The Guardian (USA)

US senators introduce ‘fans first’ live-event ticketing reform bill

- Adrian Horton

Six US senators have introduced a new “Fans First Act” to address flaws in the live event ticketing system by increasing transparen­cy in ticket sales, protecting consumers from fake or overpriced tickets, and building accountabi­lity measures for bad actors.

The bipartisan bill, brought to Congress by three Republican­s (John Cornyn of Texas, Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee, Roger Wicker of Mississipp­i) and three Democrats (Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota, Peter Welch of

Vermont and Ben Ray Luján of New Mexico), is the latest effort by Congress to combat high and exploitati­ve ticket pricing for concerts and other live events.

The heated situation with online ticket sellers – predominan­tly by Ticketmast­er, by far the largest of retailers – reached a boiling point in 2022, when demand for tickets to see Taylor Swift’s and Bruce Springstee­n’s tours, respective­ly, crashed the site and sent prices soaring.

Several Swift fans went on to sue Ticketmast­er for “fraud, price-fixing and antitrust violations”, alleging that “intentiona­l deception” allowed scalpers to buy the majority of tickets, to be resold at a mark-up; within hours of the Eras tour sale, tickets were being resold on secondary seller sites for as much as $22,000 (£18,000).

“Because no other venue can hold half as many people as the stadiums and venues working through Ticketmast­er, Taylor Swift and other popular musicians have no choice but to work through Ticketmast­er,” the suit alleged. The controvers­y led to congressio­nal hearings with Ticketmast­er executives. Though started before the Swift debacle, the US justice department launched an antitrust investigat­ion into Ticketmast­er’s parent company, Live Nation, over whether it abused its power in the multibilli­on-dollar live entertainm­ent industry.

According to an announceme­nt signed by the six senators, the Fans First Act seeks to improve pricing transparen­cy by requiring all live event ticket sellers and resellers to disclose the total cost of the ticket, including fees, when the fan initially selects a ticket for purchase; a breakdown of the ticket cost; clear terms and conditions of purchase; which seat or section they are selling in order to avoid ticket misreprese­ntation; and whether or not they are the original seller.

The act would also strengthen the

Better Online Ticket Sales (Bots) Act, signed into law in 2016, to further prohibit the use of bots to purchase tickets online, and would impose civil penalties on resellers engaging in illegal ticket sale practices. The bill would create a reporting website for fans to file complaints, to be enforced and monitored by the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and state attorneys general. And it seeks to stop bad actors by prohibitin­g the sale of “spec” tickets which resellers do not yet possess, prevents the use of deceptive websites and bad actors masqueradi­ng as legitimate sellers, and requires reporting of

Bots Act violations from ticketing companies to the FTC.

“The current ticketing system is riddled with problems and doesn’t serve the needs of fans, teams, artists or venues,” said Cornyn in the announceme­nt. “This legislatio­n would rebuild trust in the ticketing system by cracking down on bots and others who take advantage of consumers through price gouging and other predatory practices and increase price transparen­cy for ticket purchasers.”

Live Nation, the owner of Ticketmast­er, applauded the new bill: “We support the Fans First Act and welcome legislatio­n that brings positive reform to live event ticketing. We believe it’s critical Congress acts to protect fans and artists from predatory resale practices, and have long supported a federal all-in pricing mandate, banning speculativ­e ticketing and deceptive websites, as well as other measures. We look forward to our continued work with policymake­rs to advocate for even stronger reforms and enforcemen­t.”

 ?? ?? Beyoncé performing in Chicago. Photograph: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Parkwood
Beyoncé performing in Chicago. Photograph: Kevin Mazur/Getty Images for Parkwood

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