4,993 posts
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Post by Someone in a tree on Feb 25, 2019 20:48:02 GMT
I dislike the NT and Royal Opera House for multiple reasons and I find they have #&(@'££@ online bookings systems to make my hatred valid.
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Post by Deleted on Feb 25, 2019 20:50:37 GMT
Honestly, ATG's constant revisions of their website has led me to catch a bus into Edinburgh to use the Playhouse box office in person recently. The website constantly crashes, especially on Edge, and it is painfully slow, with several screens between selecting your seats and actually paying for them. No ATG, I do not want to buy your Variety Boxes, Ambassador Lounge passes, wine vouchers, programme vouchers, ice cream vouchers and god knows what other crap ughhh.
Going to the box office actually saves me 15p too.
£3.65 booking fee, £3.50 bus fare.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 11, 2019 15:15:19 GMT
The ATG interface has just changed. Again. In front of my eyes. Between two different venues - and thus two shows - completely different date and seat plan interfaces. ... Wonderful. They've discarded the 'remove' seats button, so once you add a seat into your basket, thats its. No changing your mind, your stuck! Look at this new shiny shambles.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 11, 2019 15:18:04 GMT
Ooop. Hey up. I've gone back a few pages, refreshed, logged in this time and I'm in the old GUI. How exciting! I wonder what the next page will look like.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 11, 2019 15:24:33 GMT
Something I hate - seating plans where all the seats are the same colour so you can’t tell how much each seat costs without clicking on it.
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19,794 posts
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Mar 11, 2019 15:32:06 GMT
Ooop. Hey up. I've gone back a few pages, refreshed, logged in this time and I'm in the old GUI. How exciting! I wonder what the next page will look like. I’m more surprised that you’re booking Motown. Direct quote from my friend who went the other night: Sharpen up your shushing skills!
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Post by westendgurl on Mar 11, 2019 15:33:09 GMT
Can I add to the ATG hate? Mainly because when booking for Come From Away recently there was an error so I had to call and I just got my phone bill and wowza. All I can say is thank god I love the show!
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Post by Deleted on Mar 11, 2019 15:40:07 GMT
Ooop. Hey up. I've gone back a few pages, refreshed, logged in this time and I'm in the old GUI. How exciting! I wonder what the next page will look like. I’m more surprised that you’re booking Motown. Direct quote from my friend who went the other night: Sharpen up your shushing skills! Hahah. To be fair, I was looking for alternatives for this evening as my original plan of Royal Exchange has gone down the toilet. Was checking ticket prices* out of intrigue more than intent as it's not really my bag but I'm trying to be more open to things. That review helps solidify the decision though, looks like I'll be spamming on here tonight instead. Sorry! *£25 all seats with the theatrecard tonight.
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2,389 posts
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Post by peggs on Mar 11, 2019 16:29:29 GMT
Why would you remove the delete ticket from basket option? In a busy booking frenzy I often grab a seat and then delete if I find a better one. Is the hope that'll you'll just buy them all?!
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Post by Deleted on Mar 11, 2019 16:36:24 GMT
Why would you remove the delete ticket from basket option? In a busy booking frenzy I often grab a seat and then delete if I find a better one. Is the hope that'll you'll just buy them all?! No idea. Incredibly frustrating, especially when the previous model involved clicking a seat to reveal seat prices.
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Post by sparky5000 on Mar 11, 2019 17:25:25 GMT
What’s everyones opinion on when they prevent solo theatre goers from buying 1 ticket in a block of 2? I prefer to go with a friend or more obviously, but when I do choose to see a show solo it sucks to be told you can’t buy the ticket you actually want. I’d always choose a solo seat if I can, but sometimes they’re not in the areas of the theatre you want to be. Kinda feels a bit discriminatory, idk!
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Post by Deleted on Mar 11, 2019 17:40:53 GMT
I hate it passionately, I agree it's discriminatory. I can sort of see why a large West End theatre wouldn't want people leaving weird little gaps all over the place, but when it's somewhere like the Donmar Warehouse doing City Of Angels or the Almeida doing Richard III, there's no WAY those random solo seats are going to sit there unsold for the entire duration of the run.
I did have some fun with this last time I was booking a ticket at the Menier Chocolate Factory though; there were two seats together in the front row, and I only wanted one, so I selected the seat I preferred (call it A16) and tried to put it in my basket, to which it said "no, you can't leave a single seat, that's bad". So I changed my view from "select a seat" to "choose best available for me", asked it for a single seat in my price bracket, and it offered me the other one of the two (call it A15). So I left A15 in my basket in one internet browser, opened up the seating plan in another browser, and it let me buy A16 without any complaints whatsoever. And you know what? Despite being a single seat left all on its own, A15 was sold by the end of the day.
