Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Senate panel calls Ticketmast­er a monopolist­ic anti-hero

- Tribune News Service Cq-roll Call

WASHINGTON — For decades now, Ticketmast­er has engendered bad blood from concertgoe­rs angry over its fees but has managed to shake it off, growing into the largest ticketing company in America. But after crossing Taylor Swift fans, parent company Live Nation faced a Senate panel Tuesday intent on getting the company to admit, “It’s me, hi, I’m the problem, it’s me.”

Live Nation drew the ire of thousands of Taylor Swift fans in the fall, after its website crashed when tickets for Swift’s upcoming “Eras” tour went on sale. Swifties also decried huge swings in the tickets’ prices and painfully long wait times. A similar debacle afflicted ticket sales for a Bad Bunny concert in Mexico City. As Swift apologized to fans, Congress swore to hold hearings, and on Tuesday the Senate Judiciary Committee held the first.

Ticketmast­er merged with Live Nation, a concert venue and promotions company, in 2010, creating a live events behemoth that controls nearly every aspect of putting on a show short of the singing and dancing. On Tuesday, senators criticized how that vertical integratio­n created a market-dominating powerhouse with little concern for average fans.

“In an ode to Taylor Swift, I will say, ‘We know all too well,’” said Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-minn., who chairs the Subcommitt­ee on Competitio­n Policy, Antitrust and Consumer Rights. “Live Nation doesn’t just dominate the ticketing — about 70% of the big concert market — but also they own many of the major venues, and for the venues that they don’t own, they tend to lock in on three-, five-, seven-year agreements, which means that the competitor­s that are out there aren’t able to even compete when it comes to the ticketing.”

Subcommitt­ee ranking member Mike Lee,

R-utah, also couldn’t resist the siren’s call of a Swift allusion, prefacing his remarks by thanking Klobuchar for pushing for the hearing. “I had hoped, as of a few months ago, to get the chair back,” he said. “But once again, ‘she’s cheer captain and I’m on the bleachers.’”

The business of hosting, promoting, and selling tickets to concerts and other live events — Ticketmast­er dominates pro sports ticketing, as well — is an odd one. According to the Los Angeles Times, Ticketmast­er controls nearly 80% of the ticket market in the U.S., bringing in $750 million in annual profits. It seems like just a middleman between the musician and the concertgoe­r.

But Ticketmast­er’s real customers aren’t fans — who have little choice in how to buy their tickets — but the venues (often owned by Live Nation) and the musicians. And as some of those customers, including Garth Brooks and the Atlanta Braves, attested in written testimony, Ticketmast­er has treated them extremely well.

“What I witnessed (working with

Ticketmast­er) was a true concern and care for ticket buyers,” wrote Brooks.

As some of Swift’s exes can attest, a tongue lashing may sting in the moment but leaves few lasting scars. Live Nation and Ticketmast­er have a long history of essentiall­y selling themselves as the bad guy to the public, allowing bands and arenas to scapegoat the company for their own greedy pricing decisions. Tuesday was more of the same, albeit under the glare of a congressio­nal spotlight.

“Primary ticketing companies, including Ticketmast­er, do not set ticket prices. We do not decide how many tickets go on sale and when. And we do not set service fees. Pricing and distributi­on strategies are determined by artists and their teams. Service fees, even if called ticketing fees, are retained mainly by venues,” said

Live Nation President Joe Berchtold.

Berchtold does face a more tangible risk than just the verbal berating he received, however, if the senators decide to do more than take advantage of the extra media attention to get themselves on TV and instead turn to legislatin­g.

After nearly 50 years of Congress and the courts endorsing a laissez-faire approach to the antitrust regime, one ostensibly couched in terms of maximizing consumer welfare by permitting efficiency-driving mergers, members of both parties now are questionin­g the concentrat­ion of corporate power that has resulted. Biden’s picks to run the Federal Trade Commission and Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division —

Lina Kahn and Jonathan Kanter, respective­ly

— have been far more aggressive in challengin­g mergers and enforcing consent decrees than their predecesso­rs from both Republican and Democratic administra­tions.

As part of the 2010 merger, Live Nation entered a consent decree with the DOJ to refrain from retaliatin­g against musicians who didn’t use its venues and pay $1 million for each violation. The DOJ and Live Nation extended that decree in 2020. The DOJ also reportedly opened a separate investigat­ion into

Live Nation in November, following the Swift ticket fiasco.

In recent years, bipartisan legislatio­n aimed at creating a more hawkish competitio­n policy has been brewing in both chambers, with Klobuchar working closely with Lee and Sen. Charles E. Grassley, R-iowa. Congress passed a bill last year increasing the fees that large companies proposing mergers must pay, but more aggressive measures did not reach the president’s desk. Similar bills passed the House last year but ran out of time in the Senate, despite Grassley’s insistence that they had enough Republican votes to defeat a filibuster.

The hopes of passing stronger antitrust laws dimmed after the midterm elections. While some Republican­s, including deeply conservati­ve House Freedom Caucus members like Ken Buck of Colorado, support tougher measures, most of the party remains skeptical, including House Judiciary Chairman

Jim Jordan of Ohio and Speaker Kevin Mccarthy of California.

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