Flash Seats process and answer every question and scenario I had. Over the past couple of months, due to the education that the organization offered and to using Flash Seats when entering a game or transferring my seats to someone else, I have changed my tune. I'm now a firm believer in the whole process.
The ease of using a form of identification as a point of entry — much like everyone needs to do at airport security — is very convenient. And, speaking of security, I know that with this program it is impossible to produce a duplicate form of my tickets that can be sold by a scam artist. This system solves all of those issues.
The example of wanting to give tickets to a 12-year-old sounds cute on the surface, too, but how does the 12-year-old get to the game? I'm assuming an adult (with an ID of some sort) accompanies that 12-year-old, right?
Also, the writer says, "now I can only share with tech-savvy people who have credit cards and smartphones." This is false. I use my driver's license as a point of entry on some nights.
The Wolves seem to have their consumers in mind more than most people had assumed originally. The tickets are secure, easy to transfer and convenient.