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Post by sparky5000 on Mar 11, 2019 17:48:02 GMT
I hate it passionately, I agree it's discriminatory. I can sort of see why a large West End theatre wouldn't want people leaving weird little gaps all over the place, but when it's somewhere like the Donmar Warehouse doing City Of Angels or the Almeida doing Richard III, there's no WAY those random solo seats are going to sit there unsold for the entire duration of the run. I did have some fun with this last time I was booking a ticket at the Menier Chocolate Factory though; there were two seats together in the front row, and I only wanted one, so I selected the seat I preferred (call it A16) and tried to put it in my basket, to which it said "no, you can't leave a single seat, that's bad". So I changed my view from "select a seat" to "choose best available for me", asked it for a single seat in my price bracket, and it offered me the other one of the two (call it A15). So I left A15 in my basket in one internet browser, opened up the seating plan in another browser, and it let me buy A16 without any complaints whatsoever. And you know what? Despite being a single seat left all on its own, A15 was sold by the end of the day. Oh that’s quite a good trick, I should try that! Not that solo ticket buyers should have to! And sure I get why larger West End theatres don’t want all the solo gaps, but when a show is unlikely to be a total sellout anyway, it’s pretty crappy to refuse a willing customer a seat where they want!
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4,029 posts
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Post by Dawnstar on Mar 11, 2019 17:50:07 GMT
I've already complained about it on the previous page. It drives me mad as I go to the theatre on my own about 95% of the time, and the rest of the time when my mother comes with me we don't sit together as we have different seating preferences, so I'm always buying a single seat & therefore hit this issue fairly regularly.
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2,761 posts
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Post by n1david on Mar 11, 2019 17:50:34 GMT
What’s everyones opinion on when they prevent solo theatre goers from buying 1 ticket in a block of 2? I prefer to go with a friend or more obviously, but when I do choose to see a show solo it sucks to be told you can’t buy the ticket you actually want. I’d always choose a solo seat if I can, but sometimes they’re not in the areas of the theatre you want to be. Kinda feels a bit discriminatory, idk! I strongly dislike it, but it's worth pointing out that all theatregoers are affected by it, not just those going by themselves. I usually go to the theatre as a party of two, and it's just as annoying where there's a gap of three seats and being told you can't buy two of them as that will leave the single seat. So I'd like to see it gone but I don't think it's discriminatory - it can affect any ticket-buyer.
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733 posts
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Post by sophie92 on Mar 11, 2019 18:01:01 GMT
What’s everyones opinion on when they prevent solo theatre goers from buying 1 ticket in a block of 2? I prefer to go with a friend or more obviously, but when I do choose to see a show solo it sucks to be told you can’t buy the ticket you actually want. I’d always choose a solo seat if I can, but sometimes they’re not in the areas of the theatre you want to be. Kinda feels a bit discriminatory, idk! I strongly dislike it, but it's worth pointing out that all theatregoers are affected by it, not just those going by themselves. I usually go to the theatre as a party of two, and it's just as annoying where there's a gap of three seats and being told you can't buy two of them as that will leave the single seat. So I'd like to see it gone but I don't think it's discriminatory - it can affect any ticket-buyer. Completely agree it’s annoying either way, but I think it’s worth noting that there are quite straightforward ways to work around trying to buy 2 seats out of a group of 3 (I actually had to do this myself yesterday!) whereas trying to buy 1 of a 2 (or sometimes 1 of a 4) might not be so straightforward and the only option could be to spend more money calling up to book over the phone.
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Post by Deleted on Mar 11, 2019 18:48:04 GMT
I hate it passionately, I agree it's discriminatory. I can sort of see why a large West End theatre wouldn't want people leaving weird little gaps all over the place, but when it's somewhere like the Donmar Warehouse doing City Of Angels or the Almeida doing Richard III, there's no WAY those random solo seats are going to sit there unsold for the entire duration of the run. I did have some fun with this last time I was booking a ticket at the Menier Chocolate Factory though; there were two seats together in the front row, and I only wanted one, so I selected the seat I preferred (call it A16) and tried to put it in my basket, to which it said "no, you can't leave a single seat, that's bad". So I changed my view from "select a seat" to "choose best available for me", asked it for a single seat in my price bracket, and it offered me the other one of the two (call it A15). So I left A15 in my basket in one internet browser, opened up the seating plan in another browser, and it let me buy A16 without any complaints whatsoever. And you know what? Despite being a single seat left all on its own, A15 was sold by the end of the day. And sure I get why larger West End theatres don’t want all the solo gaps, but when a show is unlikely to be a total sellout anyway, it’s pretty crappy to refuse a willing customer a seat where they want! Amen. Interestingly I've been watching availability and prices for seats for Matilda, Wicked and Les Mis at Manchester Palace. All sold incredibly well, but lots of single seats dotted around the place in many instances. By the night of each performance the majority of single seats had sold. Granted this is regional as opposed to London but it demonstrates there is demand for single seats. I do think if outlets were to relax their single seat policies, the 'left overs' would still sell, to other solo theatre goers.
