Instead, I get a feeling of intense dread and apprehension, as I gear myself up to enter the Thunderdome that is the race for tickets.
Can I afford one? Will I be able to book a room that isn’t just a pull-out couch in somebody’s basement? Where did we land on that whole “pandemic” thing?
I experienced that familiar feeling a few days ago when Oasis announced their reunion tour. I had a Minority Report-style vision of my own grisly future, battling it out with my fellow Mancunians as we desperately vied for our own slice of sweet Nineties Britpop nostalgia.
It turns out my anxieties were extremely prescient. Not long after tickets went on sale yesterday morning, on websites like ticketmaster.co.uk, gigsandtours.com, and seetickets.com, customers started reporting crashes, endless queues, and scalpers reselling seats at hugely inflated markups (some are reporting prices as high as £6,000, and no, that third zero is not a typo).
Denne historien er fra September 01, 2024-utgaven av The Independent.
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Denne historien er fra September 01, 2024-utgaven av The Independent.
Start din 7-dagers gratis prøveperiode på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av utvalgte premiumhistorier og 9000+ magasiner og aviser.
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Truss was bracing for 'Putin to launch nuclear weapons'
Vladimir Putin was so close to using nuclear weapons in October 2022 that Liz Truss spent the dying days of her premiership preparing for the potential fallout, an updated version of her biography has claimed.
Tories take narrow poll lead after Badenoch's first week
The Conservatives have taken a two-point poll lead over Sir Keir Starmer's Labour Party in Kemi Badenoch's first week as leader.
Starmer pledges to slash carbon emissions by 81%
Sir Keir Starmer and Donald Trump are on a collision course over the climate crisis after the prime minister yesterday positioned himself as the international leader spearheading efforts to achieve net zero.
Why has the Archbishop of Canterbury had to resign?
The Archbishop of Canterbury, Justin Welby, has resigned over allegations - some of which he has accepted - that he failed to act against a prolific and sadistic paedophile, John Smyth, who had been associated with the Church of England for decades. A number of Welby’s more senior colleagues have openly called for him to stand down, while others remained silent, and the general unease has become deafening.
Welby quits over 'failures' in Church abuse scandal
Archbishop submits to pressure from clergy and PM
It's the unmade Rocky film with a twist... roll up, folks
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While rivals hit the buffers, Liverpool deserve their lead
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Barclays warns tax rise will hit workers' living standards
Business leaders accuse government of betraying the nation’