There was a reason Live Nation was a thing. It was to break Ticketmaster's monopoly.
Then it merged with Ticketmaster. Free market and everything.
When Springsteen played three nights in Toronto in 1984 the only way to get tickets was through a mail-in lottery. I got four for the first night.My wife saw the Beatles at Shea Stadium. The way she got tickets was to send a letter, self-addressed return envelope and a check to disc jockey Murray the K who held a lottery drawing -- for all 55,000 tickets. Maybe Taylor should try that method.
Even then though, wouldn’t venues go with one or the other and that was that? Other than NYC, cities usually don’t have their pick of Class A arenas to take their business to if one jacks up the rates.
Airlines at least have the excuse of keeping these god damn giant machines flying through the air, and their safety record is pretty great overall. Given how unpleasant the ticket buying experience is, it's hard to see why Ticketmaster gets to keep skimming their percent.Airline and Ticketmaster customers might be the most mistreated consumers on earth. Of course, you do have a choice, you don't have to patronize either, but that's not a realistic attitude either, since on has a monopoly on air travel and the other on buying a ticket to attend a concert or a show.