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Post by juicy_but_terribly_drab on Mar 11, 2019 20:14:55 GMT
What’s everyones opinion on when they prevent solo theatre goers from buying 1 ticket in a block of 2? I prefer to go with a friend or more obviously, but when I do choose to see a show solo it sucks to be told you can’t buy the ticket you actually want. I’d always choose a solo seat if I can, but sometimes they’re not in the areas of the theatre you want to be. Kinda feels a bit discriminatory, idk! I strongly dislike it, but it's worth pointing out that all theatregoers are affected by it, not just those going by themselves. I usually go to the theatre as a party of two, and it's just as annoying where there's a gap of three seats and being told you can't buy two of them as that will leave the single seat. So I'd like to see it gone but I don't think it's discriminatory - it can affect any ticket-buyer. If you're leaving a single seat you can normally put that in your basket in another tab to hold it, book the ones you want in the original tab and then just cancel the single seat.
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1,972 posts
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Post by sf on Mar 11, 2019 21:31:27 GMT
What’s everyones opinion on when they prevent solo theatre goers from buying 1 ticket in a block of 2? I hate it with the kind of passion some people never experience in their entire life. I think I loathe it more than I loathe the charmless woman in the lobby at Hope Mill the other week who asked me if her group could take the other seat at my table and when I said yes, they could, I wasn't with anyone, came back with "Oh, what a pity you're on your own." I think I even loathe it more than I loathe Jacob Rees-Mogg. It's basically like a big neon sign screaming "HI! WE DON'T WANT YOUR MONEY!"
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2,702 posts
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Post by viserys on Mar 12, 2019 8:35:08 GMT
Serious question: With all the "leave no single seats" policies in place, how come there are always single seats dotted around the place anyway?
I've not often come across the problem because either there's so much availability that I can pick a single seat in an half-empty row or indeed just pick a left-over single seat.
I agree it's annoying though. It has something of the old stupid vibe of "only sad losers do things alone, we keep our nice seats for the normal people who only ever do things in pairs or groups". And surely people who do go in pairs could bear to be parted by sitting in different rows, if only single seats are left, seeing as they aren't meant to talk during the performance anyway.
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2,389 posts
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Post by peggs on Mar 12, 2019 22:02:56 GMT
. And surely people who do go in pairs could bear to be parted by sitting in different rows, if only single seats are left, seeing as they aren't meant to talk during the performance anyway. Well when I go with a friend yes, we would never consider not seeing something just cos we couldn't sit together but then they're off the board too so we may not count as your average theatre goer, I suspect if I tried that with other people they'd think it most odd even if yes you can wait till a couple of minutes to sit down so that's what 5 minutes in total on your own? The single seat thing proper winds me up but so do the looks I get from people when they ask who i'm going with/went with and I say just me, it's that pity look.
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19,794 posts
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Post by BurlyBeaR on Mar 12, 2019 22:07:15 GMT
First preference: go on your own 😁 Second preference: go with someone but don’t sit together 😐 Last resort: sit together 😕
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4,361 posts
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Post by shady23 on Mar 13, 2019 7:35:11 GMT
Yes to many people I know going to a concert, theatre etc is the strangest thing you could ever do.
What I find MUCH stranger is deciding not to go to something you really want to see because nobody else wants to go with you!
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Post by Deleted on Mar 13, 2019 8:39:16 GMT
I get that going to the theatre maybe the first time alone is daunting if you haven't done it, but otherwise yes it really irritates me (is it me or is it also THOSE types of couple who can't BELIEVE you're single who also come out with those types comments too...) Again it's one of those 'fine don't go to the theatre alone yourself but don't make a drama out of the fact I/lots of people do.'
Plus having to talk to other humans you bring with you is overrated sometimes.
Also with the sitting separately, surely seeing the thing you want to see is more important than sitting next to someone (again is it me or is it THOSE couples, could't possibly be seperated from my love-bunny for 90 minutes during the show)
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4,361 posts
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Post by shady23 on Mar 13, 2019 8:49:29 GMT
These are the same couples who are always leaning into each other during the show, oblivious that when they do so it blocks the view of those behind!
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